Image via Geoff Livingston/Flick |
By
6-01-2017
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That’s our test.
The more that experts examine Donald Trump’s proposed budget for fiscal year 2018, the more destructive elements come to light. I’ve focused in recent weeks on the massive cuts to programs that serve the poorest and most vulnerable members of society, and our churches — and that concern should continue to be central to our message and mission of creating a “circle of protection” around them. The latest analysis suggests that Trump’s budget would cut at least $193 billion from SNAP (formerly called food stamps) over the next decade, which would have a devastating impact on poor and hungry people. Medicaid would be cut by up to $1.3 trillion over the next 10 years, leaving children, the elderly, and our poorest families without access to medical care. Overall, 59 percent of total cuts from 2017-2026 are from programs that serve low and moderate income people.
But some of the smaller and more subtle cuts and
changes contemplated by this budget have flown under the radar, and
would have even more dangerous impacts on communities of color.
But the broad pattern and priorities are consistent with what we know about this administration: Donald Trump, Jeff Sessions, Steve Bannon, and many of the people who surround them do not seem to believe that civil rights need to be defended in 2017.
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As I’ve described before, the Department of Justice has been at the forefront of this civil rights rollback — ordering sweeping reviews and reversals of agreements to reform local police departments with histories of civil rights abuses, and dropping its objection to a discriminatory voter ID law in Texas, to cite just two examples.
The
administration has defended its plans for the Department of Labor by
explaining that it plans to fold the Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs, which currently employs 600 people, into another
entity, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), claiming
that this move will “improve services to citizens, and strengthen civil
rights enforcement.” But their primary stated goal is cost-cutting. As
the Post points out, these two offices have in the past had
very different purposes: The EEOC investigates discrimination complaints
that it receives from employees, while the compliance office
proactively and systematically investigates federal contractors to make
sure they comply with civil rights laws and regulations.
In other words, this office fulfills a critical function because most workers who have been discriminated against don’t know they have grounds to file a complaint.
Budget decisions and political appointments to little-known offices in the vast federal bureaucracy all flow from the direction set by the White House, and their cumulative effect makes a real difference in how people interact with their government. In many cases, civil rights offices in federal agencies were set up to counter discriminatory patterns that had been prevalent for decades.
We shouldn’t have to look further than
Flint to understand the need for the EPA to pay more attention to
environmental justice, rather than eliminating the office altogether.
We shouldn’t have to look further than the fact that the residents of Flint, Mich., still
do not have safe drinking water to understand the need for the EPA to
pay more attention to environmental justice, rather than eliminating the
office altogether.
Social and economic inequities are not just personal attitudes — they are the result of structural problems prevalent in many sectors of society and government. In the face of this reality, the federal government can be a force for good, attempting to correct its own past complicity and working to prevent future discriminatory behavior by businesses, schools, contractors, local police departments, and more.
But this administration’s disregard for civil rights in the federal agencies it administers leads to an inescapable conclusion: The Trump administration seems committed to rolling back progress towards racial equity and blocking progress toward a more just and multi-cultural American future.
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Jim Wallis is president of Sojourners. His book, America's Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege, and the Bridge to a New America, is available now. Follow Jim on Twitter @JimWallis.
Read more articles from SoJo, here.
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