Archive for April, 2017

Rev. Al Sharpton: We Are Not Going Backwards – Spare Change News

On January 19, the eve of the presidential inauguration, the Rev. Al Sharpton stood outside Trump International Hotel in New York City with Mayor Bill De Blasio, filmmaker Michael Moore, actor Alec Baldwin and thousands of protesters to kick off their 100 days of resistance to the president-elects agenda. We are sending you a message from your hometown. You can try to turn back the clock, but you wont turn back time, Sharpton said to the cheering crowd. We are not going backwards.

Since then, Sharpton has led protesters in Washington, D.C., has spoken out on Twitter and has personally expressed his concerns about voting rights, federal investigations into the deaths of Eric Garner and Walter Scott and the auditing of police departments to Attorney General Jeff Sessions. This April, Sharpton said the movement will begin gearing up for a spring offensive to maintain the movements momentum going into the midterm elections. The opponents, the adversaries of what we believe in and stand for are counting on us becoming distracted, or becoming one that just give up or gives out, Sharpton explained. I think that the only way movements succeed is if there is a sustained indignation.

The controversial and sometimes polarizing Sharpton has grabbed his share of the headlines during his lifetime. He was often an advisor to President Barack Obama, and now he brings a New York-savvy read on the 45th president. He has known Trump for 30 years and has called the president a salesman, a promoter, a P.T. Barnum guy whose currency has always been hyperbole and overstatement. This was evident during Trumps campaign when he said that black communities were absolutely in the worst shape theyve ever been in before, a claim Politifact rated pants on fire. Despite Trumps claim that he has a great relationship with the Blacks, Sharpton said that hes never seen him in any of New Yorks Citys minority neighborhoods. Ive never seen him in Harlem, or Bed-Stuy, Sharpton said. Not one time. I cant think of one event that Ive seen him.

Though its still early in Trumps presidency, Sharpton said hes already been discouraged by Trumps actions towards minority communities. On Feb. 28, one day after the fifth anniversary of the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, Sessions indicated that his office would no longer conduct audits of troubled police departments. Heres him saying that hes going toin effectreverse whatever advancement weve made there, Sharpton said. And [he] has no fear that anyones going to say anything about it.

Sharpton noted that the decision was made at a time when a police officer is under indictment for the death of Walter Scott, when there has been no conclusion to the federal investigation into the death of Eric Garner and after the City of Baltimore and the Department of Justice agreed on a consent decree after the death of Freddie Gray.

And you want to stop all of this? said Sharpton, incredulous. And its almost like, no news. No ones upset about it. No ones talking about it. Its very terrifying.

Sharpton said the timing showed the administration is either tone deaf, or they want to send a signal that they want people to understand that that day is over. I dont know which it is, Sharpton admitted.

The decision to stop auditing police departments wasnt the only incident that Sharpton said bothered him. In late January, Trump marked the beginning of Black History Month by holding a listening session with about a dozen African Americans who were mostly campaign supporters, according to the Guardian. At the time, Sharpton said the event was tantamount to an insult and that past presidents did a lot more to celebrate black culture. A short time later, Trump came under criticism when he said that Frederick Douglass is an example of somebody whos done an amazing job and is getting recognized more and more. Many, including Sharpton, thought it sounded as though Trump believed Douglass was still alive.

Its a very dire situation, Sharpton said, You couldnt make it up, let me put it that way.

Though the situation may be dire, Sharpton confirmed that Trumps administration has reached out to him and other civil rights leaders. In February, Sharpton said he got a phone call from Sessions asking if they could meet and discuss issues over coffee. Similar overtures were made to Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League, and Cornell Brooks, president and CEO of the NAACP.

What was Sharptons response to Sessions? I said, I dont want a cup of coffee. You can meet with all of us and we can deal with these issues as we have any other attorney general, he responded. His office has said that they were going to set it up; were waiting to see. But it was supposed to have happened by now. Sharpton said that if the meeting does happen, he wont go alone: Ill only meet with him or Trump if theres other civil rights leaders [there].

In the meantime, Sharpton said hes worried Trumps agenda will reverse, and in many ways realign, where our country is going in terms of social justice, health care [and] voting rights. The black community is particularly vulnerable, Sharpton said, with much to lose from the new administration. They have the right to vote to lose. They have the right to public education being a priority in this country, which educates the overwhelming majority of our young people, Sharpton said. They have the right of police accountability to losethe right of police being prosecuted if they break the law, they have that to lose. They have their health care, which disproportionately helped us, to lose, and they have our economic standing to lose.

Sharpton continued: Black unemployment was cut in half under Barack Obama. Were hearing about a trillion dollars in infrastructure, none of which is said to be going in our communities. If he does bridges and tunnels that are not in inner cities, thats not jobs for us. That dont impact us. We have a lot to lose.

He also said hed like to see the media do a better job focusing on the issues like repealing Obamacare, like new tax codes, instead of chasing the distractions that Trump keeps feeding them. I think he throws so much at us, he concluded.

So far, Sharpton believes Trumps strategy has worked. I think the media has become completely predictable and gullible to whatever he does, he sighed. In the interim, immigrants living under terror, people are afraid theyre going to lose their health careall of that is pushed [to the side] and marginalized. Courtesy of Street Roots / INSP.ngo

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Rev. Al Sharpton: We Are Not Going Backwards - Spare Change News

Sharpton-led convention speakers take aim at Trump policies – New York Daily News


New York Daily News
Sharpton-led convention speakers take aim at Trump policies
New York Daily News
Former US Attorney General Eric Holder raises a fist during The Rev. Al Sharpton's opening remarks at the annual National Action Network convention Wednesday at The Sheraton Times Square. (Susan Watts/New York Daily News). BY Mary Mcdonnell ...
NAN kicks off annual conventionAmsterdam News

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Sharpton-led convention speakers take aim at Trump policies - New York Daily News

Ann Coulter’s backers at UC Berkeley file lawsuit | Fox News

BERKELEY, Calif. University of California, Berkeley students who invited Ann Coulter to speak on campus filed a lawsuit Monday against the university, saying it is discriminating against conservative speakers and violating students' rights to free speech.

A legal team led by Harmeet Dhillon, a San Francisco attorney who represents the Berkeley College Republicans, filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in San Francisco.

Dhillon is also a committeewoman to the Republican National Convention for California and former vice chairwoman of the California Republican Party.

"This case arises from efforts by one of California's leading public universities, UC Berkeley once known as the "birthplace of the Free Speech Movement" to restrict and stifle the speech of conservative students whose voices fall beyond the campus political orthodoxy," the lawsuit says.

Campus Republicans invited Coulter to speak at Berkeley this Thursday, but Berkeley officials informed the group last week that the event was being called off for security concerns.

The cancellation came after a series of violent clashes this year on campus and in downtown Berkeley between far-right and far-left protesters.

The university then backtracked and offered an alternate date, but Coulter has insisted that she plans to still come Thursday.

Coulter tweeted Monday that the lawsuit "demands appropriate & safe venue for my speech THIS THURSDAY."

The lawsuit demands unstated damages, compensation for attorney fees, a trial by jury and an injunction against Berkeley officials from "restricting the exercise of political expression on the UC Berkeley campus."

UC Berkeley spokesman Dan Mogulof said the university's attorneys were reviewing the complaint but were confident that "we are on very solid legal grounds." The university and its police department say they have credible intelligence of security concerns if the event goes ahead Thursday and they need to balance their need to allow free speech with the need to ensure campus security.

"The constitution permits the university to take such steps to protect public safety while facilitating expressive activities, and that is exactly what we are doing," Mogulof said.

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Ann Coulter's backers at UC Berkeley file lawsuit | Fox News

Ann Coulter cancels Berkeley event amid protests | Fox News

The hecklers used their veto.

Conservative commentator Ann Coulter told Fox News on Wednesday she would no longer give a planned speech at UC Berkeley after Young Americas Foundation pulled its support for the event amid threats of violence, calling her decision "a dark day for free speech in America."

The speech was originally scheduled to take place Thursday but Berkeley asked to postpone it until next month after protests over the planned speech grew into a nationally-watched firestorm.

"I looked over my shoulder and my allies had joined the other team."

- Ann Coulter

BERKELEY COLLEGE REPUBLICANS EXPLAIN LAWSUIT

Coulter, YAF -- which had helped organize and finance the event -- and the Berkeley College Republicans initially fought the schools decision, with YAF and the college Republicans filing a civil rights lawsuit on Monday. But by Wednesday YAF had actively opposed Coulters speech, she said, and ordered the lawyer not [to] file for [a] court order which would have mandated a room for the talk. The college Republicans are bound by YAFs decision, Coulter said, so theres nothing more I can do.

I looked over my shoulder and my allies had joined the other team, Coulter said in an email.

In a series of tweets, Coulter said she was "so sorry for free speech crushed by thugs."

"Its sickening when a radical thuggish institution like Berkeley can so easily snuff out the cherished American right to free speech," she tweeted.

'THE FIVE' ON ANN COULTER AT UC BERKELEY

In a Tuesday statement posted to the YAF website and signed by both YAF and the executive board of the college Republicans, the groups said Berkeley "failed to meet our demands" to provide a safe environment for the speech.

"Ms. Coulter may still choose to speak in some form on campus, but Young America's Foundation will not jeopardize the safety of its staff or students," the statement said.

YAF said Wednesday the group would hold a 4 p.m. ET news conference.

"The lawsuit has not been dropped," said YAF spokesman Spencer Brown. "At no time did Berkeley provide a time or place for Coulter to speak, and unconstitutionally violated the First Amendment rights of students in preventing YAF's campus lecture from taking place. We are moving ahead with the lawsuit."

Coulter was coy about what she would be doing instead of giving the talk.

I think Im still going to Berkeley, but there will be no speech, Coulter said Wednesday.

The university's attempt to call off the event came after a series of violent clashes this year on campus and in downtown Berkeley between far-right and far-left protesters.

The lawsuit demands unstated damages and compensation for attorney fees, a trial by jury and an injunction against Berkeley officials from "restricting the exercise of political expression on the UC Berkeley campus."

It names four university officials as defendants, including University of California President Janet Napolitano and Berkeley Chancellor Nicholas B. Dirks, and three police officials, including university police chief Margo Bennett.

The University of California president's office issued a statement saying it welcomes speakers of all political viewpoints and "is committed to providing a forum to enable Ann Coulter to speak on the Berkeley campus."

"The campus seeks to ensure that all members of the Berkeley and larger community -- including Ms. Coulter herself -- remain safe during such an event."

Fox News Michael Lundin and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Ann Coulter cancels Berkeley event amid protests | Fox News

Ann Coulter Says She Will Pull Out of Speech at Berkeley – New York Times


New York Times
Ann Coulter Says She Will Pull Out of Speech at Berkeley
New York Times
Ann Coulter said Wednesday that she is canceling her planned speech at the University of California, Berkeley, because she had lost the backing of conservative groups that had initially sponsored her appearance. Ms. Coulter, in a message to The New ...
Ann Coulter speech at UC Berkeley canceled after loss of conservative groups' supportUSA TODAY
Ann Coulter says her Berkeley speech canceledCNN
Ann Coulter already made her point about free speech. Going to Berkeley anyway would have been reckless.Washington Post
Los Angeles Times -Fox News -CNBC -Young America's Foundation
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Ann Coulter Says She Will Pull Out of Speech at Berkeley - New York Times