Tag Archives: Bernie Sanders

Bernie Sanders in Minneapolis: Reparations and Reconciliation?

February 13, 2016

Can cynicism, despair and optimism exist all at once?

Drum Corps for Sanders
Drum corps at Sanders forum; Photo by Adja Gildersleve

Bernie Sanders came to Minneapolis on February 12, for an event billed as a “community forum on Black America.” The event was hosted by north Minneapolis’s Neighborhoods Organizing for Change, and was held at nearby Patrick Henry High School, home of the Patriots. 

The significance of the location was not lost on me. In popular American mythology, Patrick Henry stands as a hero worth naming a school after. As a skilled orator, who was able to appeal to the lower classes, Henry is remembered for bravely declaring he would rather die than live without “liberty.”

Although our history textbooks don’t often dwell on this, early Americans were a rebellious bunch, and their penchant for rebellion–against greedy landowners, for example, who would not pay the militia they depended on–was a threat to the emerging, slave trade-fueled wealth and control of an elite class of men, you know–the ones who were created equal, and were in need of liberty?

People like Patrick Henry helped direct early American unrest towards the British, and away from the enemy within. Henry’s words of fire inspired an assurance that it was the British King, and not the growing American elite, that was the enemy to be defeated. 

Show me that age and country where the rights and liberties of the people were placed on the sole chance of their rulers being good men, without a consequent loss of liberty? 
Patrick Henry

Bernie Sanders is also a good speaker. Unlike Patrick Henry, Sanders seems bent on naming the problems in front of us: the greed and lawlessness of Wall Street, the control of the corporate class, the ballooning prison industrial complex, the racist oppression built into voter suppression efforts, and so on. 

In Minneapolis, Sanders spoke to the importance of investing in communities of “need,” and to stop punishing people–through exorbitant college tuition rates–for trying to get an education. He touched on environmental racism, at the prompting of an audience member, but would not directly answer a repeatedly called out question:

Will you support reparations for Black Americans?

This question hung awkwardly in the air at the end of the forum, when American Indian Movement co-founder Clyde Bellecourt insisted on being heard. Forum host Anthony Newby, of Neighborhoods Organizing for Change, tried to push Bellecourt to ask a specific question, since Sanders was about to exit the stage and hustle over to a local Democratic party event (where Hillary Clinton also appeared). But Bellecourt did not want to be rushed.

“This is a forum for people of color, and I am one of those colors,” he insisted. Some people in the crowd seemed irritated by Bellecourt’s disruption, and felt the event had been organized to specifically address the state of Black Americans.

And in this tension, we can hear echoes of Patrick Henry’s artful dodging, away from our own demons–runaway capitalism, greed, exploitation, the slave labor that built the wealth of this country, the Native lands grabbed for our “Manifest Destiny,” the continuous assault on immigrants and refugees, and so on–and towards a faraway master.

Whose painful legacy can or should be dealt with first? And will a potential Sanders administration be able to deliver on the reparations and reconciliation–through the kind of Truth and Reconciliation Commission that Canada has put in place–that might really power a people-led movement?

For my part, whatever anguish of spirit it may cost, I am willing to know the whole truth; to know the worst and to provide for it. 
Patrick Henry

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Bernie Sanders & AFL-CIO to focus on Racial and Economic Justice in Minneapolis, Unions

February 9, 2016

It’s 5 degrees outside, but you can put away that parka: things are hot in Minneapolis right now.

Bernie Sanders is coming to a north Minneapolis forum on Friday, February 12. The exact details have yet to be revealed, but the significance of this event is, as Sanders might say, “yooge.”

Sanders will appear at north Minneapolis’s Capri Theater, at the invitation of Neighborhoods Organizing for Change (NOC), a northside non-profit dedicated to fighting for racial and economic justice in the Twin Cities. A February 8 NOC press release says the forum will “focus on the Black experience in America, and specifically in Minnesota” and the racial disparities that exist here and elsewhere. Also up for discussion is what the federal government can do to “invest in radical solutions being developed in Black communities and other communities of color.” The statement says Hillary Clinton declined NOC’s invitation to attend.

According to NOC, a presidential candidate has never held a forum in north Minneapolis, a historic area home to some of Minneapolis’s proudest, yet most marginalized neighborhoods (learn more about the area by watching this superb, story-based video). By agreeing to come here, Sanders will have to put his progressive stump speech to the test.

Are the marginalized and people of color really at the center of Sanders’ proposed reforms? If you follow the recent writings of both Ta-Nehisi Coates and Michelle Alexander, you know that, this year, there will be no free passes given to candidates who say they want what’s “best” for African-Americans, specifically, or people of color overall.

That seems refreshing, as does another major event scheduled in Minneapolis this week. On Thursday and Friday, Tefere Gebre, Vice President of the AFL-CIO, will be in town for a forum on the need to bring racial and economic justice to the nation’s unions. POCUM Forum

Kerry Jo Felder is the education organizer for the Minneapolis Regional Labor Federation (MRLF), which acts as an umbrella organization for the AFL-CIO, the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers, and other local unions. Felder says Gebre is coming to Minneapolis as part of the AFL-CIO’s eight-city Labor Commission on Racial and Economic Justice tour.

This tour was set in motion at the 2014 unrest in Ferguson, Missouri and is intended to provide a platform for confronting the institutionalized racism in labor unions, while also making the case that unions can provide solutions to today’s entrenched and expanding racial and economic inequities.

Felder, who started a People of Color Union Member (POCUM) caucus within the MRLF, says the union must step up and do a better job of acknowledging how racism is holding unions back. “I hear the stories all the time, from my POCUMs. People are sick and tired of being passed over for jobs and promotions.”

Tackling racism head-on is essential to the overall survival of unions, according to Felder, who lives in north Minneapolis and sees disparities–in housing, jobs, income and education–around her every day. “We have to have people who are in the unions go back to the community, and explain why unions matter. Relationships matter. If people are getting passed over for positions, they’re not going to have a good taste in their mouths, or want to help support unions.”

The AFL-CIO held similar racial and economic justice tours in 1995 and 2005, says Felder, but, clearly, not enough has changed.“We’re trying to make this happen,” she insisted. “We hope we can focus on what’s bad about how our unions are operating, come up with some solutions, and make it good.”

AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka gets this, says Felder. “He sees that, if the unions are going to survive, they are going to have to include people of color more.”

Perhaps, if Bernie Sanders, or Hillary Clinton, or any presidential candidate, is going to survive, they will also need to, authentically, address the issues–and solutions–raised by people of color.

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