Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden to Black voters: ‘We’ve kept our promises’

- By Aaron Morrison and Will Weissert

NEW YORK — President Joe

Biden virtually addressed the Rev. Al Sharpton’s racial justice conference on Friday, telling a sympatheti­c crowd “we’ve kept our promises” as he ramps up efforts to energize Black voters who will be vital to his re-election bid this fall.

Addressing several hundred attendees at the annual National Action Network Convention in New York, Biden ticked through a long list of what he said were some of his administra­tion’s key accomplish­ments for Black Americans.

He detailed providing federal public works funding to reconnect city neighborho­ods that were divided decades ago when highways were built, and also investing billions in historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es.

“Together, we’ve kept our promises to make some of the most significan­t investment­s in the Black American community ever,” Biden said. He also noted his pardoning thousands of inmates convicted on federal marijuana charges, combating racial discrimina­tion in the real estate market and canceling student debts for millions of Americans.

He called that “transforma­tional change” but said, “We know there’s much more work to do.”

He said he still hoped to sign major legislatio­n expanding voting rights and the George Floyd Act, a police reform package named for a Black man whose murder by Minneapoli­s police in 2020 sparked widespread racial justice protests and calls for federal legislatio­n.

Biden is facing a November rematch with Republican former President Donald Trump, who has tried to step up his own appeal to Black voters.

Although Biden historical­ly enjoys high support and approval from Black Democrats, 45 percent of Black Americans said they disapprove of the way Biden is handling his job as president in March, according to polling by The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Just over half said they approve.

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