In
this column, I have been promoting the need for targeted policies
that are directed to the deep recesses that afflict the African
American community in so many areas, especially now that the financial
resources appear to be at hand to make a difference. Well, right
on cue a question was directed to President Barack Obama at his
Press Conference on April 29, by BET journalist Andre’ Showell,
who asked him, “…given this unique situation [where blacks face
double-digit unemployment and communities of color experience a
deep recession] what specific policies can you point to that will
target these communities and what’s the timetable for us to see
tangible results?”
The
president replied, “Well, keep in mind that every step we’re taking
is designed to help all people. But folks who are most vulnerable
are most likely to be helped because they need the most help.” He
used the examples of unemployment insurance and health insurance
and alluded to his general approach: “…if the economy is strong,
that will lift all the boats as long as it is also supported by,
for example, strategies around college affordability and job training,
tax cuts for working families as opposed to the wealthiest that
level the playing field and ensure bottom-up economic growth. And
I’m confident that will help the African American community live
out the American dream at the same time that it’s helping communities
all across the country.”
However,
President Obama does not seem to understand two vital things. First,
because these vulnerable communities were suffering before the current
set of crises, if they are to be made viable (and not go back to
a “normal” state of disadvantage), it will take double the effort.
Second, his theory seems to presuppose that African Americans and
others have now - or will have - equal access to the resources that
he has made possible, without state and local politics that favor
whites and other groups. So, where are the supportive tools? Without
them, no targeted strategies can be successful.
Perhaps
the corrective tools exist in the Congress where Rep. Maxine Waters
has long believed in targeted public policy as a most effective
way to serve vulnerable communities. Most recently, for example,
in the debate over fixing the Home Foreclosure crisis in the House
Financial Services Committee, she attached an Amendment to a bill
(HR 1728) that directed 15% of the $180 million set aside for mortgage
and housing counseling would go to organizations that target such
services to minorities and low-income homeowners.
In
fact, in the recent legislative actions addressed to the financial
and housing sector she has had an influence on several such measures.
Two of the most important relate, first to Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mack, the major housing agencies which now have a mandate in law
to include minorities and women in responsible positions in the
Agencies work forces. Second, a recent law also directs the Troubled
Assert Recovery Program (TARP) to include minorities and women in
the letting of contracts as: asset managers, servicers, property
managers, expert consultants and other servicers.
So,
it may be that Obama as President doesn’t want to do the targeting,
but instead, to appear race-neutral and let members of Congress
direct the resources to the specific constituencies they believe
need them. Well, that’s ok, but I am still concerned about his theory
of governance where minorities are concerned. The black community
was the only one not to come back from the 2001 Bush recession to
its pre-recession strength, so a rising tide certainly does not
lift all the boats. This flawed theory emerged recently because
during the last two years of the Clinton administration (1998-2000)
when black economic growth briefly grew faster than the rest of
the nation. This slogan however, has not held up as a general rule
of economic growth.
For
the Obama theory to work, the Justice Department and the Civil Rights
offices in the cabinet agencies will have to level the playing field
by enforcing a version of affirmative action that conservatives
stifled during the Bush years. Even for Congressional targeting
to work, Justice will have to enforce recent laws that intend for
blacks and other vulnerable groups to have access to the resources
flowing from the massive financial windfall that is underway. Otherwise,
Obama’s theory is just a slogan that covers up a multitude of sins.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member Dr. Ron Walters is the Distinguished
Leadership Scholar, Director of the African American Leadership
Center and Professor of Government and Politics at the University
of Maryland College Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity)
(Rowman and Littlefield). Click here
to contact Dr. Walters. |