MC Digital Edition 9.9.2020

Page 1

SKIN DEEP:

Designer Siana Treece Launches Nude Dresses for all Flesh Tones

City.Life.Style. B1

Michigan Chronicle

Vol. 84 – No. 1 | September 9-15, 2020

Powered by Real Times Media | michiganchronicle.com

Governor Whitmer Signs Bill to Provide Funding for Enhanced Federal Unemployment Benefits  Governor Whitmer signed Senate Bill 745, which appropriates $2.8 billion in supplemental funding from federal revenues awarded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency to cover a temporary $300 per week enhanced federal payment for eligible Michiganders receiving unemployment benefits. As part of the FEMA program, the additional $300 per week in unemployment benefits will continue until the federal emerGovernor Whitmer gency disaster relief funding made available for this program has been exhausted. At this time, it is unknown how many weeks may be covered by existing funds. “This is good news for the thousands of Michiganders who are still without work as a result of the COVID19 pandemic, but it’s still a short term band aid that falls short of what’s needed,” said Governor Whitmer. “We need the president, Mitch McConnell, and Congress to put partisanship aside and pass a bipartisan recovery package that will help us save lives and get people back on their feet. Michigan families, frontline workers, and small business owners are counting on the federal government to do the right thing and work together on their behalf.”  At this time, eligible claimants do not have to take any action to receive the additional benefit amount provided by the program.

AN EYE TOWARDS NOVEMBER ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

Election 2020 – What’s Next?

Michigan Chronicle Endorses U.S. Sen. Gary Peters For Re-election In November By Whitney Gresham

J

ust as the race for the presidency of the United States between the Republican Donald J. Trump and former Democratic Vice President Joe Biden offers the country the starkest of choices to be made about the future and the direction of our country, so does the race between Michigan incumbent Sen. Gary Peters, a Democrat, and his Republican challenger John James. In many ways, the campaign for the U.S Senate is reflective of the Presidential campaign in as much as it pits a moderate, centrist, Democrat in Sen. Peters, who was propelled into office with the overwhelming support of Black voters in Detroit and around the state against a far-right Republican, in James, whose campaign – like Trump's - is mostly centered on repudiating the legacy of America's first Black President, Barak Obama, while counting on voters to be enamored by his business background. Besides the ideological differences between the two men who are both military veterans, the significant differences are Peter's years of experience as an elected official with a track record of fighting and delivering for

Michigan's citizens. Versus James, who has never held elective office. He did, however, unsuccessfully challenge Michigan's senior Sen. Stabenow for her seat in 2018. Another noticeable difference is that Peters is white and from Pontiac, and James is an African American from Detroit. And the Michigan Republican Party believes that makes him a more attractive candidate for some Black Michigan voters and some white voters concerned about their Party's reputation for hostility toward African Americans. However, in this moment of the Black Lives Movement, racial reckoning and demands for social justice, James bizarre ambivalence about Black civil rights - even refusing to support the strengthening and renewal of the John Lewis Voting Rights Restoration Act and denying voter suppression is profoundly problematic. It puts him squarely at odds both morally and politically, with most African Americans on an issue that is foundational to the Black community. Nether James, his press secretary, Abby Walls, or officials from the Michigan Republican Party responded to phone calls, emails, or texts from the

Chronicle requesting an interview or answer questions emailed to them by the Chronicle.

However, in interviews he provided elsewhere, James has reiterated his strong support for Trump and continued to call for Obamacare's destruction – which he has called a "monstrosity" - while offering no meaningful plan for replacing it. Besides committing himself to a policy that would end health care for more than 100,000 Detroiters, he has also called for the de-funding of Planned Parenthood and taking away critical funding for public schools and other essential services to provide tax breaks for the rich. During a 2018 interview with the Chronicle, when he was challenging Sen. Stabenow, James claimed he was a "textualist" and said he supported the appointment of rabidly anti-civil rights justices, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court. Both justices have voted not only to gut the Voting Rights Act every time it has been before the court for review during their tenure. Still, they are also part of a far-right anti-civil rights cabal on

See ELECTION

2020 page A2

Domino Effect:

WHAT’S INSIDE

When Police Stop Black Men, The Effects Reach Into Their Homes And Families By Deadric T. Williams and Armon Perry — (The Conversation)

Denise J. Lewis,

veteran real estate attorney and senior partner retires from Honigman LLC

Money. A5

While much of the world was sheltering in place in the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, many Americans’ undivided attention was focused squarely on Minneapolis, Minnesota, where George Floyd was killed at the hands – and knees – of the police. Floyd’s murder evoked memories of other murders by the police, including those of Walter Scott, Eric Garner, Philando Castile and Samuel DuBose. Most recently, another unarmed Black man, Jacob Blake, was shot seven times in the back in Kenosha, Wisconsin. We are a sociologist and a social worker who study racism, inequality and families, including a focus on Black men and their interactions with law enforcement. Each of these killings serves as confirmation that concerns about those interactions are warranted.

$1.00

The problem isn’t just that Black men get

See DOMINO

EFFECT page A2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
MC Digital Edition 9.9.2020 by Real Times Media - Issuu