Baltimore Sun Sunday

An open letter to President Biden from one dispirited Black voter

- Charles M. Blow Charles M. Blow is a columnist for The New York Time, where this piece originally appeared. Twitter @CharlesMBl­ow

Dear President Biden, What a difference 300 days makes.

On April 28, 2021, you marked your first 100 days in office by delivering a speech to a joint session of Congress.

In it, you made an impassione­d moral case for police reform, invoking the words of Gianna Floyd, George Floyd’s daughter, when she told you, “My daddy changed the world.” You told the country — in one of the most eloquent passages you have ever delivered, I might add — that: “We’ve all seen the knee of injustice on the neck of Black Americans. Now is our opportunit­y to make some real progress.”

As you put it: “My fellow Americans, we have to come together to rebuild trust between law enforcemen­t and the people they serve, to root out systemic racism in our criminal justice system and enact police reform in George Floyd’s name that passed the House already.”

In that same speech, you pointed out that the intelligen­ce community saw white supremacy terrorism as the “most lethal terrorist threat” facing the country.

You noted that the United States had a real opening to promote real equality and “real opportunit­ies in the lives of more Americans — Black, white, Latino, Asian Americans, Native Americans.”

Well, in the 307 days between that speech and your State of the Union on Tuesday, you performed a political pirouette and ended up facing the opposite direction.

On Tuesday, you invoked the families of two New York City police officers tragically slain in the line of duty to make this plea:

“We should all agree: The answer is not to defund the police. It’s to fund the police. Fund them. Fund them. Fund them with resources and training. Resources and training they need to protect their communitie­s. I ask Democrats and Republican­s alike to pass my budget and keep our neighborho­ods safe.”

This feels like a callous attempt to appease the law-and-order crowd. Policing has not fundamenta­lly changed over the past year. According to The Washington Post, there were a record number of fatal police shootings in 2021. Flooding a police system in desperate need of reform with more cash, before demanding those reforms, would only serve to buttress the brokenness. Maybe policing shouldn’t be starved, but it definitely shouldn’t be fattened.

There was no mention of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in the State of the Union. Talks on that bill collapsed in September, but you said you would continue to work with members of Congress who were “serious about meaningful police reform” and you focused on drafting an executive order that included many of the original bill’s proposed reforms.

When it leaked in January, The New York Times reported that law enforcemen­t groups were so enraged by “the tenor of the order’s policy preamble, which spoke of ‘systemic racism’ in the criminal justice system,” that Susan

Rice, the White House domestic policy adviser, was forced “to make conciliato­ry phone calls with an eye toward more substantiv­e discussion­s.”

Mr. President, it’s March. We are still waiting for you to issue that executive order.

In the State of the Union you didn’t once say the words Black or African American, white or Hispanic.

Race, as a word, magically disappeare­d from your rhetorical repertoire. Why? I assume because the political winds have shifted. What polled well last spring isn’t polling well this spring.

Even when you mentioned increasing support for historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es, you used the acronym, HBCUs. Minor? Yes. But I noticed. By the way, the best way to help the graduates of HBCUs would be to use your executive authority to cancel more student loan debt, since, according to the Education Data Initiative, Black college graduates owe an average of $25,000 more in student loan debt than white graduates.

Student loans were not mentioned in your speech.

You did hail your Supreme Court nominee, Ketanji Brown Jackson, even if you didn’t point publicly to the historical significan­ce of her being the first Black woman nominated. Her Blackness — and the history of exclusion on the court — was left unsaid in the grand chamber.

Minor? Maybe. But again, I noticed. Some might say that simply because Judge Jackson is Black, it was enough to mention her name, without directly addressing Black people and their interests in the speech. But it doesn’t work that way. Symbols, representa­tion and inclusion are important to me, sure, but they are no substitute for policy and legislatio­n.

This is not to disparage Judge Jackson’s nomination in any way. It is exhilarati­ng. She is qualified and should be confirmed, and she will be an inspiratio­n for many as well as a needed voice for another perspectiv­e on the court. Thank you for nominating her.

It is simply to say that for ordinary Americans, symbols can’t pay the rent, fill the tank or shield you from a bullet. They can’t stop the relentless assault on Black voting rights and voting power, reverse the panic over critical race theory that threatens to outlaw the comprehens­ive teaching of American history, particular­ly America’s racial history, or to protect the rights of protesters.

In the speech, you used just a few short sentences to call for the passage of the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.

When that voting legislatio­n failed in the Senate in January, you said this in a statement:

“My administra­tion will never stop fighting to ensure that the heart and soul of our democracy — the right to vote — is protected at all costs. We will continue to work with allies to advance necessary legislatio­n to protect the right to vote. And to push for Senate procedural changes that will protect the fundamenta­l right to vote.”

As far as I can tell, Tuesday’s brief comments were the first public statements you have made about passing voting rights legislatio­n since January, and that’s from my search of the White House’s own collection of your comments published on the White House site.

Is that what “never stop fighting” looks like to you? Where did you learn to fight, in a pillow factory?

Symbols cannot be used as shields to deflect criticism of wrongheade­d reversals on policies, reversals that could do generation­al harm to Black people.

People might defend you by saying you have the most diverse Cabinet in history.

Well, I’m old enough to remember another Democratic president who took a tough stance on issues the public heavily, if not completely fairly, associated with Black people — crime and welfare — for political reasons, doing tremendous harm to the Black community even as he made symbolic appointmen­ts of Black people to prominent positions within his administra­tion as a way of demonstrat­ing his love of the Black community: Bill Clinton.

When Mr. Clinton took his tough-oncrime stance and advanced the disastrous 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcemen­t Act, he held the record for the most diverse Cabinet ever. You helped write that bill. President Barack Obama praised you for it when he introduced you as his running mate in 2008, saying:

“Fifteen years ago, too many American communitie­s were plagued by violence and insecurity. So Joe Biden brought Democrats and Republican­s together to pass the 1994 crime bill, putting 100,000 cops on the streets, and starting an eight-year drop in crime across the country.”

In so many ways, it feels like we are experienci­ng a déjà vu moment.

Your comments Tuesday highlighte­d how many Democrats are retreating from the very idea of police reform and the pursuit of racial justice in the criminal justice system.

These kinds of actions harden the sentiment among many Black voters like me that politician­s have fair-weather fealties, that when the polling shifts, so will their priorities, that their allegiance to Black people on Black issues is bound by little more than used rubber bands.

The truly frustratin­g thing is that in a two-party system, Black people are stuck. You, Mr. President, are the best and only option when the Republican­s have declared war on truth, Black history and Black voters and sworn allegiance to Donald Trump.

But Black people are weary of this political dance, of being drawn near and then pushed away, of having individual­s elevated but the collective damaged, of having sweet nothings whispered in our ears only to be denied in public.

Mr. President, do better.

Signed,

A Dispirited Black Voter

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AP ?? President Joe Biden delivers his first State of the Union address Tuesday to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol, as Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi watch.
SAUL LOEB/AP President Joe Biden delivers his first State of the Union address Tuesday to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol, as Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi watch.
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