November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 125 No. 44
JUNE 3, 2017 - JUNE 9, 2017
Inside Commentary
Honoring Second Lieutenant Collins on the Senate Floor
Stop the Killing
Baltimore
• Hundreds of
School Layoffs Take Effect
By Sen. Chris Van Hollen
A4
B1
Prince George’s New BlackOwned Vegan Restaurant Opens in Baltimore
C1
Shayla Edwards via AP
Austin Edwards was one of the eight people Brookhaven, Miss. authorities say a gunman killed during a house-tohouse rampage on May 27 in rural Mississippi. Police arrested Willie Cory Godbolt, who is said to have known most of the victims, and have charged him with several counts of murder. He could face the death penalty if convicted. See story on page A2.
Ben Jealous, Former NAACP President, Announces Run for Md. Governor By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO
Join
the over
685K
members of the AFRO Facebook Family
afro.com
Your History • Your Community • Your News
The AFROAmerican Newspaper Prince George’s County Edition is Published weekly as an E-edition. Notification is sent to you via email. You can opt-out of receiving this by selecting the unsubscribe option at the bottom of each email notice.
Join the AFRO on Twitter and Facebook
Ben Jealous, 44, announced his candidacy for Governor of Maryland May 30 in front of a local flower shop in West Baltimore. Jealous focused on courage, civil rights and innovation during his announcement. Jealous’ speech laid out an aggressive and progressive platform taking inspiration from Democratic icons of previous generations. “We’ve got to get back to being the party of FDR, JFK and LBJ,” Jealous said in front of a crowd of about 50. “A party that stands for civil rights and also the party that fights for working people, that fights to ensure that it’s easier for all of our children to create a better future for them.” Jealous, a former NAACP president, the youngest to serve at the time, and is currently a partner with Kapor Capital. He
Minimum Wage Fight Resurfaces in Congress By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com A bipartisan group of elected officials, led by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt), introduced legislation to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour. This increase is an effort to propel more than seven million Black workers into more financially stable waters. “Just a few short years ago, we were told that raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour was ‘radical.’ But a grassroots movement of millions of workers throughout this country Continued on A3
Haitian Diaspora Has Special Responsibility, Says Ambassador By Lenore T. Adkins Special to the AFRO
Courtesy photo
Paul Altidor is the Haitian ambassador to the U.S.
What can Haitians and Haitian Americans living in the United States do to help the island nation now? It’s a question that came up during a panel discussion May 19 as part of Haiti Week in Washington, D.C., which Busboys & Poets and Paul Altidor, Haitian Ambassador
said his history with the NAACP gave him the experience to take on multiple issues at once without one subtracting from another. Jealous is also a former president of the National
Continued on A3
• Muse Possibly
Eyeing Baker’s Seat
D1
Presidential election
2016 Black Turnout Lower than 2012 By James Wright Special to the AFRO Jwright@afro.com
Photo by J.K. Schmid
Former NAACP president Ben Jealous officially announced he is running for Gov. of Maryland May 31.
A demographer from one of America’s leading think-tanks confirmed what many political scientists and activists believed: the Black voter turnout in 2016 was lower than in 2012 and helped Donald J. Trump to electoral success. On May 18, the Brookings Institute, based in Washington, D.C., released a study “Census Shows Pervasive Decline in 2016 Minority Voter Turnout” by William H. Frey, senior Continued on A5
A recent New York Times story highlighted how several apartment complexes marketed to lowincome families in several parts of the country, including Maryland, owned by Jared Kushner, son-inlaw of President Donald Trump, were being neglected. The below article details how housing racial bias charges were being leveled against Trump properties as far back as 1973.
AFRO Archived History
Apartment firm faces major bias suit in N.Y. Nov. 10, 1973
WASHINGTON-The Justice Department has brought its second major suit in New York charging discrimination against blacks in apartment rentals. J. Stanley Pottinger, assistant attorney general in charge of the department’s civil rights division, said the government was seeking against the Trump management Corp., a large apartment owner and real estate management firm, to prohibit it from continuing alleged discrimination in its more than 14,000 apartments in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island. The apartments average $250 a month Continued on A5
Continued on A3
Copyright © 2017 by the Afro-American Company