Posted inCriminal Justice, Policing

‘I Was on My Knees, Handcuffed’: Black Man Shot By Mississippi Police Tells His Story

JACKSON, Miss. — Michael Corey Jenkins held his neck, covered in white gauze bandages, as he struggled to form words. He wanted to explain the violent abuse he endured at the hands of deputies from the Rankin County Sheriff’s Office last month. “I was on my knees, handcuffed, and he was standing over me,” Jenkins […]

Posted inCriminal Justice, Policing

Police Shot Handcuffed Black Man in the Face in Mississippi, Attorney Says

BRAXTON, Miss. — A 32-year-old Black man came close to death last month when he was shot in the mouth while handcuffed during a drug raid in this small, predominately white village, according to an attorney for his family. Six white sheriff’s deputies falsely accused him and a friend of selling drugs and “dating white […]

Posted inBlack Farmers, Rural Issues

These USDA Programs Want to Advance Equity — but They Don’t Ask for Applicants’ Race

A group of white farmers sued the federal government last year over a $4 billion loan forgiveness program created for farmers of color. The lawsuit stalled payment distribution to Black recipients and pushed the Biden administration to replace the race-conscious program — created to address past discrimination by the USDA — with a race-neutral version.  […]

Posted inBlack Farmers, Rural Issues

The Government Failed to Help Black Farmers. These Women Created a Fund for Them.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s decades of discrimination against Black farmers has resulted in lost land, economic instability, and a decline of diversity in the industry. During the pandemic, access to capital became an even larger barrier for farmers trying to keep their farms or, in the case of new farmers, obtain land.  Farmer-activists Olivia […]

Posted inElections, Politics & Policy

How Gerrymandering Hurt Black Voters in the Midterms

A record number of Black candidates ran for seats in Congress this week, hoping to increase representation in a predominately white legislature. But only a fraction of Black candidates won their races on Nov. 8.  One possible explanation: gerrymandering.   In Florida, incumbent Rep. Al Lawson, a Democrat who served in Congress since 2017, lost his […]

Posted inElections, Politics & Policy

Why So Many Black Candidates Struggled in the Midterm Elections

Several Black candidates made history on election night: Democrat Wes Moore became Maryland’s first Black governor. Maxwell Frost, a 25-year-old progressive activist, won his bid to become the youngest member of Congress. And in Pennsylvania, voters elected their first Black U.S. representative, Democrat Summer Lee. But for many more — particularly those whose names topped […]

Posted inElections, Politics & Policy

Black Voters Turn Out to Polls Despite Election Day Confusion

Black voters were at the center of legal disputes and polling-site confusion on Election Day, as voting rights advocates responded to allegations of intimidation at the polls and Republican interference in ballot counts. In Philadelphia, election officials made a last-minute change to the ballot-count process on Tuesday that could delay the vote tally for days, […]

Posted inElections, Politics & Policy

The Black Candidates to Watch on Election Day

The Nov. 8 elections have the potential to be historic, as a record number of candidates are running to become the first Black woman or Black man to hold their office. With diverse faces on ballots nationwide — from governorships to school board races — Tuesday’s midterms could increase Black political power across layers of […]

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