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Al Sharpton on Black firsts in politics: We did not put you there for symbolism – Yahoo News

Were not fans. Were grown folks that have the power of our vote, Sharpton said during the launch of Build Back Bolder.

Rev. Al Sharpton spoke during the online launch event for the Build Back Bolder plan and called on Black politicians to commit to making change beyond holding their landmark positions.

Read More: Al Sharpton files for divorce from wife after 17 years of separation

The Los Angeles Times reported the Black to the Future Action Fund released the agenda and garnered the support of Sharpton, the Rev. William Barber II of the Poor Peoples Campaign, LaTosha Brown of Black Voters Matter, Ns Ufot of the New Georgia Project, and Deborah Scott of Georgia STAND UP. Build Back Bolder is a Black mandate issued to the history-making President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris administration.

We did not put you there for symbolism. We are past the Jackie Robinson days, Sharpton said during the online launch for Build Back Bolder, according to the LA Times. We dont want a Black in the game. We want to win the game.

What weve learned is that we only are going to get what we fight for, he continued. And even though some [politicians] may be better mannered, it does not mean that theyre going to do what is right for our agenda. Were not fans. Were grown folks that have the power of our vote.

Reverend Al Sharpton speaks during the Juneteenth celebration in the Greenwood District on June 19, 2020 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo by Michael B. Thomas/Getty Images)

Alicia Garza, Principal at Black to the Future Action Fund, worked closely on the project.

America has consistently failed to deliver on its promise to Black communities, Garza said, according to the Times. But when we are focused, when we are organized, when we are determined, Black America has been successful in delivering on our promise to not rest until freedom comes. We pushed the Biden-Harris campaign to victory, not for them, but for us, because we cant wait any longer.

Build Back Bolder recommends that in the first 100 days, the Biden-Harris White House expand Social Security payments, guarantee priority for Black-owned small businesses in the next round of PPP and ensure racial equity in COVID-19 vaccine distribution, among a broader list of suggestions. In the long-term, the plan hopes to simply hold the government accountable.

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Government, and the people who operate it, must be held accountable for laws, policies, and practices that marginalize and perpetuate disparities for Black communities and Black people, the plan states. Policymakers must take action to bridge racial gaps in health, wealth, and other social outcomes by eliminating laws, policies, and practices that do harm to Black people, as well as by outlawing private sector practices that exploit racial disparities in order to boost profits.

Harris made history when she became the first Black and the first Southeast Asian-American to hold the position of vice president. During her first national sit-down interview since the historic win, the Howard University graduate sat with Errin Haines, editor-at-large at the non-profit, independent news outlet The 19th News, and was questioned on her significant role and plans while in office.

I feel a great sense of responsibility. When I took that oath on Jan. 20, there were a whole lot of people standing on that stage with me, she said. And you may not have seen them, but they were in my heart, they were in my mind when I had my hand on the Bible and raised my hand to take that oath. And I feel the weight of the responsibility that comes with that.

She also spoke to being a first, but hopefully, not the last.

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at the White House during a Black History Month Virtual Celebration on February 27, 2021 in Washington, DC. . (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

Read More: Sharpton eulogizes George Floyd, demands America get your knee off our necks

I do it with a sense of optimism, knowing that we are still, yes sadly making a lot of firsts, but we are doing it and if we keep at it, soon perhaps we will be talking about the second and the third and the fourth, and it will be common and not something that we need to write about because its happening everywhere.

Watch the full interview below:

Correction: A previous version of this article misstated Alicia Garzas title.

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Al Sharpton on Black firsts in politics: We did not put you there for symbolism - Yahoo News

Battered by Scandal, Governor Cuomo Leans on Black Leaders to Build His Defense – The New York Times

As he faced the worst political crisis of his tenure, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo visited a Black church in Harlem this week to get vaccinated against the coronavirus.

But he clearly had another agenda as well. One Black minister or political figure after another rose to offer praise for Mr. Cuomo, with the leader of the states chapter of the N.A.A.C.P., Hazel N. Dukes, even referring to the governor as her son, insisting that he aint white.

Then Charles B. Rangel, the former longtime congressman and New York political icon, heralded the importance of due process, telling people to back off until you get some facts.

When opposition starts piling up, said Mr. Rangel, now 90, You go to your family, you go to your friends because you know they will be with you.

As Mr. Cuomo navigates a deepening scandal over allegations of sexual harassment, he has leaned on his deep well of support in the Black community, which has reliably backed him and twice helped him win re-election. The governor and his associates have been working the phones, seeking the support of Black leaders and elected officials who could serve as a firewall against the barrage of calls for his resignation or impeachment.

The phone calls have been supplemented by the governors recent visits to vaccination sites, often flanked by Black and Latino members of the clergy. The Rev. Al Cockfield, who joined Mr. Cuomo at the Javits Center in Manhattan for one of the events, said he attended to send a purposeful message: Im standing with the governor.

Of course, some of the governors most prominent critics have also been Black officials, such as Andrea Stewart-Cousins, the State Senate majority leader, who was one of the earliest leaders to call on Mr. Cuomo to resign.

Yet a number of other Black leaders have helped Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, blunt some of the blowback, with many saying they support investigations into the harassment claims instead of the governors immediate resignation.

Representatives Hakeem Jeffries and Gregory Meeks, two high-ranking Black Democrats from New York, are among the few members of the states congressional delegation who have not called on Mr. Cuomo to immediately resign. Mr. Jeffries and Mr. Meeks refused requests to be interviewed for this article.

Ms. Dukes was one of the first to issue a forceful rebuke of those calling for Mr. Cuomos resignation. Other Black women, such as Assemblywomen Crystal D. Peoples-Stokes and Inez E. Dickens, as well as Laurie Cumbo, a Brooklyn councilwoman, have been among his most vocal defenders.

It strikes a nerve for African-Americans at a lot of levels, said Charlie King, a longtime ally of Mr. Cuomo who was his running mate during his failed bid for governor in 2002. I think for African-Americans, in general, we believe for a lot of reasons that this rush to judgment never works out well for people of color and we believe deeply in seeing how it plays out before you convict somebody.

A number of women, including former and current aides, have accused Mr. Cuomo of inappropriate remarks and behavior, including unwanted touching and unwelcome sexual advances.

Mr. Cuomo has defiantly rejected calls for him to resign, while denying that he has touched anyone inappropriately and apologizing for comments he said may have been interpreted as unintentional flirtation.

A poll by Siena College released this week suggested that the governor had some support: Fifty percent of voters believed he shouldnt step down, compared to 35 percent who said he should.

The poll suggested that the governors support was stronger among the Black electorate. Nearly 70 percent of Black voters surveyed said Mr. Cuomo should not immediately resign, compared to 50 percent among all voters. The governors favorability rating was also higher among Black voters, 61 percent, than white voters, 37 percent.

Many of Mr. Cuomos achievements, like raising the minimum wage and passing paid family leave, for example, have made him popular among Black voters.

The governors team is now eager to reach an agreement with the State Legislature to legalize recreational marijuana, a long-stalled initiative with strong appeal among Black and Latino communities that have suffered from the disparate enforcement of drug laws. A deal could be announced this week, far sooner than originally anticipated, according to lawmakers familiar with the matter.

To many, Mr. Cuomos attempts to rally support among Black influencers was just the latest example of the Democratic Partys reliance on its Black base in moments of political peril.

Former President Bill Clinton employed a similar strategy during his impeachment battle in the late 1990s to weather the allegations related to his conduct with an intern, Monica Lewinsky, in the Oval Office. Mr. Cuomo was Mr. Clintons federal housing secretary at the time.

Mr. Cuomo may also be taking cues from Gov. Ralph Northam of Virginia, a Democrat who survived widespread calls for his resignation over a racist photograph in his medical school yearbook. Although the politics in New York and Virginia are different, Mr. Northam retained the support of Black voters throughout the controversy, with polls showing most of them favored him remaining in office.

Race has already been thrust into the debate over Mr. Cuomos fate, with some of his defenders drawing on problematic comparisons between the allegations against the governor and the wrongful persecution of African-Americans.

In a Facebook post, George Latimer, the Westchester County executive, compared those calling on Mr. Cuomo to resign to the mob that lynched Emmett Till, the 14-year-old Black boy who was wrongfully accused of offending a white woman in Mississippi more than 60 years ago. (Mr. Latimer, who is white, has since edited the post, noting that the comparison was offensive to some.)

Some lawmakers, such as Assemblywoman Rodneyse Bichotte, a Democrat from Brooklyn, have invoked the Central Park Five the group of Black and Hispanic teenagers who were wrongfully convicted of assaulting a white female jogger in 1989 in arguing for a thorough investigation into the claims against Mr. Cuomo.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, an influential Black power broker, said there are concerns among members of his National Action Network of setting a precedent of calling for someones resignation before the investigation was completed, because it could be used against Black officials in the future.

Some Black supporters have forcefully defended Mr. Cuomos right to due process, with many saying it is a reflection of deep-seated skepticism among members in their communities who have not received fair trials or have been wrongfully convicted on false charges.

The three-term governor is confronting two crises simultaneously:

Progressive Democrats like Jumaane Williams, the New York City public advocate, have emphasized that they, too, support due process. They said, however, that the debate over the governors fate now centered on a question of his political judgment, one that also involved his past transgressions.

For me this is the last straw in a long line of wrongdoings for which the governor shouldnt be governor, said Mr. Williams, citing Mr. Cuomos attempt to hide the full extent of nursing home deaths during the pandemic and his abrupt disbandment of an anti-corruption panel known as the Moreland Commission.

Mr. Cuomo angered Black voters and stakeholders in 2002, when he ran a bruising campaign in a Democratic primary against Carl McCall, damaging Mr. McCalls bid to become the states first African-American governor. But Mr. Cuomo has regained the support of many of them since then.

Mr. Williams has pushed for Mr. Cuomo to resign, but he acknowledged the governors ties to Black voters.

I think the Cuomo name has particular meaning in the Black community, Mr. Williams said. Theyre also sensitive of being accused of things and not being able to defend yourself.

Like Mr. Williams, some of Mr. Cuomos most prominent foils throughout this crisis have been Black elected officials.

Ms. Stewart-Cousins, a Democrat from Westchester County, was, at the time, the most powerful Democratic politician to call on Mr. Cuomo to step down earlier this month.

Carl E. Heastie, the Assembly speaker, directed the Assemblys judiciary committee to begin a broad investigation into Mr. Cuomo that could potentially lead to the states first impeachment in more than a century.

The investigation, which could take months, gave Mr. Cuomo some breathing room, leading some critics to speculate it was actually a mechanism to delay impeachment. Even so, it could fuel Mr. Cuomos eventual departure.

And Akeem Browder, a criminal justice reform advocate, said that seeing Mr. Cuomo getting vaccinated Wednesday at a Black church in Harlem reminded him of why he began distancing himself from the governor three years ago because he felt as if he were being used.

Mr. Browder, whose brother, Kalief Browder, killed himself in 2015 after facing abuse at Rikers Island during the three years he was held there for allegedly stealing a backpack, went from being a guest at the governors State of the State address to endorsing Mr. Cuomos primary challenger, Cynthia Nixon, in 2018.

Mr. Browder felt the governor was not pushing hard enough for bail reform while benefiting politically from his presence at events.

I thought how indicative it was of how willing he is to use and leverage his position, Mr. Browder said of Mr. Cuomos appearance at the Black church this week. He was literally pandering to the Black community to get his name out from under fire.

And then there is Letitia James, the state attorney general, who is overseeing a separate investigation into the sexual harassment claims.

Ms. James, the first woman and first Black woman to be elected to the position, presents a dual threat to Mr. Cuomo: She has been talked about as a potential candidate to challenge him next year.

It has been the Black community that has kept up the governors numbers, said Mr. Williams, the public advocate. I think there will be erosion if the governor tried to run again and there was a credible person who ran against the governor.

Reporting was contributed by Shane Goldmacher, Maggie Haberman and Jeffery C. Mays.

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Battered by Scandal, Governor Cuomo Leans on Black Leaders to Build His Defense - The New York Times

‘Stand your ground’ laws: Everything you need to know – CNN

(CNN)

Cases of self-defense arent always simple especially in states with a stand your ground law.

In July 2018, police say Michael Drejka fatally shot a man who shoved and knocked him to the ground in an argument over a parking space in Florida.

Although critics say Drejkas use of deadly force was uncalled for, the Pinellas County sheriff declined to arrest him, citing the states stand your ground law, which gave him immunity. The decision sparked outcry and calls for reform.

But its not the first time a stand your ground law has created controversy. Many states have similar laws on the books.

Heres what you need to know about them.

Generally, stand your ground laws allow people to respond to threats or force without fear of criminal prosecution.

Most self-defense laws state that a person under threat of physical injury has a duty to retreat. If after retreating the threat continues, the person may respond with force.

If you attack me in a non-stand your ground state, Ive got to try to get out of it, explained CNN legal analyst Mark OMara. I have to retreat before I attack The theory is, it (responding with force) has to be your last chance.

But in stand your ground states, you have no obligation to retreat, OMara said.

In other words, someone facing an imminent threat can use lethal force right away without first trying to escape.

04:10-Source:CNN

Mark O'Mara on the shooting of Markeis McGlockton

While most states provide some form of legal protection in cases of self-defense, 25 have enacted stand your ground laws, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL).

The laws in at least 10 of these states, mostly in the South, literally say that you can stand [your] ground.

Its important to note that not all stand your ground laws are the same. States may word and even enforce them differently.

Florida has had several high-profile cases that sparked national conversation about stand your ground laws.

The state passed its stand your ground law in 2005, allowing people to meet force with force if they believe theyre under threat of being harmed.

Of all the states with stand your ground laws, Floridas is probably the strongest at this point, OMara said, for three reasons.

First is the fact the states law says a person has no duty to retreat.

Second: the states law provides immunity from criminal prosecution and civil actions, OMara said, which not all other stand your ground statutes do.

The final reason, OMara said, can be attributed to a recent change in the law, which shifts the burden onto the state to prove that a shooter did not act in self-defense and is therefore not entitled to stand your ground immunities.

Previously, the shooter used stand your ground as a defense, and had to prove she or he feared further bodily harm. But no longer.

Nowhere else is there anything like this in criminal law where somebody asserts something and the burden then shifts to the other person, Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said in a press conference. Thats a very heavy standard and it puts the burden on the state.

Floridas law has drawn attention over the years, most notably in the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida.

11:55-Source:CNN

Basketball star Carmelo Anthony says gun violence has "got worse" since Trayvon Martin

In 2012, a jury found George Zimmerman who OMara represented in that case not guilty in the shooting death.

Martin was walking to his fathers fiancees house from a convenience store when Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer, saw him and called the police. Zimmerman defied an order to not approach the teen. When he did, the two got into a physical altercation, and Zimmerman shot Martin.

As the case garnered national attention, onlookers speculated whether Zimmerman would try to use the Floridas stand your ground law as part of his defense.

Zimmerman was charged in Martins death but was eventually acquitted. Ultimately, he did not lean on the states stand our ground law, but did claim self defense.

Still, the case cast a spotlight on Floridas stand your ground law and demands to change it.

Supporters of stand your ground laws say they give people the right to protect themselves. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush defended the law at the National Rifle Associations 2015 annual meeting in Nashville.

In Florida you can defend yourself anywhere you have a legal right to be, he said. You shouldnt have to choose between being attacked and going to jail.

The NRA has pushed hard for stand your ground laws in the past. Its former president, Marion Hammer, helped create Floridas law back in 2005.

Critics say the laws encourage violence and allow for legal racial bias. In 2013, Sherrilyn Ifill, then president and director-counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, gave testimony in a hearing on stand your ground laws.

Even those who do not consciously harbor negative associations between race and criminality are regularly infected by unconscious views that equate race with violence, she wrote.

Racial stereotypes, she wrote, could cause people to misinterpret innocent behavior as something threatening or violent, and stand your ground laws could justify this violence.

With the controversy surrounding stand your ground laws, there have been efforts to change or repeal them. In 2017, North Carolina lawmakers filed the Gun Safety Act, which would repeal the states stand your ground law. No updates on the bill have been available since April of 2017.

The NCSL says recent attempts have not been successful.

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'Stand your ground' laws: Everything you need to know - CNN

What are Stand Your Ground Laws? | Brady

Imagine if your state legislature passed a law saying that any person who feels threatened by another person may use lethal force to execute the perceived threat. Then say that, as a matter of state policy, residents should presume that Black people are more threatening than White people.

This sounds absurd, but this is basically a Stand Your Ground law in a nutshell.

These laws pervert self-defense and make it self-offense." Our countrys weak gun laws and prolific civilian firearm carrying mean Stand Your Ground laws increase, rather than decrease, gun crime. This, alone, is an unacceptable attack on everyones right to live. And when combined with deeply-rooted, racist conceptions of white innocence and black criminality, as well as courts unequal applications, Stand Your Ground laws particularly devalue Black lives.

With rights come responsibilities. The right to keep and bear arms is not a free for all; it does not encompass a right to trigger-happy vigilantism devoid of reason or proportionality. Stand Your Ground laws are an affront to our right not to be shot and we must stand our ground against them.

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What are Stand Your Ground Laws? | Brady

‘Stand Your Ground’ Laws Are Racist, New Study Reveals

Photo by Ryan Vaarsi via Flickr

To George Zimmerman, a 17-year-old black kid in a dark hoodie was a threatening presence. Under Florida's Stand Your Ground statute, this was reason enough for him to shoot and kill Trayvon Martin in his family's neighborhood in Sanford, Florida in 2012.

Florida was the first state to pass a Stand Your Ground law in 2005. The controversial statute that's been enacted in 23 states across the US authorizes a person to use lethal force to defend his or her life against any threat (or perceived threat). But critics of the self-defense statute argue that it perpetuates racial biasand a recent study published in the journal Social Science & Medicine has given law's detractors new evidence to prove it.

In "Race, law, and health: Examination of 'Stand Your Ground' and defendant convictions in Florida," researchers Nicole Ackermann, Melody S. Goodman, Keon Gilbert, Cassandra Arroyo-Johnson, and Marcello Pagano combed through data from a Tampa Bay Times investigation. They further examined the 204 cases in the state in which Stand Your Ground was cited as a defense against homicide or some other violent act and the results were, sadly, not surprising. The study found that in cases argued from 2005 to 2013, juries were twice as likely to convict the perpetrator of a crime against a white person than against a person of color. "These results are similar to pre-civil rights era statistics, with strict enforcement for crimes when the victim was white and less-rigorous enforcement with the victim is non-white," the researchers report.

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Take the lesser-known Stand Your Ground case of 69-year-old Trevor Dooley, a black man who claimed the statute as his defense for shooting an unarmed white man, 41-year-old David James, at a basketball court following an altercation. Although the Tampa Bay Times said this was a "case with many similarities" to Trayvon Martin's, the judge denied Dooley immunity and convicted him of manslaughter.

Behind this unequal application of the law, the study reveals, is implicit racism built on the effects of hundreds of years of explicit discrimination; Implicit Association Tests have consistently shown that, regardless of explicit preference, both black and white people associate whiteness with positive stimuli and blackness with negative stimuli.

Stand Your Ground laws are an example of "the constitutive presence of racial bias in our society by the determination of whose life is valued, demonstrated through the legal consequences for taking such a life," the study concludes. Or in other words, the question of whether #blacklivesmatter cannot be affirmed by an individual, only by our institutions and our laws. And self-defense doctrines like Stand Your Ground are akin to Jim Crow laws that viewed "white as the superior race and helped to legalize certain forms of homicide."

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James Jones, a psychologist at the University of Delaware, is a member of the National Task Force on Stand Your Ground Laws, which calls for other states to conduct similar studies such as this. In the American Medical Association's Monitor on Psychology he ultimately calls for the repeal of Stand Your Ground laws and other statues that provide far too much room for bias. "What we know from our research is that there is a lot of racial and ethnic bias in the judgment of threats," he writes. "It's important for us to show inherent bias in laws that use such a subjective criterion for self-defense."

Ackermann et al. underline the urgency of this endeavor in their study. "We have made a lot of progress since 1787, but this halving of the odds of being found guilty of a crime if the victim is non-white is an eerie reminder of the infamous three-fifths compromise."

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'Stand Your Ground' Laws Are Racist, New Study Reveals