
Above Photo: Congressional Black Caucus meets with Richard Nixon on March 25, 1971 (National Archives)
The Congressional Black Caucus has strayed far from the politics of its original members. Once called the âconscience of the congress,â the group is made up of Democratic Party loyalists living off of a now undeserved reputation.
Even though we think first of those we were directly elected to serve, we cannot, in good conscience, think only of themâfor what affects one black community, one poor community, one urban community, affects allâŠ,
â Letter from Congressional Black Caucus to President Nixon in 1971.
In the 1960s, Rep. Charles Diggs (D-Mich.) established the Democracy Select Committee (DSC) to bring the nine elected African American House members together. They were organized in order to help them strategize around their common issues and develop policy initiatives that would address the problems facing their African American constituents. âThe sooner we get organized for group action, the more effective we can become,â Diggs said. The operative words in Diggsâ statement are âgroupâ, âactionâ and âeffectiveâ. Is the current iteration of the CBC as a group taking effective action?
By the beginning of the 92nd Congress, (1971-1973) the number of African American Representatives had risen from nine to 13. Rep. Louis Stokes (D-Ohio) said, âIn addition to representing our individual districts, we had to assume the onerous burden of acting as congressman-at-large for unrepresented people around America.â Those 13 African American members founded The Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) in 1971. It was from that above referenced 1971 letter to Nixon that the CBC became known as *The Conscience of the Congress* .
Ossie Davis was the keynote speaker at the first CBC fundraising dinner in 1971. The title of his address was, Itâs Not The Man, Itâs The Plan. In this address he challenged the members of the CBC by stating, ââŠthe time hasâŠcome when rhetoric will begin to take a back seatâŠGive to us a âTen Black Commandments,â simple and strongâŠâ He closed by saying, âLet us stop making history by ad hoc methods and impromptu improvisations. Let us plan the whole thing outâŠâ He directed the CBC members to give people their assignments and hold them strictly responsible if they donât carry them out.
Now is the time for the African American community to take stock, not of the original 13 members of the CBC, but of the current 58. Are they in fact addressing the problems facing the African American community? Are they taking effective âgroup-actionâ? Has the âconscience of the Congressâ become unconscious? Have they devolved into a comprador class of relatively privileged, wealthy and educated natives of a colonized land that have been âboughtâ by the colonizers? More simply put by the late Glen Ford, have they become âthe Black Misleadership Classâ?
According to the CBC website, ââŠthe Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) has been committed to using the full Constitutional power, statutory authority, and financial resources of the federal government to ensure that African Americans and other marginalized communities in the United States have the opportunity to achieve the American Dream.â Ossie Davis said in his address, ââŠthe name of the game is power-and if you ainât playing power, youâre in the wrong place.â Is the CBC using its power as a 58 â member potential voting bloc to demand substantive change, or are they a rubber stamp for the interests of the American elite? They appear to be less effective now than they were 51 years ago.
Before examining domestic policy, take a look at some foreign policy blunders. This past April the House passed the Countering Malign Russian Activities in Africa Act, which was introduced by CBC member Gregory Meeks, Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee*.* Using pages from the Cold War playbook, the US is once again invoking the threat of a Russian boogeyman to justify American imperialism in Africa. The bill passed the House on a 415-9 vote. All of the so-called âprogressiveâ members of the House, the Squad, and the CBC supported this legislation.
The Act sanctions African nations that fail to follow the American lead and choose to exercise their sovereignty by ignoring American dictates not to do business with Russia. SADIC, the 16-member regional bloc of Southern African countries, said in a joint statement that the United States is âbullyingâ African nations and punishing them for not following the âfailing US sanctions regimeâ that has made the African continent âthe target of unilateral and punitive measuresâ.
The U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) is another unfortunate example of the US using militarism as an offset to diplomacy and the basis of American interventionism in African countries. The CBC direct and tacit support of AFRICOM is a travesty. There has been a significant increase in coups over the last 18 months, with African military leadership, many of them AFRICOM trained, carrying out takeovers or attempted takeovers in Burkina Faso, Sudan, Guinea, Chad, Mali, Niger and Guinea-Bissau. The Black Alliance for Peace calls for the CBC to support opposition to AFRICOM and demands the CBCâs commitment to holding hearings about the military programâs negative impact on the African continent. To date the CBC is conspicuously silent on these demands.
On another front, in response to the rapidly deteriorating security and humanitarian situation in Haiti, the Biden administration is at the UN seeking support for âthe immediate deployment of a multinational rapid action forceâ to go into Haiti. The problem is, most of the problems in Haiti are a result of US interventionist and hegemonic imperial policies towards the island nation. President Biden is now hoping to use the Trump era Global Fragility Act (GFA) **as its cover for US military intervention.
The GFA is being heralded as an enlightened new approach to diplomacy when in fact itâs old wine in new bottles. President Biden said the GFA ââŠprovides a roadmap: a 10-year effort to strengthen the security and prosperity of people everywhere by helping to fortify the footing of parts of the world that continue to grapple with challenges that can lead to destabilizing conflict and violence.â The problem with this so-called logic is, when you look at the counties targeted; Haiti, Libya, Ghana, Guinea, and others; the US and it Western allies have been largely responsible for their instability by assassinating their leaders and fomenting coups. Simply put, the US is implementing a ânewâ strategy (of which military intervention is an important element) to âsolveâ the problems that US intervention has caused. The CBC has gone right along with these imperialists, hegemonic and interventionist policies instead of standing up for the victims and speaking up against these racist policies.
Hereâs how the US Government uses domestic policy to aid foreign nations that are not occupied by peoples of color. President Biden signed the FY 2022 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) into law. As a part of this, the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative was extended through 2022 and its funding was increased from $250 million to $300 million per year. On March 16, 2022, President Biden announced an additional $800 million in security assistance to Ukraine, bringing the total U.S. security assistance committed to Ukraine to $1 billion in just the previous week, and a total of $2 billion since the start of the Biden Administration.
On May 21, President Biden signed into law the Additional Ukraine Supplemental Appropriations Act, a law that provides nearly $40 billion in additional military, economic and humanitarian aid. These US taxpayer dollars provide housing, education, medical, and other types of assistance for those in Ukraine. For those Ukrainianâs who have made it to the US, ârefugees and paroleesâ, they will receive support through Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) or Supplemental Security Income (SSI); health insurance through Medicaid; and food assistance through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
In a time when Americans are facing extreme unemployment, foreclosures and evictions, energy poverty and homelessness, they are in great need of social safety net programs. Yet, the CBC voted unanimously to fund the NDAA and pour hard-earned taxpayer dollars into supporting the military industrial complex and boondoggles like the war in Ukraine. The CBC was established to help African American members of Congress strategize around their common issues and develop policy initiatives that would address the problems facing their African American constituents. They are supposed to be the âconscience of the Congressâ; unfortunately for us, they are unconscious.
Source: Popularresistance.org