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Are mainstream media doing enough to expose the hypocrisy of the Republican Party with regard to people of color and issues they care about?

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and former Alabama Rep. Artur Davis were among the long list of minority politicians featured at the 2012 Republican National Convention in August. While those who spoke there were markedly diverse, RNC delegates were overwhelmingly White.

Some media outlets such as the Washington Post reported on this racial disconnect, noting that just 2 percent of Republican delegates were African-American. Overall, the Republican Party is 87 percent White and the Democratic Party 61 percent White, according to the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press. The 2010 U.S. Census recorded the nation's non-Hispanic White population at 64 percent.

Advocates for communities of color express concern about the GOP's array of minority speakers even as some policies that conservatives tout are widely regarded as detrimental to people of color, including strident anti-illegal immigration measures, cuts in social service programs and anti-Muslim legislation. The issue is compounded because mainstream media rarely cited these contradictions.

Political experts say news coverage should have noted that Republicans of color featured at the convention don't generally represent political views of American minority groups. Also missing in the coverage, they say, is whether minorities have influential positions in Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney's campaign.

Viviana Hurtado, the nonpartisan political writer behind The Wise Latina Club blog, covered both conventions. Her take on seeing Latino Republicans such as Rubio, New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez and U.S. Senate candidate Ted Cruz of Texas speak is that the "face doesn't match the base."

She says, "There in Tampa, I didn't see Latino representation or really minority representation." Latino Republicans have won gubernatorial and congressional offices, and the GOP did discuss how Romney's economic platform would benefit Latinos. But Hurtado says the GOP failed to address the "elefante (elephant) in the room — immigration.

"There has been an avoidance of the immigration issue," Hurtado says. "Latinos have been told Gov. Romney will deal with immigration once he's elected. That's a promise Latinos are very, very wary of."

Hurtado says Latinos are reluctant to trust the GOP on immigration given that prominent Republican Kris Kobach, Kansas secretary of state, helped devise controversial legislation to crack down on unauthorized immigration in Arizona and Alabama.

Opponents of such legislation argue that it will result in racial profiling and harassment of Latinos. Romney hasn't taken a clear stance on immigration reform and during Republican primaries, urged undocumented immigrants to "self-deport."

The mainstream media haven't pressured Romney to spell out his plan on immigration and didn't stress his failure to do so during coverage of the convention. If more Latinos held positions of power in mainstream media, coverage may have highlighted that fact, Hurtado says.

She also takes issue with how Democrats engaged Latinos at their convention and says Democrats must focus on issues beyond immigration. While reporting on the DNC, she attended two panels about voter suppression and the economy and says she was shocked to discover that no Hispanics were on either.

Republican political consultant Raynard Jackson also criticizes both parties. He says the GOP is unlikely to attract voters of color by featuring a diverse lineup of convention speakers. "It was a stupid strategy," he says. "It's not going to provide any dividends. It's insulting."

Jackson says the media should have examined how many people of color have influential positions in Romney's campaign, and he notes that Romney has no people of color controlling his campaign budget or exercising authority over others. Jackson says he doesn't consider that Tara Wall, a senior communications adviser to the campaign who serves primarily to help with African-American outreach, is such a figure.

Jackson criticizes both parties for not granting more interviews to the Black press.

Last week, on TheLoop21.com, the Black interest website, political blogger Aaron Morrison wrote an op-ed headlined "GOP Leaders Won't Acknowledge Party Racism Because They Don't Have To." He says the sheer whiteness of the Republican Party has made race an issue that conservatives don't even have to engage. But he says media should point out that Republicans have backed photo-ID laws and cuts to social services, moves that could hurt communities of color.

Moreover, Morrison says Rubio and two other minority speakers at the convention — former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Mia Love, a Utah congressional candidate — don't appear to believe that institutional racism is a major problem, a viewpoint that largely contrasts with feelings of civil rights groups.

Rice, for example, is "a woman who is proud to be Black," Morrison says. "She transcended and overcome a lot of racial discrimination. Her story is racism still exists but Blacks can achieve and go really far in life."

While that statement is true, Morrison notes that not everyone can pull themselves up by the bootstraps.

During the GOP convention, Republicans also featured people from different religious faiths. A Sikh was invited to deliver a prayer, a seeming show of solidarity after Wade Michael Page, an Army veteran with White supremacist ties, shot and killed six Sikhs at a Wisconsin temple in August. Page's motive remains unclear, but reports have speculated that he mistook the Sikhs for Muslims.

Corey Saylor, legislative director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Washington, says Republicans must be held accountable for anti-Muslim legislation and rhetoric.

In July, Rep. Michelle Bachmann (R-Minn.) and four other conservative Republicans in Congress accused Huma Abedin, deputy chief of staff to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, of having ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, an international political group linked to terrorism.

"What we see is rhetoric that essentially defines Muslims as a threat to frighten voters," Saylor says. "It's an unfortunate trend we see in the Republican Party."

Saylor says the media must do more than simply repeat politicians' wild accusations about Muslims, noting that former presidential contenders Herman Cain and Newt Gingrich have also spoken negatively about them. Repeating such claims without analysis fuels misperceptions about Muslims, Saylor says.

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) called the charges against Abedin "sinister accusations" with "no logic, no basis and no merit," and House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) said, ". . . I think accusations like this being thrown around are pretty dangerous." GOP conservatives haven't been as quick to counter Islamophobic rhetoric.

John Bolton, a Romney foreign policy adviser and former George W. Bush administration official, said he was "mystified" by criticism of Bachmann.

Thinkprogress.org, an alternative news site, reported that Romney refused to tell reporters at an event in Reno, Nev., whether Bachmann's comments about Abedin crossed the line, saying, "I'm not going to tell other people what things to talk about. Those are not things that are part of my campaign."

Bolton has also been criticized for agreeing to speak at a 9/11 event organized by conservative activist Pamela Geller, identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center as "the anti-Muslim movement's most visible and flamboyant figurehead. . . . relentlessly shrill and coarse in her broad-brush denunciations of Islam . . . .

Saylor describes Geller as "the mouthpiece of the anti-Muslim movement," and says, "Government officials will not appear with anti-Semites and White supremacists, so equally they should not appear with Muslim haters."

In 2000, the media highlighted then-presidential candidate George W. Bush's appearance at Bob Jones University, a Christian school in Greenville, S.C., that at that time banned interracial dating. Under political pressure because of news coverage, Bush expressed regret for not criticizing the policy, and the ban was eventually dropped. Media exposure can play a similar role today, especially when people of color are represented in newsrooms.

"We need journalists of color at the highest levels, not just out front anchoring and reporting but also at the management level," Hurtado says. "When you don't have journalists of color, what's going to be absent is content."

Monday, 01 October 2012 15:18
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Appearance Caps CBC Conference

 

The wife of the president of the United States, during an historic occasion, urged guests at an elite and extremely chic dinner to focus their efforts on re-electing her husband and to get involved in the political process.

First Lady Michelle Obama told thousands of guests and honorees at the Phoenix Awards Dinner of the 42nd Annual Legislative Conference on Sept. 22 that even though legal racial segregation has ended, "our journey is far from over."

"Too many of us choose not to participate in politics," Obama, 50, said to the audience at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Northwest. "Let me say that other folks are participating and they are raising money and getting organized."

Obama is the first presidential spouse to keynote the Phoenix Dinner. She is also a former Congressional Black Caucus spouse, having served in that capacity as the wife of Sen. Barack Obama, an Illinois Democrat who collaborated with other members of the chamber from 2005-2009, before being elected the 44th president of the United States.

Obama used the examples of Ronald Dellums and Patricia Schroeder in the 1970s as freshman U.S. representatives as models of persistence in the face of adversity.

"When Dellums and Schroeder were elected to Congress, they were assigned to be on the House Armed Services Committee," she said. "The chairman of the committee did not like that so he assigned one chair for both of them and they had to rotate using that seat."

Obama said that eventually the chairman relented and treated them as full members of the committee. Dellums eventually became the first black chairman of the powerful committee.

She also cited the persistence of Louis Stokes, the first black congressman from Cleveland who fought in segregated conditions in World War II and rose to prominence in national politics.

Obama said that it is up to blacks to work hard to change the political system in their favor.

"We must show up to vote every year, every election," she said. "It must be all of us. It is our birthright."

She said that "in every election, every voice must be heard" and "this is the march of our time."

"This requires constant and sustained hard work," she said. "When we get tired, think of Congressman Dellums and Congressman Stokes."

She said that a particular photo in the White House has touched her heart.

"Every few months the White House photographers rotate photos [in the Oval Office] but one that stays is the one where Barack bends over so that a black boy can touch his hair," she said. "When the boy touches my husband's hair, the boy says 'yes, it does feel the same.' We now have young people growing up and taking for granted that an African American can be president."

Obama said that political activism must be done for the sake of young people.

"We must fulfill the promise of democracy for all of our children," she said.

Sharon Jefferson of Milwaukee described Obama's speech as being "awesome and phenomenal."

"She definitely put it in perspective what we need to do for the elections," said Jefferson, 57. "It is good advice for the black community."

Cynthia Anderson of Northwest said that Obama's speech was "motivational and right on the spot."

"We need to rethink this election and rally people to vote," said Anderson, 46.

A number of people received honors including U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown [D-Fla.] and former Charlotte Mayor Harvey Gantt, who both received the Harold Washington Phoenix Award and famed film director George Lucas and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, received the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Chair Phoenix Award. Elsie Scott, the outgoing president of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation in Northwest, received a plaque and words of praise from various speakers.

Albert Black, who runs a nonprofit dedicated to improving the lives of children in Austin, said that he enjoyed the dinner and the legislative conference in general.

"We need to take what we learned here back to our communities and use the information for [our] benefit," said Black, 63.

Thursday, 27 September 2012 16:09
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Encourage High Voter Turnout to Offset Challenge

A panel discussion on voter suppression, sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus [CBC], produced more than 90 minutes of pointed conversation, fireworks, verbal sparring – all a microcosm of the contentious nature of the issue playing out on the national stage.

The Rev. Al Sharpton and conservative commentator Crystal Wright wrangled most frequently during the town hall at the 42nd Annual Legislative Conference, each sparring, jostling to make their point, battling for verbal supremacy, dismissing the other's comments.

Beneath the lively exchanges at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Northwest, is the very real situation that voting rights is under siege by Republican-led state houses which have proposed or instituted onerous voting laws panelists argued are adversely affecting constituencies who will most likely vote for President Barack Obama and Democrats.

"There are 181 restrictive voter ID laws that have been introduced all over the country," said Donna Brazile, veteran political strategist, academic and vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee. "Seventeen have passed and the impact is that 218 electoral votes are at stake. My mother told me that when you change the rules in the middle of the game, that's cheating!"

Brazile and others contend that the laws that are now present or being considered in 41 states are designed to disenfranchise minorities, the elderly, the poor, students, and disabled voters who are often less likely to have the types of IDs the GOP is demanding. At the same time, supporters insist the laws are necessary to maintain the integrity of the election process and prevent fraud.

Starting last year, panelists said, Republicans have been focused on turning the Nov. 6 election in their favor. In Texas, for example, prospective voters can register to vote with a gun or a hunting license but a student ID has been deemed insufficient by election officials.

Around the country, several panelists said, the GOP has done away with early and weekend voting; mandated that voters secure new IDs before they are allowed to vote; purged voter rolls in states like Florida, with most of those removed attached to the Democratic party; and Brazile said Republicans are intent on making it as difficult as possible for those seeking to exercise their right to vote, but she said regardless of the obstacles people face, they must not be deterred.

"This fall, we'll see barriers we have not seen since 1965," she told a standing-room-only audience of more than 2,000 participants. "Martin Luther King, Jr., gave us the ballot but we're going to have a hard time getting the ballot to people seeking to vote."

Moderator Marc Lamont Hill, Ph.D., echoed the sentiment of most of the panelists during opening comments.

"This is a 21st century form of racial discrimination," he intoned. "This is not anything to be objective about. This is a clear case of discrimination. Republicans don't want to win by genius, they want to win ... by the marginalization of poor, brown, black people. Obama galvanized a whole new generation of people. Now they [Republicans] have convinced us that for the sake of voter fraud, they have to restrict us."

"You have a greater chance of being struck by lightning in front of the house you won on Publishers Clearing House. We can lose an election, but we can never lose our vote."

Brazile was joined by the Rev. Al Sharpton, conservative columnist and commentator Crystal Wright, Reps. John Lewis [D-Ga.], Mel Watt [D-N.C.] and Marcia Fudge [D-Ohio] and Republican strategist and commentator Ron Christie.

Christie said he is aware of voter fraud and provided examples, but said he does not agree that the pursuit of those involved in these activities should come at the expense of people's ability to exercise their basic democratic right.

"The Indiana Supreme Court case paved the way for states to craft their own laws but I have a problem with Texas' law ... the Texas law is discriminating against low-income people."

Sharpton characterized GOP assertions that their desire is to root out voter fraud as a red herring.

"This is a solution looking for a problem, not the other way around," he said. "We're not against IDs ... we're against the new restrictive IDs. We say have the same IDs this year as when Reagan, Bush and Clinton ran."

Sharpton cited the case of an 85-year-old man who has to drive 27 miles to get an ID and pay $27 for the ID as well.

"That's a poll tax," he said. "This will potentially cost 5 million votes. In Watt's state, the president won by 14,000 votes. Shaving off 100,000 votes could turn the election. We need to fight to change the laws but do everything we can to vote this year. If they [Civil Rights activists] could stand up to Jim Clark, what excuse do we have to not get voter IDs?"

Wright scoffed at the assertions of Sharpton and most of the other panelists, saying that there is no racial discrimination in the efforts to combat voter fraud, adding that demands for new IDs have not adversely affected those seeking to vote. She buttressed her argument with studies which show that in Colorado, 500 non-citizens voted. And she suggested that a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the case involving the state of Indiana sanctioned the legislation GOP-controlled legislators are trying to pass.

"We have to look at the laws to find ways for people to prove who they are without others being disenfranchised," she said. "... On a very basic level, it's incumbent, regardless of the party, to know who they are voting for [on pocketbook issues] and where you live."

Sharpton and Wright butted heads verbally throughout the discussion with each accusing the other of misstating the facts.

"First of all, we can have different opinions but not different facts," he said addressing Wright following comments she made about the Indiana voter ID law that the U.S. Supreme Court upheld. "The Indiana case was not the same ID laws we're dealing with in Pennsylvania. We're talking about different states and different laws."

Pennsylvania has become ground zero in the GOP's voter registration efforts. A Pennsylvania judge upheld a law that requires voters to have a state-issued ID before they'll be allowed to vote. But residents have had great difficulty in securing these IDs and so far, fewer than 7,000 of the estimated 758,000 people on voter rolls have these photo IDs.

The number of people who lack the photo IDs needed to vote outnumber Obama's 2008 margin of victory in the state. That year, Obama carried Pennsylvania by 605,820 votes.

Laws in states such as South Carolina, Florida and Texas have been challenged by the U.S. Department of Justice under provisions of the Civil Rights Act because of a history of discriminatory election practices in those places.

Lewis, who is revered for his role in the Civil Rights movement, lamented the current situation, but also expressed frustration, saying he was "trying to be non-violent today."

Wednesday, 26 September 2012 01:14
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The substitute House Ethics Committee that investigated California Rep. Maxine Waters for allegedly steering bailout money to a bank where her husband owns stock, has now pointed a finger at the panel that polices member wrongdoing.

Warnings from the substitute committee that was appointed in February, came by way of several recommendations on how the permanent panel  should conduct itself.

Meanwhile, the committee recently announced that although the minority-owned OneUnited Bank received $12 million in bailout funds, it found no evidence that Waters knowingly violated Congressional standards or rules.

All along, the 11-term Los Angeles area congresswoman who was exonerated following a three-year probe that may have cost taxpayers as much as $1.3 million, had repeatedly insisted her efforts were part of a broader push to help minority-controlled financial institutions during the banking crisis.

Tuesday, 25 September 2012 17:02
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Most Americans are familiar with measuring poverty in terms of dollars and cents, believing that the dividing line between rich and poor is one that separates high incomes from medium – and low-range earnings. But a new study on poverty in New Orleans by local researchers released this month digs deeper and examines – not only incomes – but the relationship between asset wealth and being able to live above the poverty line.

Commissioned by the Greater New Orleans Foundation, the study, entitled "Assets & Opportunity Profile: New Orleans," is aimed at fueling "a local conversation about wealth, poverty and opportunity," according to the foundation, and presents "a snapshot of the financial security and opportunities for New Orleans residents."

Key findings in the document include research indicating that 37 percent of New Orleanians live in what is known as asset poverty, a category met when the liquidation of a person's assets is not enough to provide a higher-than-impoverished standard of living for a three-month period in the absence of a regular income.

Dr. Albert Ruesga, who heads the New Orleans foundation, calls that figure "staggering" and points out that New Orleans outpaces Louisiana and the rest of the country in the number of people who lack sufficient assets. But while Black households in New Orleans are hardest hit by the figures – half of all Black residents live in asset poverty – the impact of having limited hard assets is felt across racial, educational and even economic lines.

"Twenty-two percent of people who have a bachelor's degree in New Orleans live in asset poverty," Ruesga says. "Thirteen percent of residents who have advanced degrees live in asset poverty. That means there are people with master's degrees and doctorates who are living without adequate resources."

Forty percent of area Latinos live in asset poverty and more than 20 percent of whites and Asians join them. Ruesga points out that nearly 30 percent of New Orleanians with annual incomes between $45,000 and $70,000 also face challenges with surviving on their existing assets in lieu of a regular paycheck.

"This underscores just how many people are only one or two paychecks away from being homeless," Ruesga says. "This type of research is important because simply looking at poverty from an income standpoint is not enough; this helps to present a more complete picture. There are people with some pretty high incomes when you look at it on the surface, but who are still living in poverty when it comes to assets."

Solving these issues is a multi-pronged approach, Ruesga says, and the study lays out several recommendations for policymakers and stakeholders to examine like creating neighborhood-based financial centers, establishing a local earned income tax credit, and incorporating financial education into social service and workforce development programs.

"Municipalities can also limit the development of check cashing and payday loan centers through zoning restrictions," Ruesga adds. "These places take advantage of the 'underbanked' – people who either don't have a bank account for various reasons or have one and don't use it – and charge very high fees for their services."

Because more than 70 percent of New Orleans residents have subprime credit scores, Ruesga notes, affordable lending opportunities can be hard to come by. "They're not going to get a loan and the check cashing centers then serve as local banks. Second-chance banking for people with credit difficulties should be encouraged."

The foundation study comes on the heels of a flood of other data about the economic vitality of the New Orleans region, including a study produced by local researchers linking life expectancy in the area to one's neighborhood and an Urban League report examining the health of the city's business, social and political climate for Black residents.

But while the confluence of the information from the various reports is coincidental, Ruesga says the data contained in the three documents point to the need for systemic change in New Orleans and the reports build on each other and make it hard for policymakers to ignore the challenges faced by the city's residents.

But "on the positive side," according to the study, "entrepreneurship has spiked in the New Orleans metro post-Katrina." New Orleans has more self-employed residents than the national average, many of whom are Black, and study's authors contend that "[f]or these microenterprises to become strong income producers, effective business training, financial literacy education, and financing and professional service supports are critical."

The data for the study were culled from Census figures, the TransUnion credit rating agency and other public sources, according to Allison Plyer, who spearheads demographic research for the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center. Her group helped furnish the information for the foundation report and researchers spent months coming over the data before streamlining the figures into the eight-page study.

Plyer says that while the numbers outlined in the study are sobering, "They are not surprising," she says, given the state of the local and national economy and the city's long history with struggling to abate poverty. "What's clear from the information that is outlined is that there are a lot of people who are living on the edges of poverty."

Read more: http://www.nnpa.org/news/national/local-study-shows-that-orleanians-are-%e2%80%98asset%e2%80%99-poor/#ixzz26flbn647

Tuesday, 25 September 2012 13:47
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WASHINGTON, DC – On Sept. 25, National Voter Registration Day, Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) members will host a series of events across the country to ensure their communities are prepared to vote on Election Day.

Community leaders, local and state elected officials, will join CBC members in their districts as a part of the "For the People" Voter Protection initiative that brings attention to block the vote efforts, like restrictive voter ID laws, that may impede as many as 5 million people from registering to vote and/or from casting a ballot on Nov. 6.

At least 34 states have introduced laws that would require voters to show photo identification in order to vote and at least 12 states have introduced laws that would require proof of citizenship such as a birth certificate, to register to vote or to vote. The states that have already cut back on voting rights provide 171 electoral votes in 2012 – 63 percent of the 270 needed to win the presidency.

The CBC is committed to ensuring that no eligible voter is turned away from the ballot box during early voting and on Election Day.

The following CBC members are scheduled to host voter protection events:

CBC Chairman Emanuel Cleaver, II (MO – 05)

Grand Hall of Union Station

30 W. Pershing Road

Kansas City, MO 64108

Time: 10am – 11am CST

Contact: Mary Petrovic, (202) 494-9425

Congresswoman Barbara Lee (CA – 09)

Alameda County Registrar of Voters

12th and Oak Street

Oakland, CA 34612

Time: 11am – 1pm PT

Contact: Katherine Jolly, (510) 763-0370

Congressman James Clyburn (SC – 06) with Special Guest, Rev. Al Sharpton

Charles R. Drew Wellness Center

2101 Walker Solomon Way

Columbia, SC 29201

Time: 10 – 11:30am ET

Contact: Hope Derrick, (803) 799-1100

Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee (TX – 18)

Palm Center Courtroom Annex

5300 Griggs Road, 2nd Floor

Houston, TX 77021

Time: 11am – 1pm CST

Contact: Michael McQuerry, (202) 225-7080

Congresswoman Marcia Fudge (OH – 11)

Cuyahoga Board of Elections

2925 Euclid Ave

Cleveland, OH 44115

Time: 11am – 1pm CST

Contact: Belinda Prinz, (216) 630-0072

Congressman Al Green (TX-09)

4814 Almeda Road

Houston, Tx 77004

Time: 4 – 8pm CST

Contact: Kevin Dancy, (713) 383-9234

Congressman Alcee Hastings (FL – 23)

Office of Congressman Alcee Hastings

2701 W. Oakland Park Blvd, Suite 200

Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311

Time: 10:30am – 12:30pm ET

Contact: Ian Wolf, (202) 225-1313

Congresswoman Gwen Moore (WI-4)

Milwaukee City Hall Rotunda

200 E. Wells Street

Milwaukee, WI 53202

Time: 11am CT

Contact: Nicole Williams or Stacy Cox, (202) 225-4572

Congressman Elijah Cummings (MD – 7)

Parlett L. Moore Library Quad

Coppin State University

2500 West North Ave.

Baltimore, MD 21216

Time: 12:30pm

Contact: Safiya Simmons, (202) 225-4289

Congressman Sanford Bishop (GA- 02) – TWO LOCATIONS

Albany Government Center

222 Pine Avenue

Albany, GA 31701

Time: 8:30am ET

AND

Columbus Government Center

100 10th Street

Columbus, GA 31901

Time: 5pm ET

Contact: Maxwell Gigle, (202) 225-3631

Congressmen John Lewis (GA – 05), David Scott (GA -13), and Hank Johnson (GA – 04)

Georgia State Capitol – Washington Street Side

206 Washington Street SW

Atlanta, GA 30334

Time: 11am – 1pm ET

Contact: Brenda Jones, (202) 226-4673

Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson (TX – 30)

Dallas County High Schools except the I.S.D.'s of Highland Park and Mesquite

Dallas County, Texas

Time: 10am – 2pm CST

Contact: Collin Chlebak, (202) 225-8885

For more information about the Congressional Black Caucus' Voter Protection Initiative, visit www.TheCongressionalBlackCaucus.com/voteready.

Tuesday, 25 September 2012 00:13
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The Republic of Cameroon United States Ambassador Joseph B.C. Foe-Atangana, front, welcomed Congresswomen Karen Bass (CA-33), standing back, home after

the congresswoman DNA test traced her roots to Cameroon during the African Rising: A Continent of Opportunity session at the Congressional Black Caucus Legislative Conference on Friday, Sept. 21 at the Walter Washington Convention Center in Northwest.

Monday, 24 September 2012 13:55
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National Town Hall Meeting on Sept. 20 Focused on Serious Challenges Facing Voters

 

WASHINGTON – The Congressional Black Caucus Foundation (CBCF) devoted its National Town Hall meeting held last week at the Washington Convention Center to examining Voting Rights and New Age Discrimination. The town hall meeting served as the centerpiece of the Foundation's 42nd Annual Legislative Conference that was held in the nation's capital Sept. 19-22.

More than 20 states have changed their requirements for voting, which can affect a disproportionate number of African Americans, the disabled, and low income communities. The Foundation brought together experts, the community, and academia to discuss how the new laws passed by several states have made it more difficult to vote. Among the panel members who discussed the implications of the new measures and offered strategies for ensuring proper access to voting in November, were Reps. John Lewis (Ga); Mel Watt (NC); and Marcia Fudge (Ohio) - CBC leads for anti-voter repression campaign

Donna Brazile - DNC vice chair of Voter Registration and Participation; Democratic political strategist CNN; Dr. Marc Lamont Hill - CNN commentator, host of Our World Black Enterprise; Columbia Professor of Education; Rev. Al Sharpton -president of National Action Network (NAN), and host of MSNBC's PoliticsNation; Crystal Wright - conservative columnist; political commentator; and Ron Christie - founder/president of Christie Strategies; Republican political strategist.

"Millions of voters will be facing serious challenges as the result of the restrictive voting laws put in place across the country," said Menna Demessie, Ph.D.,, senior research and policy analyst for CBCF.

In addition, the Foundation distributed a voter guide toolkit on flash drives. These drives include information on voter registration and identification laws in each state, the latest developments regarding voter identification legislation, and opportunities for civic engagement to repeal the voter identification laws.

"We want people to be prepared before the election. It is too important an issue to be left to chance," said Dr. Demessie. "This toolkit is a step-by-step instruction guide to ensure voters are properly registered and ready to vote."

The conference is recognized as one of the most important gatherings of African-American leaders in the nation. In addition, attendees recognize the importance of what CBCF accomplishes in the community and have supported the Foundation's efforts to provide scholarships, internships, and fellowships to improve economic parity and to decrease health disparities.

Monday, 24 September 2012 13:24
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First Lady Michelle Obama Speaks at Phoenix Awards Dinner

 

 

Many of the country's most notable African-American leaders --  such as news commentators Roland Martin and Donna Brazile and a host of politicians -- gathered over the weekend in the nation's capital for the Congressional Black Caucus' 42nd Annual Legislative Conference (ALC).

The four-day event, held Sept.19-22 at the Washington Convention Center in Northwest, included the staple Prayer Breakfast and culminated with the Phoenix Awards Dinner. The conference also showcased the Emerging Leaders series as well as a variety of workshops and town hall meetings, receptions, exhibits, vendor fares and entertainment.

During the elaborate awards dinner on Sept. 22, where first lady Michelle Obama was the keynote speaker, tribute was paid to U.S. Attorney General Erich Holder, film maker George Lucas, Harvey Gantt, the first African-American mayor of Charlotte, NC, and Rep. Corrine Brown of Florida. The event was hosted by actors Sharon Leal and Robert Townsend and attracted about 3,000 guests.

In paying tribute to the civil rights achievements of members of the Congressional Black Caucus, Mrs. Obama mentioned the unwavering efforts of Georgia Congressman John Lewis and others. She cautioned that just because "there are no more 'whites only' signs keeping us out, no one barring our children from the schoolhouse door, we know that our journey is far, far from finished.

"Congressman Lewis understood the importance of that right," Mrs. Obama said. "That's why he faced down that row of billy clubs on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, risking his life so we could one day cast our ballots. As he put it, "...your vote is precious, almost sacred. It is the most powerful nonviolent tool we have to create a more perfect union."

Overall, the conference shed light on the national election on November 6 which pits Democratic President Barack Obama against GOP contender, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Four years ago, African Americans turned out in droves to help elect the nation's first black commander-in-chief. However, as election time nears, given the state of the economy, many of his past supporters ponder how they will vote this time. That concern, coupled with new voter ID laws, was also at center stage of the ALC.

"This struggle continues and the same type of mentality that would rush there to prevent us from voting yesterday exists today with the same motivation to stop us from voting," said Rep. Charles Rangel.

Meanwhile, the Rev. Jesse Jackson added that it's essential that every vote counts.

"A non vote for X is a vote for Y. Everybody votes," Jackson said. "And so to not vote would be a big mistake."

The CBC's foundation is the nonprofit arm of the House and Senate's Black caucus. While most conference-goers are Obama supporters, the foundation doesn't formally endorse a candidate.

However, the CBC does embrace goals that include closing the achievement gap, assuring quality health care for every American and focusing in employment and economic security.

Monday, 24 September 2012 07:08
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The dates and venues have been announced for the 2012 Presidential debates between President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. The date for the Vice Presidential debate has also been announced.

Tickets – Tickets for each debate are controlled by the Commission on Presidential Debates and are extremely limited since the debates are primarily produced for television. The majority of tickets are distributed to host university students and faculty through a lottery system. Please click the "Tickets" link next to the college name listed below for further information.

TV Channels – Each debate will be broadcast live on ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC, as well as all cable news channels including CNN, Fox News and MSNBC among others.

Live Stream – Each debate will be streamed live online.

October 3, 2012

Topic: Domestic Policy

Air Time: 9:00-10:30 p.m. Eastern Time

Location: University of Denver in Denver, Colorado (Tickets)

Sponsor: Commission on Presidential Debates

Participants: President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney

Moderator: Jim Lehrer (Host of NewsHour on PBS)

The debate will focus on domestic policy and be divided into six time segments of approximately 15 minutes each on topics to be selected by the moderator and announced several weeks before the debate.

The moderator will open each segment with a question, after which each candidate will have two minutes to respond. The moderator will use the balance of the time in the segment for a discussion of the topic.

October 11, 2012

Vice Presidential

Topic: Foreign and Domestic Policy

Air Time: 9:00-10:30 p.m. Eastern Time

Location: Centre College in Danville, Kentucky (Tickets)

Sponsor: Commission on Presidential Debates

Participants: Vice President Joe Biden and Congressman Paul Ryan

Moderator: Martha Raddatz (ABC News Chief Foreign Correspondent)

The debate will cover both foreign and domestic topics and be divided into nine time segments of approximately 10 minutes each. The moderator will ask an opening question, after which each candidate will have two minutes to respond. The moderator will use the balance of the time in the segment for a discussion of the question.

October 16, 2012

Topic: Town Meeting Format including Foreign and Domestic Policy

Air Time: 9:00-10:30 p.m. Eastern Time

Location: Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York (Tickets)

Sponsor: Commission on Presidential Debates

Participants: President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney

Moderator: Candy Crowley (CNN Chief Political Correspondent)

The second presidential debate will take the form of a town meeting, in which citizens will ask questions of the candidates on foreign and domestic issues. Candidates each will have two minutes to respond, and an additional minute for the moderator to facilitate a discussion. The town meeting participants will be undecided voters selected by the Gallup Organization.

October 22, 2012

Topic: Foreign Policy

Air Time: 9:00-10:30 p.m. Eastern Time

Location: Lynn University in Boca Raton, Florida (Tickets)

Sponsor: Commission on Presidential Debates

Participants: President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney

Moderator: Bob Schieffer (Host of Face the Nation on CBS)

The format for the debate will be identical to the first presidential debate and will focus on foreign policy.

Wednesday, 19 September 2012 19:48
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Tar ball and mats of old oil have washed ashore in the wake of Hurricane Isaac. The State of Louisiana closed a 12-mile stretch of shoreline in the Grand Isle area along with an area stretching from the shore to roughly one mile into the Gulf's waters. Further, pelicans and other wildlife have been reported found covered with oil. Reports indicate that officials will be conducting tests to verify whether this petroleum debris stems from BP's 2010 Macondo well disaster.

"There are reports of residual Macondo oil along the shorelines near Fouchon [sic] Beach and Grand Isle," Arturo Silva, a spokesperson for BP, told The Louisiana Weekly via email. "These are areas that were in active response prior to Isaac, so it was expected... that these could be areas where highly weathered residual oil might be exposed." Silva went on to point out "that there have been 90 reports of oil releases from other sources since the storm, and it is imperative that the parties responsible for that oil act in the same manner as BP and respond quickly in following Coast Guard directions."

A New York Times report dated Sept. 6th confirmed that the oil washing ashore did originate with the Macondo well. Silva told The Louisiana Weekly that BP was conducting its own tests to verify these results. Deputy Director of the Gulf Restoration Network, Aaron Viles, offered a pointed critique. "Isaac's aftermath shows that BP's oil is still in the Gulf, and that the Coast Guard should never have allowed BP to stand-down cleanup efforts along Louisiana's hard-hit coast."

At the same time that Isaac was churning up an oily wake, the Department of Justice was addressing the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon spill, which dumped roughly 5 million barrels (205.8 million gallons) of oil into the Gulf of Mexico. On the last day of August, the Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a memo with the New Orleans Federal District Court asserting that BP has "a culture of corporate recklessness." This memo followed a motion filed by BP earlier in the month asking the court to accept the settlement proposal that it had put forward in May. Just days later, The DOJ memo was followed by a filing from BP co-defendant, Halliburton, also asking Judge Carl Barbier to reject BP's settlement offer.

The Chicago Tribune tied a drop in BP's stock price to the aggressive DOJ memo. David Uhlmann, former head of the DOJ's environmental crimes section, told the Associated Press that this tone indicates that the government is ready to go to trial. The trial is slated to begin in mid-January 2013.

One of the key points at issue is whether or not BP's conduct prior to the spill constitutes gross negligence. If the firm is found to have been not only culpable for the disaster, but also to have contributed to the conditions that caused the explosion that killed 11 men and spewed 4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf, it will be subject to punitive damages beyond the fines that it faces for violating the Clean Water and Oil Pollution Acts.

In penultimate section of its memo, the DOJ asserted that with its motion, "BP is apparently seeking to pre-judge the results of the NRDA [Natural Resource Damage Assessment] by inviting the Court to make factual findings on environmental injury based on BP's selective and misleading account of environmental conditions."

New Orleans attorney Stuart H. Smith posted comments on his blog about the recent filings, stating that "Scores of plaintiffs — including some represented by my law firm — are challenging the deal as unfair, ignoring issues such as the long-term neurological damage to clean-up workers and other Gulf residents who were exposed to massive amounts of the toxic dispersant Corexit that was deployed by BP." Smith's blog also asserts that the filings point towards a significant hearing with Judge Barbier scheduled for November.

This article was originally published in the September 10, 2012 print edition of The Louisiana Weekly newspaper.

Wednesday, 19 September 2012 17:43
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The longevity gap between "two Americas" has widened since 1990, says a new study. One America is mostly white and well educated, and the other is ethnic or undereducated – and dying about a decade sooner than their more affluent counterparts.

The gap between college-educated whites and African Americans who did not complete high school is "simply unbelievable," stated S. Jay Olshansky, lead author of the extensive new analysis published in the August issue of the prestigious health policy journal Health Affairs.

The researchers, who crunched mortality numbers in key databases from 1990-2008, found that white men in the United States with 16 years or more of schooling had life expectancy at birth of 14.2 years longer than African American males with fewer than 12 years of education. The gulf between well-educated white women and black women with low educational levels was 10.3 years.

The research study is published with the stark title, "Differences in Life Expectancy Due to Race and Educational Differences Are Widening, and Many May Not Catch Up." It is the latest publication by the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on an Aging Society, a roster of 15 leading academic experts in aging and longevity.

Low Education Shortens Life for All Groups

The report shows that lower educational levels marked declining life expectancy within every demographic group examined.

The gap between black women of high versus low educational levels was 6.5 years, and for Latinas the difference was 2.9 years. For males the longevity gaps were 12.9 years among whites, 9.7 years among blacks and 5.5 years for Hispanics.

What's more, the picture for those with fewer than 12 years of education "has grown notably worse for whites," says the study. In terms of educational status "whites at the bottom are losing ground at a faster pace" than those at the top.

The gulf between white women is especially wide, says the report. Those with 12 years or less of education were living just over a decade (10.4 years) less than white American females with at least 16 years of schooling.

The two Americas—those with very high versus very low education—are in a longevity "time warp," Olshansky asserted.

While those with higher levels of formal learning are gaining longevity dividends every year, those least educated have had life expectancy linger at mid-20th century levels. Although blacks have added years slightly overall, among those with the lowest education, longevity for African American men is stuck at the average life expectancy the United States reached in 1954. For other groups with the least education, black women linger at the 1962 level, white women hover in 1964, and poorly schooled white men only live as long as Americans did in 1972.

Medical Advances Not Enough

According to the study, higher education directly affects health because increased learning prompts more people to adopt healthier lifestyles it improves their ability to cope with stress, and enables them to manage chronic diseases more effectively.

However, the report says, education's indirect effects, such as increasing one's access to "more privileged social position, better-paying jobs and higher income are also profound."

These underlying social and economic effects, the research group explains, are why efforts to modify behavioral risk factors alone, such as to reduce obesity or smoking, "are not likely to have a major impact on disparities in longevity."

And the ethnic disparities in education are sharp. On the one hand, among those age 25 or older in 2008, the researchers found, more than one-third of Latinos had less than a high school education, compared with one in six African Americans and only one in 12 whites.

On the other hand, says the study, among those who "enjoy the health and longevity benefits" of a college or post-graduate degree, about one-third are white, one-sixth Black and one in eight Hispanic.

The life-expectancy findings for Hispanics are more complicated than for others. Although Latinos appear to have the highest reported life expectancy at birth among ethnic groups in the study, the researchers cautioned that other factors are in play.

Previous research cited by the study's authors shows that Latino immigrants "tend to be healthier than subsequent U.S.-born generations of Hispanics." Second- or third-generation Hispanics born in the United States experience higher mortality risks and die 10-20 percent earlier than their immigrant parents' and grandparents' generations.

As Hispanics become a larger proportion of the total U.S. population—with a higher proportion of them born here, "their current longevity advantage may diminish rapidly," the article says.

Also skewing the overall figures showing a Latino longevity advantage, says the study, many older Hispanic immigrants "return to their country of origin to die; and the people who emigrate from most countries in Latin America tend to be healthier and more highly educated than the population from which they originated."

Gap Could Grow Larger

Without greater attention to education and its impact on social factors in health, say Olshansky and his colleagues, advances in medicine and technology alone are unlikely to close disparities by race and socioeconomic status. Nationally, he noted, increased access to good educational equity is apt to improve people's health and productivity, thus reducing future demands on Medicare and dependence on Social Security—major budget issues in the presidential campaign.

They emphasize that expanding lifelong learning opportunities would be especially significant for those already in the workforce and who would find it very difficult to return to traditional formal education programs.

Olshansky and his colleagues warn that if the anticipated advances in medical science and technology continue without educational gains, by 2050 "the health and longevity gap between the two Americas could grow larger."

They recommend that American society "implement educational enhancements at young, middle, and older ages for people of all races, to reduce the large gap in health and longevity that persists today."

Wednesday, 19 September 2012 16:42
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