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Our Response to the Political Landslide by James Clingman

Nov. 16, 2014

Blackonomics

Our Response to the Political Landslide    
By James Clingman 

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Relative to the “Tuesday Evening Massacre” by the Elephants over the Donkeys, in January 2009 I wrote an article that warned about our being complacent and resting on the mere fact that we had elected a Black President.  I suggested that we should get busy right away doing the commensurate work it would surely take for us to get something more for our votes than just a good feeling about “making history.”  Obviously, we failed in that regard, and now we are crying about the massacre that took place on November 4, 2014.

As far back as 2006 this column and my television show warned against our complacency and settling for an emotional victory rather than a substantive victory.  Now we have very little, if anything, to show for our record turnout of 2008 and 2012, because we failed to act appropriately on the morning after those elections.

My article, “When Elephants and Donkeys Fight,” was based on an African proverb that states, “When elephants fight, the grass suffers.”  November 4th was a graphic illustration of that reality for us, the grassroots.  And for the next two years the elephants and donkeys will continue to fight and we will continue to suffer.  Why?  Because we have no clout with either party; we have no say-so about what happens to us.

Black voters have been lulled to sleep by patronizing gestures and platitudes from politicians who only want and know they will always receive our votes.  They also know that we will not leverage our votes against them nor make demands on them in exchange for our votes.  They know all we want to do is vote, and then we will go home and await the next election.

When the donkeys won they did not move us to the front of the reciprocity line.  They did not acknowledge us by putting forth specific legislation to benefit Black voters.  They did not show their appreciation by spending more with our media during their 2012 campaign.  No, they needed our votes, which we gave so generously in prior years, but they refused to reciprocate in any meaningful way.  Now the donkeys are blaming us for their defeat, saying “too few” of us voted.

Is it really our fault?  Are we the reason many of us are crying about the results of the last election?  Are we, the Black electorate and the political talking-heads whom we follow, the reasons we will likely spend the next two years in political purgatory?  Maybe so, but the real question is: If we got nothing during the first two years of the Obama administration, when the donkeys controlled both houses, what would make any of us believe we will get anything during the next two years?  Maybe this is the slap upside our heads that will make us change the way we play politics.

Here is a solution.  Mr. Theodore Johnson III wrote an article in Atlantic Magazine titled, Black America Needs its own President (September 5, 2014) in which he stated, “The call for a President of Black America may, at first blush, sound odd…But Black America is about 45 million people strong and has buying power of just over a trillion dollars ... an economy roughly equivalent to Portugal's and a population that is about the same as Spain’s. That should translate to a significant amount of economic and political power. But without a leader to marshal this capital, we’re treated like a subcultural afterthought…”

Johnson continued, “Of course, the President of Black America is just a symbolic label, not an elected position.  But it needn’t be. After all, who elected Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, and King to be the personification of Black America in their respective eras? He or she would carry a big stick, and that big stick would be the marshaling of the Black electorate and Black purchasing power...the Black American economy sustains numerous businesses and products across the nation; no dollar leaves a community faster  than the Black dollar. This is unfortunate, but it is also leverage.”

Interestingly enough, a group formed in 2007 devised a plan for a President of Black America, which we called the “POBA.”  Unfortunately, Black folks decided to take another nap when it looked like Barack Obama would be elected as the POTUS, and our plan was shelved.  In light of Mr. Johnson’s article and our previous attempt, now is the time to find the POBA.

This is a call for one million conscious Black voters to join the POBA movement.  These voters/consumers will use our leverage to positively impact political outcomes and the Black economy, locally and nationally.  If you want to be “One in a Million,” contact me at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Voices from Abroad by E. Faye Williams

Nov. 16, 2014

Voices from Abroad
By E. Faye Williams

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(TriceEdneyWire.com)In 2008, when President Obama launched his first campaign for the Presidency, we heard a multitude of voices expressing adoration for his candidacy. Not surprisingly, much of Senator Obama's staunchest support came from abroad. I believe the entire world was waiting for the U.S. to more fully live up to its' creed.  I also believe that it recognized Mr. Obama as leader who could accomplish that great feat.

Through the years, as obstructionists in Congress, animosity of Republicans and enmity of home-grown racists have eroded the confidence of the people in President Obama, it is refreshing to see that he still enjoys the support of millions of citizens outside the U.S.

After the mid-term elections, my attention was drawn to reading an article entitled “You Americans Have No Ideas Just How Good You Have It with Obama." It was written by a Canadian.  Given the title, I half expected the article to have been written by someone whose name would be immediately recognizable, but this article caught my eye because it was an open letter written by a new name - Richard Brunt. I thank Leslie Salzillo for sharing the letter with us here in the U.S. Mr. Brunt expressed what I was thinking well and I quote:

"Many of us Canadians are confused by the U.S. midterm elections. Consider, right now in America, corporate profits are at record highs, the country's adding 200,000 jobs per month, unemployment is below 6%, U.S.gross national product growth is the best of the Organization for Economic         Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries. The dollar is at its strongest levels in years, the stock market is near record highs, gasoline    prices are falling, there's no inflation, interest rates are the lowest in 30 years, U.S. oil imports are declining, U.S. oil production is rapidly increasing, the deficit is rapidly declining, and the wealthy are still making astonishing amounts of money.

America is leading the world once again and respected internationally - in sharp contrast to the Bush years.  Obama brought soldiers home from Iraq and killed Osama bin Laden.
So, Americans vote for the party that got you into the mess that Obama just   dug you out of?  That defies reason.
When you're done with Obama, could you send him our way?"

A singular source of frustration was the conduct of the 2014 midterm elections, as well as the outcome. It’s unconscionable that 2/3 of the American people either couldn’t or didn’t see through the negative spew that had no purpose other than to provoke racial animus against President Obama.  I’m in utter disbelief that so many could be persuaded to vote against their own interests, while others were frozen in fear, refusing to stand up for principles they claim to hold dear.

It’s also embarrassing that observers from other nations can so positively assess the qualities and accomplishments of our President while members of his own party led the desertion against him and the policies that salvaged America from the demons of a Republican administration gone mad.  It was disappointing that uninformed voices echoed the age old "blame the victim" mantra against the President.

The fact that Democrats abandoned our principles, surrendered so many seats and are now scratching heads in disbelief is indicative of inexcusable political ineptitude. The lessons of the 2 Obama campaigns demonstrate what can be accomplished when we honor the groups that give foundation to our "base" and the progressive ideals that elevate us all.

As much as I care about my party, I’m angry with those who acted as though we didn’t exist after we gave the party two great victories with President Obama at the top of the ticket.  We shouldn’t have to depend upon foreign friends to tell us how great our President is.

(E. Faye Williams is president/CEO of the National Congress of Black Women.  www.nationalcongressbw.org)

With Huge Shoes to Fill, Lynch is Poised to Become First Black Woman Attorney General by Hazel Trice Edney

Nov. 10, 2014

With Huge Shoes to Fill, Lynch is Poised to Become First Black Woman Attorney General
By Hazel Trice Edney

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - President Obama’s nomination of New York federal prosecutor Loretta Lynch to succeed Eric Holder as attorney general is drawing applause from national civil rights leaders. Despite her stellar reputation, it remains unclear whether Lynch will assume the same civil rights agenda that Holder is leaving unfinished.

“The nomination of Loretta Lynch to be the new Attorney General of the United States is applaudable and deserving. She is an excellent and worthy choice to succeed Attorney General Eric Holder in his groundbreaking work for the American people,” says Rev. Al Sharpton, who has been deeply involved in the case of Michael Brown, shot by Ferguson, Mo. police officer Darren Wilson Aug. 9. 

Sharpton, who has apparently known Lynch since the police abuse case of Abner Louima in the late 1990s, says he has “not always agreed” with her on cases, but, “I have always seen her operate in the most fair, balanced, and just manner.”

Lynch, currently federal prosecutor in Brooklyn, N.Y., would become the nation’s first Black female attorney general if confirmed by the Senate. Her appointment is considered non-controversial, mainly because she has received bi-partisan confirmations by the Senate in two previous appointments to federal positions. She must now go before the Senate Judiciary Committee; then recieve Senate confirmation by majority vote.

"The nomination of Ms. Lynch, who would become the nation's first African American female Attorney General, has signaled that the President is uncompromising and determined that our country's top attorney be dedicated to doing what is right for the American people. President Obama has nominated one of the best and brightest to help lead this nation and move our justice system forward,” says Congressional Black Caucus Chairwoman Marcia Fudge (D-Ohio).

When the news broke that Holder was resigning, Sharpton, NAACP President Cornell William Brook, National Urban League President Marc Morial, and a string of others were in the midst of a press conference, Sept. 25, expressing high hopes for Holder to take over the criminal investigations in the killings of Michael Brown and the choke-hold death of Staten Island, New Yorker Eric Garner as well as the “pandemic of police misconduct” around the country, as described by NAACP President/CEO Cornell William Brooks. 

Sharpton said at that press conference, “There is no attorney general that has demonstrated a civil rights record equal to Eric Holder.” 

With huge shoes to fill in the eyes of many in the Black community, Lynch appears passionate for the position. At the White House announcement Nov. 7, she thanked President Obama “for your faith in me in asking me to succeed an Attorney General whom I admire, and to lead the Department that I love.”She also thanked Holder for “leading by example, and always, always pushing this Department to live up to its name…The Department of Justice is the only Cabinet Department named for an ideal.  And this is actually appropriate, because our work is both aspirational, and grounded in gritty reality.  It’s both ennobling, and it’s both profoundly challenging.”

Describing the position of Attorney General as “the people’s lawyer”, President Obama praised Lynch’s qualifications.“It’s pretty hard to be more qualified for this job than Loretta.  Throughout her 30-year career, she has distinguished herself as tough, as fair, an independent lawyer who has twice headed one of the most prominent U.S. Attorney’s offices in the country.  She has spent years in the trenches as a prosecutor, aggressively fighting terrorism, financial fraud, cybercrime, all while vigorously defending civil rights,” the President said. “One of her proudest achievements was the civil rights prosecution of the officers involved in the brutal assault of the Haitian immigrant Abner Louima.”

He also credited her with having successfully prosecuted the terrorists who plotted to bomb the Federal Reserve Bank and the New York City subway; brought charges against public officials in corruption cases; helped to “secure billions in settlements from some of the world’s biggest banks accused of fraud” and sent some of New York’s most violent and notorious mobsters and gang members to prison.

“Loretta might be the only lawyer in America who battles mobsters and drug lords and terrorists, and still has the reputation for being a charming people person,’” Obama said to laughter in the East Room.

Lynch is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School and rose from Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of New York to Chief of the Long Island Office, Chief Assistant U.S. Attorney, and U.S. Attorney, according to the White House bio. She is the daughter of a school librarian and a fourth-generation Baptist minister. She is married with two step children.

NAACP President Brooks underscored the crucial issues currently on the table, including the police violations as well as key voting rights issues. “Her nomination could not have come at a more critical time in our nation’s history,” said Brooks. “We look forward to working with Ms. Lynch to ensure that our nation's voting rights laws, employment protection laws and anti-housing discrimination laws are strictly and fairly enforced.”

Before she establishes her own record with the national civil rights community, perhaps her best reference is Holder himself. “Loretta has earned the trust and respect of Justice Department employees at every level, in Washington and throughout the country.  She is held in high regard by criminal justice, law enforcement, and civil rights leaders of all stripes,” Holder said. “I have had the good fortune of working closely with Loretta on a range of important issues over the years, and particularly since the beginning of 2013, when I asked her to serve as chair of the Attorney General’s Advisory Committee…And I know that she is both well-qualified and uniquely positioned to continue the critical work that’s underway and build upon the progress we have made over the past six years, from advancing criminal justice reform to safeguarding civil rights.”

Obama’s Legacy: Defining the Course Forward By Rev. Jesse Jackson

Nov. 10, 2014

Obama’s Legacy: Defining the Course Forward
By Rev. Jesse Jackson 

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - The president has paid his courtesies to the Republican leaders who now control the Congress. Mitch McConnell has indicated that he’s prepared to cooperate with the president, if he’s prepared to capitulate. Others, like Sen. Ted Cruz, have declared that the scorched earth obstruction will continue.

The real question is how President Barack Obama acts. Many talking heads urge him to find common ground — on fast track trade authority, on tax breaks for multinationals, on various “reforms” of Obamacare, on lifting restrictions on exporting natural gas. He can, he’s told, consolidate his “legacy” by getting things done.

But these accomplishments take the country in the wrong direction. They deal with none of the true challenges facing the country. Why tax breaks for corporations that already capture a record percentage of the national income? Why more corporate trade treaties that ship good jobs abroad? Why join in denying the reality of catastrophic climate change?

Instead, the president can and should make his legacy clear by defining what his presidency stands for. He needs to address the pressing challenges facing this country — and contrast that starkly with the wrong-headed corporate and special interest agenda of Republicans. Here are five ways he can help secure a true legacy that points the way forward:

In foreign policy, he can open a new chapter with neighbors in our own hemisphere. A bold first step would be to issue executive orders doing what he can to ease the boycott, open up travel and normalize relations with Cuba. Our failed policy toward Cuba now isolates the U.S. in its own hemisphere. An opening to Cuba could be the dramatic step needed to open real cooperation on economic development, drug trafficking, public health and immigration.

In economic policy he should, as promised, push as far as possible toward immigration reform. It is vital that the millions now locked in the shadow economy be liberated from the exploitation that allows. That is not only humane; it lifts the bottom of the economy helping all. Republicans argue that if he acts unilaterally, they will never pass comprehensive reform, but they have already made it clear that sensible reforms will never pass this Republican Congress.

On basic justice, the president can use his bully pulpit and his pen to accelerate the attorney general’s efforts to reform our racially troubled criminal justice system from police practices to judicial sentencing. He can ensure that the events in Ferguson — too frequently mirrored in communities across the country — help crystallize a bold agenda for reform. He can convene governors, mayors, public safety officials and civil rights and citizen leaders to drive that reform.

On inequality, the president likely will have to wield his veto pen to counter Republican efforts to offer more tax breaks for the rich while cutting basic investment in support for the vulnerable. One effort the president can make on his own is to issue a Good Jobs Executive Order. Now he should put government on the side of good employers, giving preference to employers who pay their employees well, don’t allow excessive CEO pay, respect workplace laws and allow their employees the right to organize. We will never rebuild the middle class unless workers regain the right to negotiate for a fair share of the profits and productivity that they help to produce.

On national security, the president should turn our attention to the real security threats that have no military response. In addition to issuing new regulations on carbon emissions from power plants, he could describe the extreme crisis we now face from climate change, and detail how meeting that challenge can be a source of good jobs, better foods, better transport and healthier communities. He should lay out a bold agenda to capture the lead in the green industrial revolution that must sweep the world — and make it clear who is standing in the way.

The president still has the best pulpit in the land. He can still help Americans understand the challenges that can no longer be ducked and the bold steps needed to meet them. His proposals will be dead on arrival in the Republican Congress. His words will be mocked by conservative hawks. But he can define the choice, and that may be the most important legacy of all.

Rainbow/PUSH Expose Vast Diversity Void on Boards of Tech Firms

Nov. 9, 2014

Rainbow/PUSH Expose Vast Diversity Void on Boards of Tech Firms

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A survey by the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, headed by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, shows that there are only three Blacks and 1 Hispanic among the 189 total board members of the 20 technology companies surveyed.  That includes just 36 women among the 189 total board members of the 20 companies surveyed. 

"This data reveals a bold and audacious pattern of exclusion", says a Rainbow/PUSH release.

Eleven of the companies have no people of color on their boards, including Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo, eBay, Google among others.  Just three companies – Microsoft, Oracle, and Salesforce have a Black or Latino on their Board.

In contrast the telecommunication companies with whom many technology are now competing: Verizon alone has three African-Americans on its Board of Directors.  ATT has two African-Americans and Comcast one African American on their Boards.

“Rainbow PUSH has successfully PUSHed the technology to reveal their workforce diversity and inclusion data – the data documents the virtual exclusion of Blacks and Latinos from the industry in both tech and non-tech jobs.  This dearth of diversity is replicated on the corporate boards of directors.  It’s time for a change.  Technology companies must transform themselves – from the corporate boards to the workforce – to mirror the communities and customers it relies upon for its growth and success,” the statement says.

Reverend Jackson says he would continue to PUSH for diversity in Silicon Valley and the technology industry at speaking engagements at Platform in Atlanta, before the New York Venture Capital Association and at a recent USA Today forum at Stanford. Rainbow PUSH is also organizing a “Next Steps for Technology” workshop on December 10 in Silicon Valley to continue its push to reach, measurable and concrete change in the tech industry.

“Diversifying the technology industry – from corporate boardrooms to the workforce – is this era’s civil rights challenge.  While we engaged companies to move from resistance to release and usher in a new climate of transparency, more must be done:  companies must set concrete, measurable goals, targets and timetables to expand minority participation on their boards, in their c-suites, and workforce. They must expand to engage minority professional and financial services firms, advertising and marketing agencies in their business development," Jackson says.

In short, companies need a 21st century diversity and inclusion strategy to change the face of technology.   Rainbow PUSH stands ready to partner and produce the talent needed to usher in a new era of change in the tech industry.

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