The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe: Friday edition

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This is the June 19, 2026, edition of “The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe” newsletter.Subscribe hereto get it delivered straight to your inbox every Monday through Friday.

ON JUNETEENTH – By Rev. Al Sharpton

This year, Juneteenth comes to us at a defining hour in the life of this nation. It is a charge to rise to the moral demand this country has so often fallen short of. We know all too well that justice delayed is not an accident; it is a decision. So let us be clear: The work is not finished. 

When the enslaved people of Galveston, Texas, finally learned they were free, they were hearing a truth deliberately withheld from them. On June 19th, we reflect on that injustice and indict every force that has tried to make people beg for what is already theirs. 

We are living in a time when old fights have new names and new machinery. We are fighting for voting rights because there are still those who want to prevent our people from choosing their leaders. We are fighting redistricting schemes as representation is carved up and diluted behind closed doors. We are fighting for affordability and labor rights because freedom means nothing if families cannot live with dignity. We must not be found asleep while others work to turn back the clock. 

This Juneteenth, let us honor the past by refusing to surrender the present. The work is not finished. The dream remains unfinished, and we must not go silent until the promise of freedom is not just remembered but realized.

ON THE CALENDAR

On June 19, 1865, the last enslaved Americans learned they were free. This weekend, the country celebrates — in New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Atlanta, Miami, and beyond. 

The nation’s capital marks the summer solstice with Fête de la Musique: Thirty acts across more than 10 locations in Georgetown. All of it free, all of it outside. ☀️

If you’re near Philadelphia this weekend, look up. The Chester County Balloon Festival is sending hot air balloons over Ludwig’s Corner Horse Show Grounds all weekend long.

In the Windy City, roar your boat down the Chicago River for the Chinese Dragon Boat Race — 33 teams, intricately designed boats, one very good time. 

More in the Midwest for the music-minded: Columbus, Ohio, is hosting Creekside Blues and Jazz across more than 30 stages this weekend. 

In Boston, the Roxbury International Film Festival — New England’s largest film competition celebrating work by and for people of color — is back for its 26th edition.

And Sunday is Father’s Day. The Times put together 25 questions worth asking your dad. Three to start: 

“Who were you before fatherhood?” 

“What’s your deepest wish for me?” 

“Are there things you wish you could say to your own father that you have never said?”

MAILBAG

You asked, Joe answered.

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