Dr. Julianne Malveaux
The
“Are We Better Off?" Interview
with
Kam Williams
A
Tip of the Chapeau to Dr. Malveaux!
Dr. Malveaux is the founder and President of Economic Education, a 501-c3 organization focused on personal finance and economic policy education and their connection. Here, she talks about her new book, “Are We Better Off? Race, Obama and Public Policy."
Kam
Williams: Hi,
Julianne, thanks for another opportunity to interview you.
Dr.
Julianne Malveaux:
Greetings,
Kam. I hope you are well. Thanks for the opportunity to talk with you
again.
KW:
You're welcome. What inspired you to publish "Are We Better
Off?"
JM:
People
will be talking about the Obama legacy for decades, and I wanted to
include my voice in the analysis of this presidency. This is a column
collection, or as one colleague called it, “history in real time,”
recounting my perspective on the highs and lows of this presidency
from an African-American perspective. More than simply a column
collection, the book has a substantial introduction that frames the
Obama presidency, explores the way Obama was treated by the political
establishment and also how this first black president treated “his”
people. In the epilogue, I use numbers to tell the story of
African-American gains and losses during this presidency.
KW:
How did
you decide which articles to include in the book?
JM:
Wow!
That’s a great question. It was quite a process to narrow more than
400 columns down to 80. I write weekly, though, and I don’t always
write about President Obama, so that was the easy elimination.
Sometimes, I repeat myself, and that was a second elimination. I
worked with a team, including a great editor who, as the project came
together, suggested other additions and eliminations. It was a
process.
KW:
Well,
are we better off after eight years of Obama?
JM:
The
economy is better than the one President Obama inherited, and
unemployment is lower, but the unemployment rate gap remains large.
Black child poverty is higher. As I write in the epilogue, “Yes we
can. No he didn’t. President Obama didn’t push black people
backward, but he missed the opportunity to move us forward.”
KW:
In the
Introduction, you ask, "How does President Obama treat his
people?" before criticizing him for not reciprocating the
overwhelming support he's received from the African-American
electorate. You say, "He scolds instead of uplifts, and offers
tepid gestures to our needs." What do you think he could have
done in terms of jobs, housing and education?
JM:
If some
of the recovery money had gone to cities instead of states, the urban
population, read "Black"
and "Brown," would be better off with recovery jobs. While
the banks got big bailouts, a sizeable chunk of African-American
wealth evaporated because so many people lost homes. Some of the
federal programs to help homeowners were never fully implemented. And
President Obama’s pick of Arne Duncan as Secretary of Education was
abysmal. Cutting HBCUs was unconscionable. Implementing new
regulations on Parent Plus loans, which cost HBCUs 28,000 students,
was hostile. At
the same time, it is important to note that, except for his first two
years, which were a missed opportunity, President Obama faced rabid
opposition from the Republicans. Indeed, as soon as he took office,
Senator Mitch McConnell announced that his top priority was to deny
President Obama a second term. The president did introduce a jobs
bill that could not clear Congress. The Republicans simply would not
work with him.
KW:
What
about all the black-on-black violence in so many inner cities across
the country. Do you really think the president could have put a dent
in it from Washington, DC? After all, his own Chief of Staff, Rahm
Emmanuel, became Mayor of Chicago, and the body count has only
escalated there?
JM:
President
Obama’s choice of Rahm Emmanuel as his Chief of Staff was
questionable, and perhaps coverups around the police violence against
black people in Chicago is reflective of Mr. Emmanuel’s values. Did
Rahm Emmanuel serve President Obama or did he serve himself as he
prepared to run for Mayor of Chicago? I
don’t use the term black-on-black violence, since I’ve never
heard the term white-on-white violence. Most violence is
intra-racial, and much of the violence in African-American
communities is a function of drug availability, joblessness and
poverty. Obviously
these conditions predate the Obama presidency and the president has
limited ways to dent this violence. But funding war weapons in
cities, as opposed to more community policing, is not the solution.
KW:
What
about the issue of blacks as the victims of violence by police and
vigilantes like George Zimmerman? Do you think Obama could have done
more for Trayvon Martin than to say that he could've been his son?
JM:
President
Obama did put together a task force on 21st Century Policing, led by
Philadelphia police chief Charles Ramsey, to look at some of these
issues after Ferguson. The Task Force didn’t produce any
earth-shattering findings but it suggests that this matter is on the
president’s radar screen. However, this is an issue that persists.
In the first week of July, we already saw two black men killed by
police in questionable circumstances, Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, and Philando Castile in a Falcon Heights, Minnesota.
Trayvon
Martin could have been any of our sons, so I was not especially moved
by that remark of President Obama’s. He intended, I think, to say
that he took Trayvon’s death somewhat personally. He might have
said more about “stand your ground” laws and how they give
vigilantes a pass. And he might say more about these rogue cops and
their license to kill. Although
he was in Poland to participate in the NATO conference, President
Obama did respond well to the back-to-back killings, as well as to
the attacks on Dallas police officers that followed. I especially
appreciated hearing the President affirm that “black lives matter”
and that it means that some citizens are feeling more pain, and
experiencing more negative effects than others, and he offered up the
stats. He also indicated that black lives matter does not negate the
fact that blue lives matter. He ably walked the tightrope, here,
between affirming both black life and police life.
KW:
It
seems that Obama will be better remembered for LGBT than
African-American civil rights. If Trayvon had been transgender, do
you think the Attorney General would have charged George Zimmerman
with a federal crime?
JM:
Let me
answer the question another way. The President became quite emotional
about transgender student rights, threatening to pull Department of
Education funds from school districts that do not comply with federal
regulations. Black children are suspended from school three times
more than white children are, and there is no evidence that black
children are three times as unruly. Has the President ever threatened
to pull the Department of Education dollars from a school with these
disproportionate suspensions? African-Americans have rarely been the
beneficiaries of Presidential rhetorical excess.
KW:
When
you interviewed Obama, his staff wouldn't let him talk about
reparations. What did that tell you about him?
JM:
This
was in 2004, and it told me that President Obama intended to be very
careful and noncontroversial in addressing race matters. It is now
2016, and I’m not sure that I’ve heard the President address that
matter yet. I serve on the Institute of the Black World’s National
Commission on African-American Reparations, and we have asked the
President to, by executive order, establish a commission to study
reparations. He can do this without Congressional approval. While I
am not optimistic, I do hope that President Obama considers this in
these waning months of his Presidency.
KW:
In the
book, you suspect that Obama's image as a community organizer in
Chicago might be more a "manufactured mythology" than a
"gritty reality." Have you done any research to determine
whether he developed roots and maintained ties to folks he worked
with in the hood?
JM:
I’ve
talked to dozens of Chicagoans who will only go off the record in
talking about the manufactured mythology. The published record will
show that many in Chicago have mixed feedback on the President’s
role as organizer.
KW:
You
also talk about how outspoken critics of Obama, like Tavis Smiley and
Dr. Cornel West, have ended up ostracized by the black community. Do
you think this has a had a chilling effect, and did it make you less
willing to disagree with the President?
JM:
Tavis
Smiley lost lots of corporate support after he was critical of
President Obama, and Dr. West has lost some esteem. I think that
Smiley and West come at the President somewhat differently though,
and find some of West’s criticism too personal and base to be
credible. Still, the way they were treated has caused many to bridle
their tongues when discussing President Obama. I
had my own challenges with the Obamaites when, in 2008, appearing on
a program with Tavis and Cornel, I gave then-candidate Obama’s
nomination acceptance speech a B. At the time I was President of
Bennett College for Women, and actually had disgruntled members of
the public write my Board of Trustees and faculty, and address me in
ugly and disparaging terms, including black women calling me the
N-word. Ugliness does not bridle my tongue, and while some of the
consequences of being an honest critic of this President have been
unpleasant, I can manage. Don’t
get me wrong. As I write in the book, I do not regret either of my
votes for President Obama, nor my support of him when he ran for the
Senate before that. I get excited as I ever did when I see that black
man on Air Force One. But I won’t settle for symbolism, and our
President’s record should be open for analysis.
KW:
Do you
think the African-American agenda might have been placed on the Obama
administration's back burner because of a hesitancy on the part of
black leaders to question or criticize the President?
JM:
Absolutely!
You will not get fed in your mama’s house if you do not bring your
plate to the table. Some of our leadership has been so happy to be
there that they haven’t pushed our agenda. I don’t know how many
off the record conversations I’ve had with African-American leaders
who would not be quoted and refused to make their sentiments public.
KW:
What
grade would you give Obama?
JM:
Depending
on the day of the week it varies. At the moment, though there are
just a few months left in our President’s time in the Oval Office
I’d like to give him an incomplete and hope he surprises me.
Actually, overall he gets a solid B, but for his work with Black
America he gets a low C, at best.
KW:
AALBC.com
founder Troy Johnson asks: What was the last book you read?
JM:
I am
addicted to the printed word, and my idea of a good time is a good
book. So I had a read-a-thon over the 4th of You Lie weekend. Kindle
First offered "The Daughter of Union County" by Francine
Thomas Howard as a freebie, so I read it. Post-Reconstruction
historical fiction that resonated. Then, I re-read "Twelve Years
A Slave." It was my third read of that book. I first read it
years ago, maybe in the '90s, again when the film came out. I could
never see the movie after reading the book. This time, I just read it
because I always want to read something about our people’s
enslavement near the 4th. To keep it light, I also read Rolanda
Watts’ "Destiny Lingers" She is a sisterfriend and I ran
into her at Essence. Then, I finished Paul Taylor’s "The Next
America." Taylor is the Executive VP at the Pew Research Center,
and he uses their excellent data base to talk about the coming
“generational showdown” which we are experiencing, at some level,
in Black America.
KW:
Was
there a meaningful spiritual component to your childhood?
JM:
More
spiritual than religious. I describe myself as a “spiritual
sampler,” raised Catholic, been Baptist, Methodist, and a Unity
member. Always firmly believing in a higher power, I have also always
been in search of a spiritual peace.
KW:
Sherry
Gillam would like to know what is the most important life lesson
you've learned so far?
JM:
I like to think that life lessons
are learned and re-learned every day and take on importance at
different times in life. In trying times, I like to remember that you
have to keep walking because you can’t see what is around the
corner.
KW:
What's
the craziest thing you've ever done?
JM:
Do you
really think I’m going to go on record telling you the craziest
thing I’ve ever done. There’s a reel
in my brain, and I think I’ll keep it there. No regrets, though.
KW:
Finally,
what’s in your wallet?
JM:
A
little money, a couple of credit cards, some ID, and a couple of
scriptures on a 3x5 card. Matthew 17:20 and 1 Corinthians 16:9.
KW:
Thanks
again for the time, Julianne, and best of luck with the book.
JM:
Thank
you so much, Kam.
To
order a copy of "Are We Better Off? Race, Obama and Public
Policy," visit:
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