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Rep. Waters Honored By NCNW For Unyielding Service

Congresswoman Maxine Waters received the National Council of Negro Women’s highest honor, the Uncommon Height Crystal Stair Award, recognizing her decades of unwavering leadership, civil rights advocacy, and commitment to economic justice.
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By Lauren Burke
Black Press USA

Representative Maxine Waters, the veteran California Democrat and longtime standard-bearer of congressional leadership, received the National Council of Negro Women’s highest honor on December 5.

At the organization’s 90th annual gala in Washington DC, Rep. Waters was presented with the Uncommon Height Crystal Stair Award, named after Dr. Dorothy Height, the legendary civil rights leader who led the council for more than four decades. The honor recognized not only Waters’s decades in public office but her role as one of Washington’s most unyielding critics of inequality, corporate power and political retrenchment on civil rights.

In her acceptance speech, the California Congresswoman framed the moment as a continuation of unfinished work. She reflected on Dr. Height’s place among the “Big Six” leaders of the civil rights movement during the 60s and praised her ability to build institutions as well as movements. The work has extended far beyond marches to include policy change.

“Dr. Height did more than protest injustice,” Waters said on Dec. 6. “She built something that would last.”

Congresswoman Waters, 87, has made a career of combining activism with power. First elected to Congress in 1990, she is now the ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee and previously served as its chair. She was the first Black woman to lead the powerful panel. From that position, she shaped debates over banking regulation, housing policy and economic inequality, often pressing institutions she argued were insulated from accountability.

Over three decades in office, Ms. Waters has been a consistent advocate for affordable housing, consumer protections, pay equity and racial justice. She played a key role in shaping housing provisions in pandemic-era relief legislation and has long argued that economic policy is inseparable from civil rights.

“As long as I have a voice and a vote,” Ms. Waters said, “I will continue to march, build and fight.”

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