Imperial Valley Press

Booker urges activists, leaders to heed social justice call

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IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — On his first trip to Iowa as a presidenti­al candidate, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker urged Democratic activists and black leaders on Friday to heed his call for social justice and apply it to the fight for universal health care coverage and a fair criminal justice system.

In a Mason City church basement, in a meeting with city leaders in racially diverse Waterloo, at a town hall-style meeting in Cedar Rapids and in a packed home in Iowa City, Booker continuall­y likened domestic problems to the denial of civil rights.

“You cannot have life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness if you don’t have health care,” the Democratic senator told an overwhelmi­ngly white audience of about 100 who turned out despite sub-zero temperatur­es. “That’s not justice.”

Later, in a racially mixed crowd in Waterloo, Booker bemoaned a criminal justice system that disproport­ionately punishes racial minorities and “ultimately makes us a country that has a cancer on our soul.”

Race is shaping up to be central to the Democratic presidenti­al campaign. Democratic prospects have called President Donald Trump’s portrayal of immigrants racist and condemned his reaction to a deadly 2017 demonstrat­ion in Virginia as being sympatheti­c toward white supremacis­ts.

Booker, who is African-American, is starting his campaign for the Iowa caucuses by framing the election in terms of a movement, like those for civil and voting rights more than a half century ago.

“We are a nation in crisis that is ripping itself apart with leaders who are pitting us against each other because of our race or our political party,” Booker boomed in Iowa City. “I believe we can light this world on fire again, and put the indivisibl­e back in this nation again.”

Jeannie Maybanks, who met Booker during an event in Cedar Rapids, called him “an inspiratio­nal figure.”

“He’s got so much enthusiasm,” Maybanks added. “He says what he says with such conviction. It’s infectious.”

Booker voraciousl­y signed autographs, shook hands and stood for selfies, taking the now-commonplac­e political glad-handing a step further. Booker repeatedly took the phones of people he met and recorded digital video messages of himself and Iowans, smiling and joking with them.

In Waterloo, Booker became the first presidenti­al candidate this year to visit Black Hawk County, where the black population — at 9 percent — is more than twice that of Iowa overall.

Booker, a former mayor of Newark, held a public panel discussion in Waterloo focusing mainly on issues facing the black community.

Booker touted the passage of the a criminal justice reform bill in December as an act that benefits minority men, though University of Iowa law school student Daisy Cruz said the bill didn’t go far enough.

 ?? AP Photo/chArlIe NeIbergAll ?? U.S. Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., poses for a photo with Chris Peterson, of Clear Lake, Iowa, (right) during a meet and greet with local residents at the First Congregati­onal United Church of Christ, on Friday in Mason City, Iowa.
AP Photo/chArlIe NeIbergAll U.S. Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., poses for a photo with Chris Peterson, of Clear Lake, Iowa, (right) during a meet and greet with local residents at the First Congregati­onal United Church of Christ, on Friday in Mason City, Iowa.

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