Los Angeles Times

Black leaders keep eyes on the prize

After barrier- breaking 2020, the strength of African Americans in politics has emerged as undeniable reality.

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DETROIT — With a barrier- breaking year having drawn to a close, there’s one undeniable fact: the strength of Black political power.

Black voters were a critical part of the coalition that clinched President- elect Joe Biden’s White House bid. The nation will swear in its f irst Black woman and f irst person of South Asian descent as vice president, Sen. Kamala Harris, who herself may be a leading presidenti­al candidate in four years. And as the global push for racial justice continues, Congress is set to welcome several new Black, progressiv­e freshmen next year.

But while Black political and civil rights leaders see opportunit­y to work with a Biden- Harris administra­tion to build upon the momentum created in 2020, they acknowledg­e the road ahead won’t be easy given the makeup of Washington and a narrowly divided Congress.

Last year was one in which America experience­d a racial awakening, fueled by long- standing racial inequities and structural racism laid bare by the COVID- 19 pandemic’s disparate impact on Black Americans. But Black leaders say this year will be one that defines the trajectory of America and whether the nation has truly learned from the racism embedded deeply in its history.

“What I think we need to do now is support this new administra­tion that seems to have leadership as a part of his agenda,” said House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn ( D- S. C.), a close ally of Biden. “We are where we are today because of a lack of leadership and I think that Joe Biden has demonstrat­ed in his articulati­ons that he’s prepared to provide the kind of leadership that we need.”

Biden’s decisive win was seen in part as a repudiatio­n of the racist rhetoric of President Trump. But activists and civil rights leaders say that years of grass- roots organizing helped bring about Biden’s victory and that they intend to seek a return on their investment.

The National Assn. for the Advancemen­t of Colored People has urged Biden to consider creating a Cabinetlev­el position focused on racial justice, equity and advancemen­t. Derrick Johnson, the NAACP’s president and CEO, said it would be a bold action with potential to yield significan­t results.

“Trump is a symptom to a larger problem that has gone unaddresse­d in this country for decades,” Johnson said. “The NAACP specifical­ly takes the position that if you state a priority for your administra­tion, someone must own that portfolio for the entirety of the administra­tion and be accountabl­e for delivering on a commitment. And one of the things that was promised was the issue of racial equity being addressed.”

Biden has faced intense pressure to create a diverse Cabinet that is not only representa­tive of America but also able to implement tangible policies. Clyburn has publicly urged Biden to include more Black men and women in his administra­tion.

“You don’t get a second chance to make a f irst impression,” Clyburn said, before adding, “It was not a good impression.”

Biden has named a handful of Black leaders to his Cabinet, including Rep. Marcia L. Fudge ( D- Ohio) to run the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t and retired Gen. Lloyd Austin as Defense secretary. But Clyburn said opportunit­y remains for him to appoint more, including as attorney general.

In recent weeks, Biden and his transition teams have held meetings with various civil rights leaders and grass- roots activists, who have pledged to hold him accountabl­e for promises made during the campaign.

Maurice Mitchell, a national director of the Working Families Party, a progressiv­e multiracia­l grassroots effort, was one of 10 who met recently with Treasury pick Janet Yellen to discuss racial and economic justice. Mitchell said Yellen made a commitment to repairing historical harms that have been inf licted upon Black and other communitie­s of color.

“They’ve expressed a willingnes­s to engage with advocates and organizers, so we’re going to hold them to that,” said Mitchell, who is a Movement for Black Lives strategist. “A lot of Black people are suffering and if we don’t go forward and keep this momentum and keep our focus on structural change, we will be missing a significan­t opportunit­y.”

The Movement for Black Lives plans this year to continue pushing proposed federal legislatio­n it unveiled in 2020. The BREATHE Act would radically transform the nation’s criminal justice system, including by eliminatin­g agencies such as the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion and the use of surveillan­ce technology.

The proposal came during a national reckoning over brutality from law enforcemen­t and systemic racism that spurred global protests and cries for change after the police killings of George Floyd and other Black Americans.

“We defeated Trump and that was a mandate of the Black movement to really defend Black lives and ensure that he could no longer terrorize in a really public and institutio­nal way,” said Jessica Byrd, who leads the Movement for Black Lives’ Electoral Justice Project. “I also know for sure that the only way the Democrats are going to win anything else in 2022 isn’t if they quell progressiv­e calls for change but if they actually govern and change people’s lives.”

But to push any real federal policy change, Congress will be key. Democrats faced serious setbacks in congressio­nal races last year, losing so many seats in the House that the party has the narrowest majority in at least two decades. Control of the Senate hinges on two runoff races in Georgia on Tuesday.

Still, several progressiv­es will join the House this year, bringing a fresh perspectiv­e for a party with an aging leadership.

Activist Cori Bush, who led protests after the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, ousted longtime Rep. William Lacy Clay in Missouri’s Democratic primary, ending a political dynasty that had spanned more than half a century. Bush said among her f irst priorities is a more robust COVID- 19 relief package that provides greater assistance to families.

“I’m not so far away from my own pain and struggle and adversity that I can’t remember what it was like,” Bush said, noting the immense pressure facing families right now. “I’m not taking off the hat of the activist at all, it’s who I am. And so I’ll use that power and drive, and that moxie.”

Jamaal Bowman, a former middle school principal, ousted longtime incumbent U. S. Rep. Eliot L. Engel in New York’s Bronx.

“I’m very encouraged, but we have to be vigilant,” Bowman said. “We cannot let up and we have to continue to engage, organize and build a nation that works for all of us. There are people on the other side who can care less about the progressiv­e movement or about wealth sharing or Black people.... So we cannot stop, we have to be relentless to really build and get this country where we need it to be.”

In another series of firsts, New York Democrats Mondaire Jones and Ritchie Torres became the f irst two openly gay Black men to serve in the House. Torres identifies as Afro- Latino.

But California Rep. Karen Bass ( D- Los Angeles), a progressiv­e who has pushed for criminal justice reform and other key legislatio­n, said while it’s important to make note of a history- making year, Democrats face an enormous uphill battle if the party is unable to win the Georgia Senate seats.

“Everything resides on Jan. 5 and whether or not we win those Senate seats,” Bass said. “If we do not win those Senate seats, then it is not going to be the full- force, full agenda that all of us would like to see take place.”

Bass said Biden could run into challenges similar to those President Obama faced from a Republican-majority Senate that stalled much of his agenda. And beyond the Georgia races, the Senate is losing its only Black woman when Harris takes the oath of office in January.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom faced pressure to name a Black woman as her replacemen­t, with both Bass and Rep. Barbara Lee ( D- Oakland) f loated as possible choices. But Newsom appointed California Secretary of State Alex Padilla on Dec. 22, making him the state’s f irst Latino in the U. S. Senate.

“There will not be a Black woman in the U. S. Senate and frankly there will only be one Black Democrat and that’s Cory Booker,” Bass said ahead of Newsom’s announceme­nt. “Everyone wants to celebrate Black women and what a wonderful outsized role we played in the election, but our representa­tion is not important. So, of course, I think it is vital that that happens.”

Though a tough road lies ahead, many remain hopeful that real change is on the horizon — including Bush, who noted that her political ascension is the result of a rich legacy of Black grassroots organizing by civil rights legends such as Shirley Chisholm and Fannie Lou Hamer.

“I’m so encouraged because now we can expect more and I will be one of those people alongside my brother, Jamaal Bowman, in helping to usher in more and make room,” Bush said. “We got in the door — now we’re just holding it open.”

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? VICE PRESIDENT- ELECT Kamala Harris, seen at the Democratic ticket’s political victory lap on Nov. 7 in Wilmington, Del., will take her oath of off ice this month and could cast tie- breaking votes in the U. S. Senate.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press VICE PRESIDENT- ELECT Kamala Harris, seen at the Democratic ticket’s political victory lap on Nov. 7 in Wilmington, Del., will take her oath of off ice this month and could cast tie- breaking votes in the U. S. Senate.

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