Biden/Harris administration : What’s in it for Black America?

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America has what it voted for. Trump is gone. Though Trumpism must be dealt with in another forum.

Despite the failed coup d’état on Jan. 6, President Biden and Vice President Harris have been sworn in. The Biden/Harris administration is now a reality.

The work begins

The majority of Americans are ready for the country to move forward but where does it go and how does it get there?

The “empire” of America must now come to grips with a number of structural problems:

Across the United States, voter suppression policies continue to disenfranchise the poor and voters of color.

In the aftermath of the George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbury murders too many Americans do not feel safe in their own communities.

Twenty-four million American’s have died from COVID-19 as the government struggles with the logistics of vaccine distribution and inoculation.

COVID-19 also continues to ravage the American economy. According to the  Department of Labor, the four-week moving average of first-time filings for unemployment insurance claims was 834,250, an increase of 18,250 from the previous week’s revised average.

Also, 30 to 40 million Americans are on the verge of being evicted from their homes in the dead of winter and in the midst of a pandemic.

Two societies

The world also knows as W.E.B Du Bois wrote, that the problem of the 20th century is “the problem of the color line.”

In 1967 The Kerner Commission warned, “Our nation is moving toward two societies, one Black, one White – separate and unequal” and COVID-19 has highlighted deep-rooted systemic racial disparities in health care; highlighting the adage, when America catches a cold, Black America gets pneumonia.

As the Biden administration implements its COVID, economic, social justice, education, and other programs; African Americans must be at the forefront of articulating the needs of and for the African American community.

It will be fatal for the community if it overlooks the urgency of the moment.

Making that push

How quickly Biden appeared to set aside the fact that Black voters saved his candidacy and put him in the White House. He was about to drop out of the race until African American voters in South Carolina delivered him a resounding win.

Yet, in December, civil rights leaders had to demand a meeting with the then President elect in order to express their concerns about a lack of focus on racial equity, social justice, and increased diversity in the Biden-Harris cabinet.

South Carolina Rep. Jim Clyburn is on record saying, not enough Black Americans have been nominated to join the incoming Biden administration.

“I want to see where the process leads to…But so far it’s not good.”

Biden has confused gender diversity and diversity of phenotype and pigmentation with the diversity of perspective and policy.

Look at the names and records of his cabinet selections and nominees. For the most part it’s “Clinton/Obama retreads” – the same people and perspectives that have given us the neoliberal and imperialists policies that have driven the country into the ditch. Republicans have contributed to this as well.

But right now, the focus is on President Biden and Vice President Harris.

Our demands

What is the African American community willing to demand?

We need a Marshall Plan for the African American community. If the U.S. could spend $15B to rebuild Europe after the devastation of WWII and pass a $740B Defense Authorization Act, the U.S. can invest the needed dollars to rebuild the American communities of color that it devastated with the Tulsa race riot, the Red Summer of 1919 and the gutting of urban centers with the building of the highway system of the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s.

Unsung heroes

The African American community saved Biden’s bid for the Democratic presidential nomination and put him in the White House.

The African American community saved the Senate for the Democrats with its successful efforts in Georgia.

The question is not what rewards the Black community will be given for its efforts. Instead, the Black community must decide what it is willing to demand.

Dr. Leonard Weather, Jr. is president of the National Medical Association (NMA). Contact him via the NMA’s website, www.nmanet.org, or via email at dr_weather@msn.com or president@nmanet.org.

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