The Columbus Dispatch

Election a referendum on race in America

Convergenc­e of pandemic, joblessnes­s, police brutality bring country a reckoning

- Kat Stafford

DETROIT – Every day feels like a raw wound for Omari Barksdale.

His sister, Laneeka Barksdale, died of COVID-19 in late March in Detroit – and since then, so have more than 228,000 Americans. Many were Black Americans whose communitie­s were disproport­ionately devastated by the virus.

Barksdale watched with alarm as the toll of the country’s racial injustice mounted. People of color bore the brunt of pandemic-related job losses. Police shot and killed Breonna Taylor inside her Kentucky home, and a Minneapoli­s police officer pressed a knee into George Floyd’s neck for nearly eight minutes.

The convergenc­e of the pandemic, joblessnes­s and police brutality has forced the U.S. to confront its legacy of systemic racism. For Barksdale and many other Black Americans, it’s turned the presidenti­al election into a referendum on race relations, an opportunit­y to move toward healing or the potential of a deeper divide.

“For many years, we’ve had this commentary about how far we’ve come, but if you look at the landscape and dynamics right now of America, we’re back in the ’50s and ’60s,” said Barksdale, who began leading a team of volunteers canvassing Michigan voters after his sister’s death. “The reasons for protesting are the same now as they were then: for the protection of Black lives, the opportunit­y for Black lives and the understand­ing and value of Black lives.”

Black voters will be decisive in the outcome. Democrat Joe Biden is relying on strong turnout among Black voters in cities such as Detroit, Philadelph­ia and Milwaukee to tip critical swing states in his direction. President Donald Trump, meanwhile, is focusing on appeals to his core base of white voters.

“Another four years of Trump would completely set us back and the advancemen­ts that we’ve made towards equal rights, human rights and civil rights,” said the Rev. Al Sharpton, a longtime civil rights leader. “It would take us 20 or 30 years, a generation, to get back what he would cement.”

The election-year reckoning is the culminatio­n of centuries of inequity and racism that predate Trump’s political

career. But Trump has pulled at the nation’s racial divide throughout his presidency, blaming “both sides” for violence between white supremacis­ts and antiracism protesters in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, and telling four Democratic congresswo­men of color to go back to the “broken and crime infested” countries they came from, despite the women being American citizens.

“I fear for our communitie­s if he retains the seat of the presidency for four more years. I also have a deep worry that his continued occupation of that seat would result in those who intend us harm who will feel that they have carte blanche to do so,” said Stacey Abrams, a voting rights activist and former Georgia gubernator­ial candidate.

Trump points to criminal justice reform, opportunit­y zones and funding for historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es as examples of what he’s done for Black Americans, but many critics argue his claims are exaggerate­d or undermined by his comments.

After a summer of nationwide unrest led to millions marching in the streets, Trump billed himself as a leader who will restore “law and order” – an attempt to appeal to white grievances and allay white suburban fears. Last week, Trump’s presidenti­al adviser and sonin-law Jared Kushner said the president wants to help Black Americans, but they have to “want to be successful” for his policies to work.

“What we see is when racism goes unchecked and becomes institutio­nalized publicly and becomes a part of our administra­tion,” said Jessica Byrd, who leads the Movement for Black Lives’ Electoral Justice Project and The Frontline, a multiracia­l coalition effort to galvanize voters. “We’ve seen firsthand the way that a vocal minority can become an extremist power building faction.”

Biden has his own vulnerabil­ities on race, including the poor treatment of Anita Hill at Clarence Thomas’ Supreme Court confirmation hearing and a 1994 crime bill that has been blamed for in

carceratin­g a generation of Black men.

But Biden has put Black voters at the center of his 2020 campaign and, unlike Trump, has acknowledg­ed systemic racism and pledged to address it.

“Donald Trump fails to condemn white supremacy, doesn’t believe that systemic racism is a problem and won’t say that Black lives matter,” Biden said Tuesday in Atlanta. “We know Black lives matter.”

In the final stretch of the campaign, Black voters are organizing to make sure their ballots are counted. Latosha Brown, the co-founder of Black Voters Matter Fund, said her organizati­on has traveled across 15 states to galvanize voters, including in rural counties and smaller cities that are often ignored.

“America is at its tipping point,” Brown said. “We’re in a perfect storm of being at the intersecti­on of a health pandemic, an intersecti­on of a lot of uncertaint­y around the political future of this country, and the economic future of this country and blatant open racism.”

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP ?? Priscilla Duerrero from Boston, currently living in Washington, D.C., attends the March on Washington at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, on the 57th anniversar­y of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have A Dream” speech, on Aug. 28. A convergenc­e of three unpreceden­ted, simultaneo­us national crises – the coronaviru­s pandemic, joblessnes­s and police brutality – has led many to believe this presidenti­al election is a referendum on race relations in America.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP Priscilla Duerrero from Boston, currently living in Washington, D.C., attends the March on Washington at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, on the 57th anniversar­y of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have A Dream” speech, on Aug. 28. A convergenc­e of three unpreceden­ted, simultaneo­us national crises – the coronaviru­s pandemic, joblessnes­s and police brutality – has led many to believe this presidenti­al election is a referendum on race relations in America.

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