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Black business PAC backs 14 in midterms

Group hopes its financial clout helps candidates

- Fredreka Schouten

“You need a coalition to get anything done in politics.” Akunna Cook Black Economic Alliance’s executive director

WASHINGTON – A new political organizati­on launched by African-American business executives is expanding quickly and endorsed 14 House, Senate and gubernator­ial candidates Monday, as it seeks to push black economic issues to the forefront of November’s midterm elections.

The Black Economic Alliance is putting its financial clout and connection­s behind candidates in high-profile races. That includes Democrat Mike Espy, the former congressma­n and U.S. agricultur­e secretary now in a three-way battle for a U.S. Senate seat from Mississipp­i, the state with the highest percentage of African-American residents in the nation.

Other candidates the alliance is endorsing: former Nevada congressma­n Steven Horsford, who is running for an open Las Vegas-area U.S. House seat and Texas Democrat Colin Allred, a lawyer and former Tennessee Titans linebacker hoping to oust 11-term Rep. Pete Sessions in a Dallas district Democrat Hillary Clinton won in 2016.

The endorsemen­ts, provided first to USA TODAY, focus on competitiv­e contests playing out mostly in districts and states where the black population is significan­t and African-American turnout could be decisive in November.

Tony Coles, the group’s co-chairman, said the alliance represents the first time that black business leaders have joined to build their own political action committee.

“This is an important moment in time because we recognize that black Americans haven’t been able to participat­e as fully and as completely in the American Dream” as other groups, said Coles, who is chairman and CEO of Yumanity Therapeuti­cs, a Massachuse­ttsbased biotech company.

While black unemployme­nt dropped to historic lows this year, he noted that the rate – which hit 6.3 percent in August – still trails the white unemployme­nt rate, which stands at 3.4 percent.

Electing officials who will advance workforce developmen­t and other economic issues the alliance cares about will help all Americans, regardless of race or ethnicity, Coles said. “This will be a pebble that will create a ripple in a very big pond.”

The alliance’s organizers, a mix of profession­als from the worlds of finance, high-tech, politics and media, have met informally in the past through their philanthro­pic work and have donated individual­ly to politician­s. But Coles said they decided to pool their money into something bigger to make a “durable” impact.

Its leaders include Charles Phillips, the CEO of software firm Infor and former president of Oracle; Marva Smalls, global head of inclusion strategy for Viacom; and Fred Terrell, a senior adviser at Credit Suisse.

Mellody Hobson, the president of Chicago-based investment firm Ariel Investment­s, donated $250,000 to the group in June, according to its Federal Election Commission filings.

The group’s board also is expanding to include some bold-faced political names: former Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele; Ron Kirk, former U.S. trade representa­tive; former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm; and Bakari Sellers, a former state representa­tive in South Carolina.

Black power in politics

The alliance’s action comes as a growing number of political action committees focus on boosting black political power. The 2-year-old Collective PAC, for instance, spent nearly $2 million supporting Andrew Gillum’s upset victory in last month’s gubernator­ial primary in Florida. Should the Democrat win in November, he would become Florida’s first black chief executive.

Political organizati­ons run by African-Americans also are working to aid Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams in her quest to become the nation’s first black female governor.

Even if their candidates falter in November, these organizati­ons “are building capacity and building institutio­ns that can be used in the future to make sure that people of color turn out at rates that are commensura­te with their numbers in the population,” said Andra Gillespie, an assistant professor of political science at Emory University in Atlanta.

The alliance has raised about $3.5 million – a tiny sum when compared with the nearly $100 million collected by the Congressio­nal Leadership Fund, a super PAC tied to Republican leaders in the House. (Contributi­ons from one couple, billionair­e casino executive Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam, account for nearly a third of the leadership fund’s donations through June.)

Coles said that by focusing narrowly on driving turnout in competitiv­e contests, “we hope to deploy the dollars in a way in which a difference can be made.” The alliance is working with local groups to drive turnout beyond what Cook called the “cliche” of last-minute visits by politician­s to black churches on get-out-the-vote weekends.

The group, which began formulatin­g its plan last summer, hasn’t wasted time. It now has a hybrid political action committee, which can donate directly to federal candidates and raise and spend unlimited amounts on candidates’ behalf through a super PAC arm. It also has a nonprofit branch and another political committee that can focus on down-ballot contests in the states.

The endorsemen­ts coming Monday are the first House contests in which the group has engaged. Democrats need to flip 23 Republican-held seats in the House to seize control of the chamber.

Coalition building

The organizati­on bills itself as non- partisan and is not just backing AfricanAme­rican candidates. Monday’s endorsemen­ts include Democrat Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who wants to oust Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, and Phil Bredesen, a former Tennessee governor battling Republican Rep. Marsha Blackburn for an open Senate seat now held by a Republican, Sen. Bob Corker.

“You need a coalition to get anything done in politics,” said Akunna Cook, the alliance’s executive director. She and Coles say they want to help candidates who will champion issues that matter to the alliance, such as increasing home ownership and boosting wages.

Some of its endorsed candidates, including O’Rourke, have vowed not to take PAC money. Cook said the alliance’s backing, even without direct financial contributi­ons, could improve these candidates’ standing with AfricanAme­rican voters.

Chris Evans, O’Rourke’s communicat­ion director, said his boss already is talking about maternal health, education and greater access to small-business loans as he campaigns across Texas. O’Rourke’ recent hourlong interview via Skype with the PAC’s endorsemen­t team helped him delve more deeply into the topics the alliance cares about, Evans said.

“The conversati­on was more important than any kind of PAC check,” he said. “We want to work with everyone and take their ideas and see how they fit into Texas.”

The group made its first set of endorsemen­ts last month, one day after the one-year anniversar­y of the white nationalis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

It backed four Democrats in that round, including Abrams in Georgia and Maryland’s Ben Jealous, who is vying to become his state’s first black governor. The group also endorsed Richard Cordray in his quest to succeed Republican John Kasich as Ohio governor and Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, the 2016 Democratic vice-presidenti­al nominee, who is running for re-election.

In this week’s round of endorsemen­ts, it is backing 10 House candidates, three Senate hopefuls and one gubernator­ial contender, Democrat James Smith in South Carolina.

Other candidates getting the alliance’s nod Monday include: Democrat Antonio Delgado, a Harvard-educated lawyer and former rapper hoping to unseat freshman GOP Rep. John Faso in New York’s competitiv­e 19th Congressio­nal District; Democrat and retired naval officer Elaine Luria, who is running for the U.S. House from Virginia; and Democrat Joe Cunningham, who is competing in a closely watched U.S. House race in South Carolina against Republican Katie Arrington.

Arrington, who has aligned herself closely with President Donald Trump, knocked off GOP Rep. Mark Sanford in the state’s Republican primary in June.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democrat Mike Espy is running for the U.S. Senate from Mississipp­i.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Democrat Mike Espy is running for the U.S. Senate from Mississipp­i.
 ??  ?? Colin Allred
Colin Allred
 ??  ?? Ben Jealous
Ben Jealous
 ??  ?? Steven Horsford
Steven Horsford

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