When
he was running for President, 45 asked African Americans what we had
to lose by electing him. Embracing the most dystopian view of the
African American community, he attacked our schools, our streets,
crime rates, and unemployment and suggested that we were so far down
that electing him could only improve things. Curiously, he never
talked about racism when he talked about the status of African
Americans. He never spoke of hate crimes, police killings, or racist
symbols like Confederate flags and Confederate statues. He never
denounced some of his most racist supporters, including Klucker David
Duke and alt-right leader Richard Spencer. He just asked what Black
folks had to lose by electing him!
We’ve
been learning what we have to lose in these nearly five months of
45’s “leadership”. He cynically used HBCU
Presidents in a photo op, while cutting education funds that help
HBCUs. He has been silent or slow in denouncing racist incidents
that have occurred on his watch, including the lynching of Second Lt.
Richard Collins III, and the murder of heroes Ricky John Best and
Taliesin Myrddin Namkai-Meche, who stood up to the rabid racist
Jeremy Joseph Christian, who was harassing two young women on a train
in Portland (it took him three days to respond tepidly to that
incident). As of this writing, two days after a noose was hung in
the Smithsonian Museum for African American History and Culture, he
has not uttered a syllable of condemnation. These issues don’t
appear to be important to him.
Are
we surprised, then, that the budget he has submitted to Congress,
would eviscerate civil rights protections in literally every area of
our lives. Already, Attorney General Jeff Sessions has moved back
toward draconian jail sentences for minor crimes, reviewed consent
decrees with police departments, looking to loosen them, and
suggested that the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department
can be smaller. The budget reflects that so clearly that Venita
Gupta, who led the Civil Rights Division under President Obama and
now leads the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, says she sees
this budget as a “setback” for civil rights.
The
new budget calls for folding the Department of Labor Office of
Federal Contract Compliance (OFCCP) with the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, although the two agencies do distinctly
different work. EEOC investigates civil rights complaints, while
OFCCP audits contracts to ensure that employees have equal
opportunity in terms of both promotions and pay. The proposed budget
cuts OFCCP by 16 percent and eliminates 130 full time employees.
When the other 470 employees are absorbed into the EEOC, that agency
will not get an increased budget despite its expanded mission.
Both
agencies have been important in ensuring that civil rights violations
are rectified. In 2010, EEOC had more than 20 active cases that
involved nooses. Even as nooses continue to be hung as symbols of
intimidation and hate, such as the noose hung at the African American
Museum (the second hung at a Smithsonian museum in a week), the
agency charged with investigating these complaints would have fewer
resources to do so.
Similarly
OFCCP has won money settlements for thousands of employees, and
changed employment requirements when those requirements have a
discriminatory impact. Women employees at Home Depot were among
those receiving monetary settlements because of OFCCP investigations.
At
the Department of Education (surprise, surprise), a woman who opposes
affirmative action leads the Office of Civil Rights. That office
will be cut significantly, limiting its ability to investigate
discrimination complaints in school systems. At the Environmental
Protection Agency, efforts to look at environmental justice have been
eliminated.
From
the noose hung at the African American Museum to the defacing of
LeBron James’ home with a racial slur, there is continuing
evidence of the persistence of racism in our nation. This racism is
emboldened by a national leadership that is silent despite its
manifestations. We cannot be surprised. Our 45th President, after
all, once said he did not trust African Americans to work on his
accounting. He probably would have failed any OFCCP audit, and
certainly attracted several housing discrimination lawsuits decades
ago.
The
President who has been accused of discrimination has the power to
ensure that his capitalist cronies face fewer accusations by
weakening civil rights enforcement. What did African Americans lose
when 45 was elected? Among other things, we (and others) lost civil
rights protections!
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