The Guardian (USA)

What Ice Cube's collaborat­ion with Trump – and critique of Democrats – reveals

- Malaika Jabali

Throughout this election season, the rapper Ice Cube has assumed a self-bestowed mantle as spokespers­on for Black politics. He has urged that Black Americans make demands before guaranteei­ng anyone their vote. “Be skeptical of anybody telling you to just vote … and not get anything for your vote,” he said on Instagram in September. “You vote because your community is getting something.”

Last week, Donald Trump’s senior adviser Katrina Pierson announced that Ice Cube worked with the Trump campaign to develop their “Platinum Plan” for Black America, unleashing a furious wave of public criticism and accusation­s. At the core of the backlash is the suspicion that Cube’s commentary and his chief political initiative, the Contract with Black America, is less about promoting a Black agenda and more about suppressin­g Black voter turnout for the Democratic party, which Black Americans overwhelmi­ngly support.

The accusation compelled Ice Cube to appear on a number of media outlets to clarify his position. “I’m willing to work with both teams, but I’m just working with whoever is willing to work with me,” Ice Cube said on CNN. In an interview with journalist Roland Martin, Cube said “for us not to engage with both sides of the aisle to fix what I think is an American problem … is not going to help us in the end.”

This controvers­y reveals several things about American politics, and specifical­ly the sad state of political affairs for Black people. For starters, the political environmen­t is so fraught – and voters are so antsy about another four years of a Trump presidency – that any appearance of impropriet­y will raise alarm bells for many Black Americans. But that instinct has the effect of silencing even mild criticism of Joe Biden or the Democratic party. We’re closer and closer to the election, and two-party tribalism is in overdrive, nuance is mostly absent, and commentato­rs are falling into their expected camps. Conservati­ves gleefully use Cube’s message to prop up Trump.

Liberals largely dismiss Ice Cube as a race traitor without sitting with his concerns. And Ice Cube defenders reflect little on Cube’s botched political strategy or the market-based, libertaria­n-esque philosophy he’s proposing for problems that require radical solutions and wholesale government interventi­on.

The fact of the matter is, Black Americans defending and criticizin­g Ice Cube both have valid concerns. Neither major political party is working for Black Americans economical­ly. The Black-white wealth gap is alarming, with white households holding 11.5 times more wealth than Black ones, and the gap continues to widen. Black homeowners­hip is at a record low. More Black people are being imprisoned than in the 1960s. And both parties have contribute­d to these policy failures while letting big business off the hook for practices that exploit and harm our communitie­s. This includes encouragin­g manufactur­ing jobs to leave for cheaper, deunionize­d labor in sectors that were disproport­ionately occupied by Black men; failing to adequately regulate big banks who profited from subprime mortgages targeted to Black communitie­s; failing to assist Black Americans when the economy crashed on their backs; and enabling corporatio­ns to make astronomic­al profits off the disproport­ionately Black and Latino workers working in essential jobs during Covid.

As long as we’re stuck in a twoparty system backed by big corporatio­ns, big money donors and financial institutio­ns, Black people will never find a reprieve. We’ll simply jump from one party to the next, or out of the ballot booths altogether. We’ll frame our political power solely on the terms of what party leaders promise and consistent­ly fail to provide. We’ll seek whatever meager concession­s we can muster – taskforces, committee leadership promotions, and an assortment of patronage jobs – that ultimately leave many Black people disappoint­ed and disillusio­ned.

It’s the disappoint­ment I saw in multiple Ice Cube interviews. It’s the resignatio­n I’ve heard from workingcla­ss Black Americans all over the country in my reporting. Thus, given the acute economic crisis for Black Americans, it behooves anyone speaking on their behalf to have their shit together, to put it bluntly. We cannot afford anything less. Anyone with basic political instincts should know that any associatio­n with a white nationalis­t-sympathizi­ng president could and should significan­tly turn off Black voters. Cube’s strategy has heaved sound policy ideas into a tribalist, corporate media meat grinder, rendering the original message unrecogniz­able. It reduces the 22 pages of (mostly) impressive and sweeping policy prescripti­ons in Cube’s Contract with Black America – proposals such as baby bonds, a jobs guarantee, and freeing people imprisoned for marijuana possession – to a two-page “platinum” talking point for Trump’s lackeys.

If Ice Cube wants to reduce the Black agenda to a mere election-season transactio­n – without considerin­g the more fundamenta­l relation between Black liberation and anticapita­lism – he should at least get his basic business sense right. There are some parties you just don’t negotiate with, because the starting terms are too far apart. Donald Trump comes from a party that promotes small government and normalizes white supremacy. A transforma­tive economic agenda requires large, government investment­s in low-income and workingcla­ss communitie­s. This runs counter to the entire Republican trickledow­n economic platform of the past several decades. The present Republican administra­tion has yet to provide basic economic programs en masse in an election year for millions of Americans suffering from the financial fallout of Covid-19, many of whom are Trump supporters themselves. It is beyond fantastica­l to believe Trump, or any Republican president, will advance programs to Black Americans that he doesn’t provide his own followers.

But most of Ice Cube’s liberal critics fail to acknowledg­e that the Democratic party has fared little better. Though his strategy and conclusion­s are miscalcula­ted, his descriptio­n of the problems are not. The Republican party has moved right and dragged Democrats with them; the result is that Democrats have spent much of the past several decades working overtime to outflank Republican­s on toughon-crime policies, austerity politics, deregulati­on and privatizat­ion, and it’s that school of thought of which Biden has been a longtime instructor.

“Small government” won’t fix the mess which exploitati­ve business practices and neoliberal public policies have created for Black people. What it will likely take are independen­t voters, a mass movement and progressiv­e organized labor – which cannot be corralled a few months before an election – to make demands for radical, systemic change. This is serious work that, at the least, requires consistent commitment and being in community with organizers and policy experts who have been thinking and working towards those demands for more than a season. Anything less will fail the very communitie­s people like Ice Cube claim to represent.

Malaika Jabali is a public policy attorney, activist and Guardian US columnist

Watergate reporter Bob Woodward will discuss the Trump presidency at a Guardian Live online event on Tuesday 27 October, 7pm GMT. Book tickets here

'Small government' won’t fix the mess that neoliberal public policies have created for Black people

 ??  ?? ‘If Ice Cube wants to reduce the Black agenda to a mere election-season transactio­n, he should at least get his basic business sense right.’ Photograph: Bebeto Matthews/AP
‘If Ice Cube wants to reduce the Black agenda to a mere election-season transactio­n, he should at least get his basic business sense right.’ Photograph: Bebeto Matthews/AP

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