The CBC Sets Economic Justice Agenda for 2024 Elections

The coalition voiced support for DEI and inclusive hiring in infrastructure projects but neglected reparations and strategic migration.

0
President Joe Biden drops by a meeting of the congressional black caucus, Monday, March 7, 2022, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. (Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz) // Wikimedia Commons

As voters express anxiety over President Biden’s handling of the economy, the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) gathered in Washington last week to discuss an agenda for the 2024 election.

I attended the conference to learn what this national organization of elected leaders plans to do about the economic stress in the Black community. What follows are some observations on the topics of concern, and on how the CBC can do more to promote structures of economic empowerment.

To its credit, the conference featured panels that shifted the focus away from non-economic demands, a notable departure from the agenda promoted by civil rights leaders over the summer — the NAACP convention in July, with a primary message on voting rights, and the March on Washington in August “against hate and for civil rights.”