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THE VOICE OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY SINCE 1934 October 29—November 4, 2020 Vol. 87 No. 13
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“AS IT WAS SPOKEN ... LET US RECORD.”
Many young Blacks highly disillusioned with politics and voting But Trump-supporting rappers represent few or none By Sam Fullwood III The Conversation
Ilhan Omar
Courtesy of Wikipedia
Lacy Johnson
Courtesy of LacyJohnson.com
Lacy Johnson (IR) and incumbent Ilhan Omar (DFL) square off in 5th Congressional District The MSR wanted to give readers an opportunity to hear one more time from the candidates. We asked questions we thought were of utmost importance to the Black community and other Communities of Color. MSR: What is your proposal for helping the District, especially its Black constituents, cope with the expected fallout from COVID (for example joblessness, homelessness, evictions, loss of small businesses)? Johnson: I support a response where, first and foremost, the elderly and most vulnerable are protected. I support a response where the economy and job development is a focus. If we help bring in new sustainable jobs, many things such as homelessness and joblessness will despair. I support an extension of flexible rent payments to decrease homelessness as we roll out new jobs. I strongly support additional funding for small businesses. Omar: In Minneapolis, the effects of the pandemic haven’t been felt equally—19% of people of color have filed for unemployment compared to 9.5% of White workers. Black people are dying at nearly triple the rate of other folks. COVID-19 has exposed glar-
ing racial disparities that have long existed in our state and in our country. And I think we have an opportunity to create policies that remake our system in a more equal way. That means fighting to tear down all the systems of oppression that keep our society unequal. In criminal justice, in health care, in education and housing and employment and in the very air we breathe. I think if anything positive will come from this crisis, I hope it is that policies me and my colleagues have been advocating for—like Medicare for All, like universal cash assistance, like student debt cancellation—will be seen as reasonable and necessary. MSR: What will you do to address the issue of police violence? Omar: After George Floyd’s tragic death, I and other House Democrats moved swiftly to pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in order to establish new standards of policing, ban the use of chokeholds, stop noknock warrants, prohibit racial profiling and end qualified immunity for police, among many other reforms. I also introduced a package of bills to reform law enforcement at the federal level, including one which criminalizes police
violence against demonstrators exercising their constitutional rights, and another to establish a federal agency responsible for investigating all nationwide deaths occurring in police custody or police shootings. Johnson: I do not see a way for our communities to be safe without public safety. I am not in favor of defunding the police, but instead shifting some funds around to focus more on neighborhood psychological and community involvement training. Our officers nowadays live in different neighborhoods and often have great intentions, but rarely genuinely understand each neighborhood’s inner workings. MSR: In the wake of the increase in crime during the pandemic, what will you do to ensure that people feel safe in their homes? Johnson: I will always support our policemen and women because I believe our communities should still rely on public safety officials. However, when reviewing the world news and the nonstop #OromoProtests that I see in Minnesota against the Oromo people’s mass killing by the Ethiopian government, I am grateful that we have the Second Amendment in America. I will continue to advocate for it because Americans should
always have the right to protect themselves from anyone if they are in danger. Omar: Most problems arising from substance use disorders, mental health diagnoses, and poverty require medical professionals and social workers—not criminal enforcement or armed officers. Getting people the care and services they need is public safety. This is crime prevention. A new vision of what “first responders” look like will reflect that reality. We can balance the need for protection from violent crimes with the need to address our policing system. A new system will allow our community to do the work that is needed—and employ the skills needed—to solve our most serious crimes and address some of the scariest situations that our communities can face. MSR: Lots of people are struggling. They don’t have jobs or have limited income. What will you do to help? Omar: A new stimulus bill which includes additional unemployment assistance and direct cash payouts, for starters. We also have to move to cancel rent and mortgage payments to make sure people aren’t just kept in their homes, but are able to survive once the pandemic is over. Further, increasing the ■See 5th District on page 5
Judging from the brief but furious flurry of recent news and social media reports and rumors about the 2020 presidential campaign, the fate of the election may very well be decided by a previously undetected groundswell of support for President Donald Trump by young Black men. In the closing days of the campaign, a pair of hip hop art-
Rappers 50 Cent (l) and Ice Cube ists—50 Cent and Ice Cube— drew widespread political attention by expressing support for Trump, or at least a willingness to work with him in a second term. Specifically, 50 Cent—born Curtis James Jackson III—endorsed Trump’s reelection in a Twitter post, saying he feared Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden would raise his taxes. “Yeah, I don’t want to be 20 cent,” he wrote, noting that higher taxes on the rich “is a very, very, bad idea. I don’t like it.” For his part, Ice Cube—born O'Shea Jackson—didn’t exactly endorse Trump. He acknowledged in interviews that he had talked with Trump campaign officials about their interest in his “Contract with Black America.” Ice Cube revealed his 13-point contract in July as a response to the public protests surrounding the police shooting of George Floyd, describing it as “a blueprint to achieve racial economic justice” with proposals addressing financial, police, criminal jus-
tice and education reforms. By entertaining a conversation with the campaign concerning his proposals, Ice Cube provided the opening for an advisor to the president’s re-election campaign to tweet that the rapper was on board with Team Trump, overstating the reality of the situation. There is no real objective empirical evidence that 50 Cent and Ice Cube represent widespread Black political thought, or a hidden pocket of pro-Trump activ-
Courtesy of MGN ism among Black men. Quite the contrary, they are outliers within the larger Black voting community—which includes young Black men—and they are unlikely to sway a considerable number of Black voters away from the Democratic candidate in the November 3 election. A study conducted earlier this summer by American University’s Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies and School of Communications found that Trump is exceedingly unpopular
“Don’t believe the hype.” among Black Americans. For example, among all of the 1,215 Black American respondents surveyed during early July in six key swing states (Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia and Florida), only 7% said they intended to vote for Trump and 66% said they planned to vote for Biden. ■See Rappers on page 5
Rally calls for Myon Burrell’s release has expressed doubt about his guilt. Burrell, now 33, was 15 when On Sunday, October 25 a few he was sent to prison for life in hundred people gathered at the 2003 for killing 11-year-old Tyesha George Floyd Square on one of the Edwards in South Minneapolis in coldest October days in Twin Cit- 2002. Klobuchar had come under ies history to demand the release fire for the conviction after conof Myon Burrell, who has been in tinuously bragging about putting prison for 18 years for a crime that Burrell in jail for the murder as she By MSR News Service
he insists he did not commit. Even campaigned for the Democratic Hennepin County’s then-prosecu- presidential nomination. Several speakers addressed the tor, now Senator Amy Klobuchar,
crowd, including family members and a few well-known activists. The rally took place directly across the street from Cup Foods, the store Burrell told police he was in at the time of the accidental shooting of Edwards. The tapes that he said would have backed his alibi have mysteriously disappeared. “The people who worked in the store [Cup Foods] never came and said what happened when the police came and took the videotape,” explained Michael Toussaint, Burrell’s father, at the gathering of supporters. This is the same Cup Foods where George Floyd was arrested and killed by Minneapolis police on Memorial Day this year. “My son was convicted of something he didn’t do. I watched as the judge turn his back during my Amariana Burrell (niece) and Myron Burrell, Jr. Photos by King Demetrius Pendleton son’s trial. He fell asleep twice. The justice system is rigged. The system “It wasn’t that she cared about char. “She cared about her politi- boots on the ground. And he is are the same people who make the laws, but they break them too,” my child’s life,” he said, referring cal career. Please don’t stop fight- not the only one in there who is to then-prosecutor Amy Klobu- ing for my child. We got to keep innocent.” said Toussaint. ■See Burrell on page 5