New York Daily News

Joe lauds Rev. Al

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

President Biden touted his $2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan Wednesday in opening remarks to the National Action Network, the civil rights group led by the Rev. Al Sharpton, whom Biden praised for “fighting for the soul of America.”

Biden laced his comments with references to controvers­ial new laws in states like Georgia aimed at increasing voter restrictio­ns — a policy he likened to the racist Jim Crow laws of years past — and touched on his own $1.9 trillion COVID stimulus law, which he said is projected to cut poverty among Blacks by 37%.

“From my perspectiv­e, it’s only the beginning,” Biden said of the stimulus. “My American Jobs Plan will make generation­al investment­s in rebuilding America, delivering good jobs, equity and opportunit­y to Black neighborho­ods that never seem to get dealt in on the American Dream.”

That plan — a proposed infrastruc­ture outlay of $2 trillion that’s now being debated in Congress — has taken flak from Republican­s as overly broad and for its provision to raise taxes on the rich.

On Wednesday, Biden, who delivered his remarks remotely, homed in on the aspects of it most likely to resonate with Blacks, noting that the plan would replace lead pipes that carry drinking water in places like Flint, Mich., where many Blacks were poisoned by contaminat­ed tap water.

“We have so much work to do,” he said, turning his attention to Sharpton. “But I know that together we’re going to continue to make extraordin­ary progress, so thank you, thank you for everything you do.”

His short remarks helped kick off the National Action Network’s 30th annual national convention at a Times Square hotel, which also boasted several other political heavyweigh­ts, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Attorney General Merrick Garland — all of whom spoke at the event as well.

The lineup represente­d a sharp shift from Biden’s predecesso­r, President Donald Trump, who was at odds with Sharpton throughout the entirety of his time in the Oval Office.

While Biden touched briefly on criminal justice and police reform, Sharpton put more emphasis on those issues, which have been front and center since a white Minnesota cop shot and killed an unarmed 20-year-old Black man during a traffic stop Sunday. To many, he said, people killed by police represent “an issue,” but he added that their families have a different perspectiv­e.

“This is their flesh and blood. This is their child. They did not ask to become leaders or activists or symbols,” Sharpton said. “They woke up one morning, and their whole world had changed.”

Schumer (D-New York), who also spoke remotely, focused much of what he had to say on how Biden’s stimulus would benefit Blacks as well, but only made glancing mention of police reform measures now in the works. Those measures, which are included in the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, named after another Black man who died while in custody of a white police officer, have faced opposition from Republican­s in the evenly divided Senate. Pelosi (D-Calif.) noted the House of Representa­tives voted to support the bill.

Garland assured that the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division is “already hard at work.”

“It is stepping up its efforts to ensure the right to vote. It is combating discrimina­tion in areas from housing to education to employment. And it will work hard to ensure accountabi­lity for law enforcemen­t misconduct,” he said. “It will also prioritize investigat­ing whether government agencies are engaging in patterns or practices that deprive individual­s of their federal or constituti­onal rights.”

 ??  ?? The Rev. Al Sharpton at news conference Wednesday addressing group including Benjamin Crump (left), lawyer for family of Daunte Wright, who was fatally shot by a Minnesota cop on Sunday. Family members of other Black shooting victims, including Gwen Carr (third from left back), the mother of Eric Garner, also listen in.
The Rev. Al Sharpton at news conference Wednesday addressing group including Benjamin Crump (left), lawyer for family of Daunte Wright, who was fatally shot by a Minnesota cop on Sunday. Family members of other Black shooting victims, including Gwen Carr (third from left back), the mother of Eric Garner, also listen in.
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