BIDEN SIGNS LAW MAKING JUNETEENTH A HOLIDAY
Federal observance received widespread bipartisan support
President Joe Biden on Thursday signed into law a measure that establishes Juneteenth as a federal holiday, taking advantage of sudden and broad bipartisan agreement to commemorate the end of slavery in the United States after years of debate and inaction.
In signing the measure — which resulted in an unexpected day off today for federal workers — Biden also used the occasion to advocate for more aggressive action on voting access and other racial equity measures that have been at the heart of his administration’s agenda.
“Great nations don’t ignore their most painful moments. They embrace them,” Biden said in a ceremony in the East Room of
the White House. “Great nations don’t walk away. We come to terms with mistakes we made. And remembering those moments, we begin to heal and grow stronger.”
Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, the first woman of color to serve in that position, stressed during the ceremony that a national commemoration of Juneteenth — a day marking the emancipation of enslaved people after the Civil War — should also compel the nation to work to achieve equality in education, in economics and in other areas.
“Folks, the promise of equality is not going to be fulfilled until we become real, it becomes real in our schools and in our main streets and in our neighborhoods,” Biden said. “It’s not going to be fulfilled as long as our sacred right to vote remains under attack . . . we can’t rest until the promise of equality is fulfilled for every one of us.”
Biden was flanked Thursday by several members of the Congressional Black Caucus and other lawmakers who had championed the Juneteenth legislation. Also by Biden’s side was Opal Lee, a 94-year-old activist from Fort Worth who had lobbied for decades to establish the day as a national holiday.
Underscoring the historical significance, Biden said establishing Juneteenth as a federal holiday “will go down for me as one of the greatest honors I will have as president.”
In her own remarks, Harris noted that it took more than two years after the issuing of the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, which declared an end to slavery in the United States, for enslaved Black people to actually
become free. She, too, used the historic moment to implore for action.
“We have come far, and we have far to go. But today is a day of celebration,” Harris said. “It is not only a day of pride, it is also a day for us to reaffirm and rededicate ourselves to action.”
Because June 19 falls on a Saturday this year, the Juneteenth federal holiday will be observed today, according to the Office of Personnel Management, which oversees the roughly 2.1 million federal civilian workforce. It is the first new federal holiday that has been established by Congress since 1983, when Martin Luther King Jr. Day was created for the third Monday of every January.
In San Diego, federal court employees were told Thursday afternoon that they could take today off, but only with their supervisors’ approval. Any employee who ends up working today can take off another day within the next two months.
The near-unanimity around creating Juneteenth came amid much deeper disagreements in Washington — not only over legislation that is critical to the Biden administration’s equity agenda but a growing political debate across the country over teaching about systemic racism in schools.
Congress is embroiled in two major legislative fights critical to the White House, Democratic lawmakers and activists. The first — a massive voting access and campaign finance measure — is all but certain to fall victim to a Republican-led filibuster in the Senate next week. The other is a significant overhaul of policing practices that has been a point of debate since the death of George Floyd in May 2020 at the hands of a White Minneapolis police officer, who was
convicted of murder in April.
The chief negotiators on the policing measure have worked for months to craft a compromise measure that would bar controversial law enforcement practices such as chokeholds while making either officers or police departments more susceptible to lawsuits for use of excessive force.
Absent major advancements on Capitol Hill, Biden has signed several executive orders addressing inequality embedded in American life, such as steps to bolster homeownership among racial minorities and initiatives to aid minority small businesses and entrepreneurs.
The president also has tapped Harris as his administration’s point person on voting rights, adding another politically complicated issue to her legislative portfolio.
“As we work towards substantive pieces of legislation to protect voting rights and create transparency and accountability in policing, we are encouraged by today’s signing of the Juneteenth bill,” NAACP President Derrick Johnson said Thursday. “It is a reminder that freedom is an ongoing fight.”
Meanwhile, some of the handful of conservative opponents to the Juneteenth legislation have drawn links between the overwhelmingly popular bill and the debate over “critical race theory” — a method of teaching and examining systemic racism that has become a lightning rod for conservatives.
One of them, Rep. Matthew Rosendale, RMont., said the establishment of Juneteenth was part of a broader effort by liberals to make critical race theory “the reigning ideology of our country.”
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas the chief Republican
backer of the Juneteenth legislation, in an interview Thursday called that notion “just beyond kooky.”
“Obviously we still haven’t fully resolved the issue of race in our society,” Cornyn said. “One reason why I co-sponsored the Juneteenth federal holiday is because I think more people need to have an appreciation for history and the original sin of slavery.”
Rep. Tom McClintock of California was one of 14 House Republicans who voted against the bill.
“I don’t think it is a healthy thing to reach into the dead past, revive its most malignant conflicts and reintroduce them into our age,” McClintock said. “Emancipation should be celebrated by honoring the person responsible for it, Abraham Lincoln, as we once did.”
The establishment of Juneteenth as a federal holiday moved at a surprisingly rapid clip this week, particularly for Congress’s otherwise lethargic standards.
Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., had blocked passage of the Juneteenth legislation for nearly a year, after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis and the national reckoning on race that followed renewed momentum for the efforts to formally commemorate the day marking the end of slavery in Texas.
But in a surprise move, Johnson — who said he had opposed Juneteenth as a federal holiday for economic reasons — went to the Senate floor Tuesday to announce that he was dropping his objections. Leaders in both chambers then moved swiftly to pass the measure through the House and Senate.