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White House Releases Obama's Black Agenda by Hazel Trice Edney

April 1, 2012

White House Releases Obama's Black Agenda
By Hazel Trice Edney

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Michael Strautmanis tells audience of Black women: 'We have come too far to turn back now.' PHOTO: Roy Lewis/Trice Edney News Wire

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More than 300 women and their proteges applauded message from White House aid Michael Strautmanis who also distributed "President's Agenda and the African American Community." PHOTO: Roy Lewis

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – Sending the message that President Obama is in a struggle to keep Black and women’s equality gains from slipping, White House Aids have given hundreds of Black women a document outlining his Black agenda.

“The President is committed to working with anybody of either party to create an economy where everyone gets a fair shot, does their fair share and plays by the same rules,” Michael Strautmanis, aid to presidential advisor Valerie Jarrett, told hundreds of women at a Women’s History Month luncheon sponsored by the Black Women’s Roundtable of the National Coalition for Black Civic Participation last month.

The Roundtable, headed by NCBCP President/CEO, Melanie Campbell, is viewed as being among the most powerful coalition of African-American women in the country, mainly because of the clout held by its membership. Campbell is a leading expert on African-American voter participation and community mobilization. Former Essence Editor-in-Chief Susan Taylor was keynote speaker at the event.

Strautmanis continued, “But, I want to make sure you understand we’ve made one thing clear. We have come too far to turn back now. He will oppose any attempt to take us back to the policies that got us into this mess in the first place. So that’s where we are. That’s the crossroads that we’re at.”

The backdrop for the approximately 10-minute speech was the distribution of a 44-page document titled “The President’s Agenda and the African American Community”.

The move clearly acknowledges criticism from Obama supporters and detractors who say he has done a poor job communicating to his dominate Black base what he has done for Black people.

“What’s at stake in this debate right now. This is not about a political party…It’s about the ordinary men and women who want to see their hard work and their responsibility pay off,” Strautmanis said. “It’s about the kids who deserve a country where everyone gets a shot. And it’s about the folks in this town who want to turn back the clock on the progress that we’ve made from the voting rights act to our social safety net to Pell grants to public education. That is not who we are as a country. We are not going backwards so I ask you to join me to together go write this next chapter in American history with Black women at the forefront.”

The November 2011 document, which can be viewed in its entirety at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/af_am_report_final.pdf, covers everything policy issue from economics, to education to civil rights as they pertain to African-Americans.

Among the key bullet points:

  • According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, due to measures President Obama fought for in the Recovery Act, 6.9 million Americans were kept above the poverty line, including 1.3 million African-Americans, and poverty was lessened for 32 million more in 2010 alone.
  • Additionally, through this year’s budget battles the President pushed hard to preserve the programs of greatest importance to African American families – for example, by securing $17 billion for Pell Grants without undermining other critical investments like Head Start, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
  • The President continued that fight with the December 2010 tax deal that maintained expansions of the Child Tax Credit and Earned Income Tax Credit, benefiting an estimated 2.2 million African- American families and almost half of all African American children, while extending unemployment insurance to benefit over a million Africa-Americans.
  • With unemployment among African-Americans at an unacceptably high rate of 15.1 percent – and 1.25 million African-Americans out of work for more than six months – the President believes that inaction is not an option. That is why he proposed the American Jobs Act, and has traveled across the country to call on Congress to pass it.
  • The Administration’s youth employment and job training programs are critical for the 708,000 unemployed African-Americans aged 16-24—involving them in their communities and maintaining their connection with the labor force. The Recovery Act funding provided over 367,000 youth with job opportunities in the summers of 2009 and 2010. These programs trained youth in key industry skills, and provided a much-needed paycheck.
  • The Obama Administration is also strongly committed to helping people find work and acquire skills for jobs in 21st century high-growth industries. Investments in the Recovery Act enabled states to help millions of out of work Americans—including millions of African-Americans—seeking jobs or job training opportunities.
  • Protect Civil Rights and Promote Criminal Justice. The President has signed major legislation like the Fair Sentencing Act and the Claims Resolution Act, and worked to expand and enforce hate crimes prosecutions, reduce unfairness in sentencing, and counter employment discrimination.

These are among the actions that have been taken by the Obama Administration expanding his three- year tenure thus far. What’s unusual is the compilation of them all in one document.

CBC Chairman Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.) has consistently said that when the question is asked, the Obama Administration must be able to specify policy successes that directly impact Black communities, on which President Obama is dependent for his re-election bid.

“Because I am so committed to his re-election, when people raise that question – and it gets raised almost every day – I say, ‘Look the President’s doing his thing, we’re doing ours.’ I try not to get into the issue too deeply,” Cleaver said early last year. “I’m a supporter of the President. I told him to his face that I was going to do everything I could for his re-election but yeah, I would love to see it a little differently.”

Amidst what will likely be a close election with a Republican rival, the President’s Black agenda is now being placed front and center. Strautmanis concluded to thunderous applause from the audience of women and young protégés from across the country:

“No matter who you are or where you come from, you can make it if you try. … But for Black Americans and as women, our country has often failed to live up to that promise.”

He named Congresswomen Barbara Jordon Shirley Chisholm and “the legendary Dr. Dorothy Irene Height as those who have also led the way for equality for women and African-Americans – “ordinary women who have done extraordinary things Black women have always made that promise real.”

Reminding that the Lilly Ledbetter fair pay act for women was the first piece of legislation Obama signed into law, Strautmanis concluded, “We’ve been encouraged to see almost four million new jobs created over the past 24 months, manufacturing is back, the auto industry is back. We’re beginning to see what change looks like. But we’ve got a long way to go.”

 

Trayvon Martin Funeral Director: No Signs of a Fight

April 1, 2012

Trayvon Martin Funeral Director: No Signs of a Fight

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Afro American Newspaper

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A funeral director who handled the body of Trayvon Martin said March 28 he saw no evidence that the 17 year-old who was shot and killed by a Neighborhood Watch volunteer, had been in a recent fight.

Funeral director Richard Kurtz said he saw no sign of struggle on Martin’s hands and no indication that Martin had punched Zimmerman in the face.

He made that assertion March 28 on Headline News’ "Nancy Grace Show” amid claims by Sanford, Fla. law enforcement officials and George Zimmerman’s father that 17 year-old Trayvon Martin attacked Zimmerman, an armed Neighborhood Watch volunteer, the night he was killed.

“First of all when I received the body with the death certificate, I noticed the gunshot wound,” Kurtz said. “But [with] his hands and his knuckles; I didn’t see any evidence that he’d been fighting anybody.”

When Grace asked Kurtz to clarify, Kurtz said there were no cuts or bruises on Martin’s hands or any other injuries on his body aside from the gunshot wound.

This assertion is at odds with the account that Zimmerman’s father, Robert Zimmerman told WOFL Fox 35 in Orlando.

"It's my understanding that Trayvon Martin got on top of him and just started beating him," Zimmerman said.

Zimmerman, a former magistrate in the Virginia state court system, continued saying that his son started to follow Martin because he thought it was suspicious that Martin was walking between the houses in the gated community instead of using the street or the sidewalk on a rainy night. He said Martin approached his son after Zimmerman got out of his vehicle.

“He went to the next street, realized where he was and was walking to his vehicle,” Zimmerman continued. “It's my understanding; at that point, Trayvon Martin walked up to him and asked him, 'Do you have a [expletive] problem?' George said, 'No, I don't have a problem,' and started to reach for his cell phone... at that point, he (Martin) was punching him in the nose, his nose was broken and he was knocked to the concrete."

Also at odds with Robert Zimmerman’s story is video of George Zimmerman released by the police which shows no signs that George Zimmerman had been in a fight.

Trayvon Martin Case Seen as Barometer for Race in America by Hazel Trice Edney

Trayvon Martin Case Seen as Barometer for Race in America

By Hazel Trice Edney

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) The clarion cry for the arrest of George Zimmerman continues across America this week as protests rise from city to city in response to the Feb. 26 killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Fla.

 

Zimmerman, the admitted killer of the unarmed teen carrying a bag of skittles, remains free this week. His claim of self-defense as a Neighborhood Watch captain is backed by the Sanford Police Department, whose police chief Bill Lee has temporarily stepped down in the wake of other investigations. The FBI, Attorney General Eric Holder’s office, a task force formed by Florida Gov. Rick Scott and a grand jury are all probing the shooting as thousands of protesters continue to converge on the near-Orlando city.

 

Meanwhile, the high-profiled case has caused civil rights groups to view it as a new barometer for America’s race relations in 2012. This view was underscored by President Barack Obama who won widespread applause among Black leaders for speaking out on the case.

 

“I’ve got to be careful about my statements to make sure that we’re not impairing any investigation that’s taking place right now,” Obama said in the Rose Garden March 23. “But obviously, this is a tragedy. I can only imagine what these parents are going through.”

The words of the nation’s first Black president became increasingly personal.

“And when I think about this boy, I think about my own kids.  And I think every parent in America should be able to understand why it is absolutely imperative that we investigate every aspect of this, and that everybody pulls together - federal, state and local - to figure out exactly how this tragedy happened.”

Hinting at the deep racial implications, the President alluded to history of racial bigotry in America and how it affects Black families from every walk of life:

“I think all of us have to do some soul searching to figure out how does something like this happen. And that means that examine the laws and the context for what happened, as well as the specifics of the incident. But my main message is to the parents of Trayvon Martin.  If I had a son, he'd look like Trayvon. And I think they are right to expect that all of us as Americans are going to take this with the seriousness it deserves, and that we're going to get to the bottom of exactly what happened.”

The Southern Christian Leadership Conference, founded by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was among the first to laud the President for his stance.

 “I applaud and appreciate President Obama’s riveting resolve,” says SCLC Chairman Dr. Bernard LaFayette, Jr., in a statement. Simultaneously, he, among thousands, expressed disappointment with the slow pace of justice in the case.

 

“I am aghast and disturbed that it has taken so long for the U.S. Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, in conjunction with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, to investigate the tragic and seemingly senseless killing of Trayvon Martin.”

 

Meanwhile, NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous, Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. and Rev. Al Sharpton have led joint rallies and spoken at numerous churches in the case, decrying the fact that Zimmerman, a White Hispanic, has yet to be arrested. A statement from Martin’s parents this week rebuked police who apparently leaked unrelated information saying Martin had been suspended from school for an offense associated with marijuana residue in a backpack.

 

“They killed my son and now they’re trying to kill his reputation,” said his mother, Sybrina Fulton.

 

On Tuesday, Fulton and Tracy Martin, Trayvon’s father, were on their way to Capitol Hill for a congressional hearing on police profiling.

 

The hearing, hosted by U. S. Rep. John Conyers, former chair of the House Judiciary Committee and currently the ranking member, was titled, “Protecting a ‘Suspect’ Community: Forum on Racial Profiling, Federal Hate Crimes Enforcement and ‘Stand Your Ground’ Laws”.

 

It is the Florida “Stand Your Ground” law that is at the crux of the Zimmerman controversy. He claims he was within the law, which gives someone the right to kill if they feel their life is in danger. However, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, a Republican, who signed that law, says it does not apply to a civilian who pursues a suspect.

 

A 911 tape reveals Zimmerman saying he was following Martin. Shortly afterward, Zimmerman could be heard under his breath saying what sounded like, “F----n’ Coon”, a racial epithet. The FBI and Justice Department are researching the recording to see whether Zimmerman could be charged with a hate crime.

 

Moving forward, the case has shed new light on the lack of racial justice and equality in America that will no doubt have residual effects. It has also given new life to a movement to stop violence against young Black males by police as well as among each other.

 

“The unfortunate occurrence of Trayvon Martin's untimely death reveals again the imperative for America to address race and justice,” concludes Damien Conner, captain of SCLC’s programs and chapters. “It is our turn, the youth of this country, to mount the brazen bull of inequity and slay the menacing monster of racism.”

‘I Am Trayvon’: Slogan Reflects Worry for Kids in Community

April 1, 2012

‘I Am Trayvon’

Slogan Reflects Worry for Kids in Community

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Richmond Free Press

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Eight-year-old Tyvrell Cribb symbolizes solidarity with Trayvon Martin as he takes part in a Richmond, Va. rally on the campus of Virginia Commonwealth University. The rally was held to show sympathy for the family of the slain Florida teen and demonstrate outrage at the failure of police to arrest his killer. PHOTO: Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Nationally, signs carry the slogan “I am Trayvon Martin” at rallies, including those in the Richmond area. It’s a slogan that also resounds in church pulpits and untold conversations.

And across the country, children and grown men, including state legislators and congressmen, also are donning hooded sweatshirts — a “hoodie” — as a show

of solidarity with the unarmed Florida teen who was gunned down after being deemed “suspicious” for wearing a hoodie by his killer, a self-appointed Neighborhood Watch captain.

That’s why the pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta — the church that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once pastored — wore a hoodie last Sunday. “We’re standing as a church of nonviolence to say that a hoodie is not a weapon,” the pastor, the Rev. Raphael Warnock, preached.

The uproar over Trayvon’s slaying in Sanford, Fla., continues to explode in the public consciousness a month later.

His death has clearly touched a raw nerve — exposing the unspoken fears so many black parents have for the survival of their children who enter a world where they

face suspicion just for being young and black. President Obama summed up that underlying worry with his comment last Thursday: “If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon.”

Mothers and fathers see themselves and their children in the anguished faces of Trayvon’s parents who cannot believe their son was killed for simply walking back to his father’s home with iced tea and a bag of Skittles. No one wants to be like Trayvon’s parents in having to bury their child.

That’s why so many now are talking about the survival instructions that are commonplace in black households where parents talk to their children, particularly their sons, about how to act around police and others. And for good reason. A U.S. Justice Department study found that young Black males are three to four more times likely to have police threaten them or to use force against them compared to their White counterparts.

One example is the instruction to boys to keep their hands out of their pockets because people might perceive that as threatening or think they’ve stolen something. Or in a store, to always have their items bagged and to take

a receipt to avoid any issues.

And if police are involved, sons are told not to reach for anything and to be respectful to avoid trouble or being killed.

Nationally Respected Civil Rights Attorney John Payton Dies at 65 by Zenitha Prince

Nationally Respected Civil Rights Attorney John Payton Dies at 65
By Zenitha Prince

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Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Afro American Newspapers

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - President Obama led the nation in mourning the passing of John Payton, a giant within the civil rights legal community.

 

Payton, who was the sixth president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, died in the late evening hours March 22. He was 65.

 

“Michelle and I were saddened to hear about the passing of our dear friend John Payton,” the president said in a statement. “Our thoughts and prayers go out to John’s family, the many students he taught, and those who love him.”

 

According to the LDF website, Payton’s lifelong commitment was “to be an advocate for justice, equality and a true democracy for everyone.”

Expressions from the White House, members of Congress and civil rights leaders across the country have been received reflecting the deep loss, respect and appreciation for the immense contributions John Payton has made in the struggle for improving civil rights for the African-American community, and the international communities where civil rights have and continue to be an issue.

“John Payton was one of the greatest civil rights lawyers our nation has ever had and our world has ever known,” NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous said in a statement. “From defending affirmative action to fighting mass incarcerations to protecting voting rights, John defended civil rights gains and won civil rights victories. He was a dear friend, a valued counselor, and a leader of leaders. The entire NAACP family is deeply saddened by his sudden passing. We will miss him. We will honor his memory by fighting for justice as he did – with passion, precision, and perseverance in the face of great odds.”

As head of the LDF, he secured “critical victories” in the areas of voting rights (Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District Number One v. Holder) and employment discrimination (Lewis v. the City of Chicago), according to the organization. As a partner with the Washington, D.C. firm of Wilmer, Cutler, Pickering, Hale and Dorr, Payton was the lead counsel for the University of Michigan in successfully defending the use of race in the admissions process at its undergraduate college and at its law school.

For these and other victories, the National Law Journal named John Payton one of the most influential civil rights attorneys of the last decade, and the Washington D.C. Bar Association awarded him the Charles Hamilton Houston Medallion of Merit.

“A true champion of equality, he helped protect civil rights in the classroom and at the ballot box,” President Obama said. “The legal community has lost a legend, [but] while we mourn John's passing, we will never forget his courage and fierce opposition to discrimination in all its forms.”

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