On the campaign trail last year, then-Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump sought the support of black voters by asking them, “What the hell do you have to lose?”
An answer came during the Congressional Black Caucus' annual legislative conference this past week: Everything.
“We are losing essential freedoms,” said Brittany Packnett, who became an advocate for criminal justice reform after the 2014 police killing of Michael Brown and subsequent protests in Ferguson, Missouri. “The mood is resolute. No one is confused about the amount of work that lies ahead of us.”
Those who flocked to the nation's capital for the gathering of black lawmakers, leaders and policy experts identified multiple ways that black Americans are losing ground under President Trump's watch.
The conference, which ended Sunday, took place against the backdrop of yet another attempt by the GOP-controlled Congress to undo a signature domestic achievement of the country's first black president, the Affordable Care Act. Over the past eight months, black Americans have also been alarmed by the administration's attempt to undo federal housing programs, a lack of funding for historically black colleges, and a retreat from discussion of disparities in policing of minority communities.
The conference also happened as Trump attacked NFL players who kneel in protest during the national anthem. Since last season, several players have knelt or raised fists when the anthem is played to protest police treatment of blacks and social injustice.
This year's CBC conference was the first since president Barack Obama left office, shifting the national black political leadership mantle from the White House back to Capitol Hill. The heavily Democratic caucus - currently boasting its largest-ever membership with 49 representatives and senators - so far has had a testy relationship with Trump, who got only 8 percent of the black vote when he was elected last November.
Concerns falling on ‘deaf ears’
Trump met with CBC leadership in March. But in June, the caucus turned down an invitation to meet again, saying their concerns have fallen on “deaf ears” at the White House, and that Trump's policies are harmful to black Americans.
Trump's claim that “many sides” were responsible for racial violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August, and that there were “very fine people” among the white nationalists in attendance protesting the possible removal of a statue of Confederate general Robert E. Lee, generated controversy.
Trump has rejected the persistent condemnation of his words and actions on matters involving race. Speaking from the White House amid overwhelming criticism of his statements, he declared, “Racism is evil,” and said he condemned white supremacists and other hate groups. He declared himself to be “the least racist person that you have ever met” in a December 2015 interview with CNN.
At a raucous town hall meeting on Thursday, Reps. John Lewis of Georgia and Maxine Waters of California urged attendees to push back against Trump's agenda and the newly emboldened neo-Nazis and white supremacists who have wholeheartedly embraced it.
“Racism is still deeply embedded in American society,” said Lewis, a veteran civil rights activist. “We have to call it what it is at all levels, whether it's at the White House or the poor house. Don't try to sweep it under the rug like it doesn't still exist.”
Waters, who has been a staunch and vocal critic of Trump, was cheered when she called Attorney General Jeff Sessions “a racist.”
“He's a throwback,” Waters said. She noted Sessions' reversal of ex-Attorney General Eric Holder's stance on mandatory minimums for crack-cocaine prison sentences, which have disproportionately affected African-Americans, and his review of federal consent decrees for local law enforcement agencies.
Sessions saw his nomination to be a federal judge turned away in 1986 because of allegations he had made racially charged comments. He said then, “I am not a racist,” and during his confirmation this year rejected “the caricature that was created of me,” saying, “It wasn't accurate then, and it's not accurate now.”
Put off during campaign
During the campaign, many black voters were put off by Trump's references to blacks “living in hell” and his promises to restore “law and order” to cities like Philadelphia, Chicago and Baltimore. This summer, Trump suggested that police officers be more rough with suspects when taking them into custody.
Philadelphia city councilman Derrick Green said Trump's budget proposals are harmful to cities because they eliminate programs like the community development block grant.
“It is really questionable how he can really say that he wants to help cities like Philadelphia,” said Green, noting that Philadelphia remains the poorest big city in America, with a poverty rate double that of the national average at more than 25 percent.
Economist Julianne Malveaux, who attended the conference, called Trump's characterization of urban centers “stereotypical and stupid.” Malveaux, former president of the all-black women's Bennett College in North Carolina, cited Trump's lack of support for historically black colleges in the budget, as among the examples of his lack of urgency to address concerns in the black community.
“What he seems to have done is reverse the entirety of the Obama legacy, literally department by department,” said Malveaux. “What do we have to lose? Everything. The message is, ‘You don't count.’”
Princeton African-American Studies professor Eddie Glaude said those who caution that Trump's tenure is young are “naive.”
“What are we waiting to see?” Glaude asked. “The economic philosophy is not going to benefit us.”