2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumCBC ( COngressional Black Caucus) chair G.K. Butterfield endorses Hillary Clinton
CBC chair G.K. Butterfield endorses Hillary Clinton, says she is best candidate to improve black lives
http://thegrio.com/2016/01/07/g-k-butterfield-endorses-hillary-clinton/
Martin Luther King once said, Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.
The black community matters, and black votes matter, which is why I publicly and proudly support Hillary Clinton for president. She has the record, foresight, and passion to improve the lives of millions of African-Americans.
This was not a hard decision.
Four out of five black adults in this country have a favorable opinion of Clinton. Black support for her is far stronger than for any other candidate. And its well deserved: In her commitment to reforming our criminal justice system, expanding voting rights, creating jobs and economic opportunities, and enhancing workplace diversity, Clintons goals align closely with those of the Congressional Black Caucus and the black community as a whole.
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Clinton has long fought for justice. As a young lawyer in Arkansas, she worked with juvenile offenders in the Childrens Defense Fund and at a legal aid clinic at the University of Arkansas. As a Senator, she introduced a second chance program to rehabilitate troubled minors.
On the campaign trail, Clinton has laid out a series of proposals to reform our criminal justice system.
Among other things, she has called to end racial profiling, attach body cameras to police officers, shorten mandatory minimum sentences, and eliminate the legal distinction between crack and cocaine. She has met with community leaders like Jesse Jackson and with mothers of gun violence victims. And she understands, along with so many in our community, that restoring justice is the first step toward building trust. Her policies can help repair a broken system.
Voting rights are equally important. I still remember that day in 1957 when racist laws in my home state weakened black votes and forced my father out of office. That experience convinced me to become a lawyer, judge, and legislator, so I could help ensure equal representation for the black community.
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NurseJackie
(42,862 posts)MoonRiver
(36,926 posts)Cause, it's just different!
NurseJackie
(42,862 posts)Anyone? Anyone? Oh, come on! It's funny because it's true!