Race still plays a significant role in determining who gets ahead in America, says Clinton
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton gives remarks at the 2016 National Action Network National Conference.                                   (Joe Tuitt/NNPA News Wire)
By Joan H. Allen (Associate Publisher, Daily Challenge)
     It was a packed house at the National Action Networkâs 25th Anniversary Conventionâs Plenary Session for Democratic Presidential Candidate Hillary Clintonâs speech. Rev. Al Sharpton addressed the press.
âWhen we say, âyesâ and âamen,â thatâs not a heckler,â he quipped. âWhen the media asks, âwhy did Secretary Clinton come to NAN?â Itâs because [presidential candidates have] been doing that for over a decade.â
Although Sharpton said that he had not yet endorsed a candidate, he sang Clintonâs praises.
âWeâve known each other for over 20 years,â said Sharpton.
They havenât agreed on everything, Sharpton admitted, citing the President Bill Clintonâs 1994 crime bill. However, when theyâve agreed, âsheâs not been ashamed or anyway step-ping back, as she did when, Amadou Diallo was killed by police. She took a public stand.
âAlthough I havenât endorsed a candidate, I wish to make this clear: the issues need to be dealt with in a substantive way⌠Black America must be taken seriouslyâŚand not given slogans that canât be explained how they can be achieved. Be-cause nobody can win, unless we vote seriously.â
Sharpton then introduced the mothers and widows of victims killed by police: Â Kadiatou Diallo, Amadou Dialloâs mother; Esaw Garner, Eric Garnerâs widow; Gwen Carr, Eric Garnerâs mother; Lesley McSpadden, Michael Brownâs mother; Sybrina Fulton, Trayvon Martinâs mother; Constance Malcolm, Ramarley Grahamâs mother; Valerie and William Bell, Sean Bellâs mother and father.
It was not surprising that there was such a strong presence of these mothers and families of Black victims. They were among the first to have shown their support of Clinton and she has worked with some of them through the years. Clinton who had paid tribute to them in February said, âIt was a great honor spending time with them.â
As if in response to the sentiments expressed by the earlier panel, â2016: A Transitional Election Year with Much at Stake,â Clinton stated, âIf weâre gonna ask African Americans to vote for us, we can-not take you or your vote for granted. We canât just show up at election time and say the right things and think thatâs enough. We canât start building relationships a few weeks before a vote.â
Her strong position on the issue of gun violence is one of the few key areas that distinguishes her from her Democratic opponent Sen. Bernie Sanders, which she addressed.  âMy opponent does not see it the same way, but I think this a national emergency. And Iâm going to do everything I can to take on the gun lobby and try and do everything I can to save lives.â
Clinton continued: âThereâs something wrong when gun violence is by far the leading cause of death for young Black men. Thereâs something wrong when Black kids get arrested for petty crimes, but White kids for the same crimes donât⌠Somethingâs wrong when so many Black parents are burying their childrenâŚÂ and itâs a time we face up to systemic racism in all its forms. Race still plays a significant role in deter-mining who gets ahead in America and who gets left behind. Race is the single biggest factor determining whether you live near a toxic site, from âasthma alleyâ in the Bronx to âcancer alleyâ in Louisiana.â
It is for this reason Clinton announced she is not only pro-posing reforming the criminal justice system, sheâs also proposing a major $125 billion plan to revitalize communities of color and places where poverty remains stubbornly high. She also announced a new plan for environmental justice to get rid of lead in Flint, Michigan and everywhere else in five years.
However, Clinton was quick to remind attendees of her Republican opponent Trumpâs divisive campaign and she called the Republican front-runner out, stating, âwhen he was asked to disavow David Duke and other White supremacists supporting his campaign, he played coy and the list goes on. And everyone [can] see this bigotry for what it is. Itâs up to all of us to repudiate it.â Coming to the defense of New Yorkers, Clinton said, âour diversity is our strength not our weakness.â
Clinton shared how being introduced to Marian Wright Edelman, the first Black woman admitted to the Mississippi bar and the transformative experience working for her at the Childrenâs Defense Fund, straight out of law school. It was there that she saw how her faith in working for social justice and change could become a viable career. âWhether I was investigating Black teens being incarcerated, segregated academies, or running legal clinics for prisoners and poor people. It was all a part of the same mission to fight injustice and even the odds for those who had them stacked against them.â
Clintonâs closing remarks were met with thunderous applause.
âI have worked on these causes all my adult life,â she said. âI am gonna keep going at it no matter what.â
