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Black Convention Tackles Economic
Issues: Jobs & Development to Dominate in
Gary by Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor This article was originally published
in Black Commentator on January 26, 2006
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Back in 1972, it was "Nation Time!" in
Gary, Indiana, at the historic convening of the National
Black Political Assembly. In 2006, it's time for another
mass political gathering, "to bring together the
collective wisdom, creativity and resources in our
community to map out a bold economic agenda that can
unite us and be a catalyst to forming new economic
relationships that will empower communities of color
across the nation." The Call to Convention for the
National Black Peoples Unity Convention - to be held at
the same Gary high school as the 1972 gathering -
promises that the March 9 - 12 event "will be a potent
catalyst to refocus and rejuvenate the movement for
black economic empowerment." And by "empowerment," the
organizers don't mean some mythic trickle down from
Black millionaires to the masses:
"We must explore new concepts to build
partnerships among the religious community, the trade
union movement and the investment community.
"We must use these partnerships to
anchor economic empowerment and job creation, more
affordable health care and housing, and improvements
to an educational system that will prepare our youth
to succeed rather than fail or
falter."
The convention's slogan is "Policies for
Empowerment: A Struggle for a New Economic Order" -
which is indeed a tall order. But why the focus on
economics in 2006? "Because very seldom if ever does the
national political leadership talk to our communities
about economic issues and economic solutions," said
William Lucy, President of the Coalition of Black Trader
Unionists (CBTU) and one of three
co-chairs of the "Unity" convention. "We're talking
about taxes, development, job creating possibilities,
capital development programs… We need to form
partnerships to generate jobs and prepare the young for
jobs. It is possible to make change. The convention will
identify ways to do so."
The Legacy
Lucy first announced
plans for "going back to Gary" at last
May's annual convention of the CBTU, which was founded
the same year as "Gary I."
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"What we expect [from Gary II] is
that a consensus will develop around an agenda
that will serve to help mobilize our
constituencies across the country," said Lucy, who
is also Secretary-Treasurer of the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME).
Although great currents of energy
went into, and emerged from, the 1972 event, it
cannot be said that a consensus emerged. The
National Black Political Assembly is viewed by
many as a watershed in modern Black history, when
new and aspiring Black Democratic officeholders
clashed with Black Power activists and those who
sought to build an independent Black political
party.
The 1972 Gary
Declaration called for radical
transformation of American society, and of Black
politics:
"A Black political convention,
indeed all truly Black politics, must begin from
this truth: The American system does not work
for the masses of our people, and it cannot be
made to work without radical, fundamental
changes. The challenge is thrown to us here in
Gary. It is the challenge to consolidate and
organize our own Black role as the vanguard in
the struggle for a new society.
"To
accept the challenge is to move to independent
Black politics. There can be no equivocation on
that issue. History leaves us no other choice.
White politics has not and cannot bring the
changes we need."
Eight years later, under the
leadership of Dr. Ron
Daniels and other veterans of Gary
I, the National Black Independent Political Party
(NBIPP) was formed at a tumultuous convention in
Philadelphia. As at Gary, delegates to the 1980
NBIPP affair formed as state delegations - which
often found themselves in even deeper conflict
than the colonial delegations that gathered in
Philadelphia in 1776. NBIPP soon faded from the
scene.
Gary II co-chair George Brown, the
former Colorado Lt. Governor, says there will be
no state delegations at Gary II. "Everybody is a
participant. Nobody is shut out" from speaking as
an individual.
The third co-chair is Richard
Hatcher, the former mayor of Gary, an 84 percent
Black city of about 100,000, forty miles from
Chicago. "We know that we cannot replicate 1972,"
said Hatcher, whose job is now held by a white
man, Scott King. Gary II will be dissimilar
to Gary I in many ways. Hatcher doesn't expect
more than a quarter of the 8-10,000 activists that
last descended on his hometown, although the
number of Black elected officials has increased
from less than 2,000 to about 9,500 over the past
34 years.

"The problems that face us are
perhaps more critical than in 1972," said Hatcher,
a view reflected in the "Unity" convention's
Mission Statement, prepared by University of
Maryland political scientist Ron Walters, a member
of the convention's advisory board:
"[T]he storm of political,
economic, social and cultural subordination has
not yet passed over us and so we, and others of
our class, continue to be prevented from
achieving their full citizenship by acquiring
the means to give it substance. This occurs by
the neglect of the needs of our communities, by
passage of deleterious public policies and by
acts of direct racial and class aggression.
""This situation is intensified by
the face that we live in the context of an
American capitalist economy that continues not
to produce full employment and the leaders of
which have transferred millions of jobs to
low-wage labor markets outside this country,
penalizing not only individual workers, but
whole communities, towns and cities which have
depended upon the returns from that economic
activity…. The result is that America is
becoming a country of the very rich and the very
poor and its middle class has suffered serious
deterioration…. Because Blacks have been
uniquely situated in the industrial sector, the
black middle class has stagnated over the past
decade in terms relative to growth of the white
middle class….
"[Conservatives] punished
organized labor and transferred substantial
wealth to the upper classes, through the
management of fiscal policies…. Accordingly, we
are ‘going back to Gary' in the spirit of unity
fostered by the historic Gary Convention of
1972, to focus on the state of the black economy
and its relationship to other sectors of
life."
Note that the organizers of the
National Black Peoples Unity Convention refuse to
treat "economics" as the domain of the rich -
white or Black. Rather, they plan to confront the
political-economy in the totality of its
impacts. Dr. Walters prepared a beginning list of
economy-related concerns to be wrestled with in
Gary: poverty, the aftermath of Katrina, family
viability, labor rights, fair wages, business
development, the role of Black in large
corporations, health care economics, urban
economics, affirmative action, Social Security,
international trade and investment.

(BC would have
placed mass Black incarceration at the top of the
list. So massively pervasive is the impact
of this evil, racist state policy that it presses
an unbearable weight on all aspects of Black life,
and interacts with the political economy in
multitudinous, horrifically destructive ways.)
By correctly framing economics
broadly, the convention promises to explore
real-world afflictions, and to take the subject of
"Black" economics out of the narrow confines of African
American business development, which is only one
aspect of the much larger picture. Discussions
will be grouped around broad categories such as
Youth Leadership, Economic Issues, Human Rights
and Social Justice, Education, Job Creation,
Religious Leadership and Community Development,
and Community Based Organizational Partnerships -
all approached from an economic standpoint. The
format appears well-designed for activists in a
wide range of areas to relate their experiences
and propose solutions to the multiple scourges
that ravage Black America.
The living, breathing fruit of the
Civil Rights era, Black elected officials, have
been summoned to attend in force: the
Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), National Black
Caucus of State Legislators (NBCSL), National
Conference of Black Mayors (NCBM), National Black
Caucus of Local Elected Officials (NBCLEO), National Association of Black
County Officials and appointed Black officials
from all levels of government. Every name on Ebony
magazine's Most Influential 100+ list has been
contacted, in the effort to give the convention
both broad and deep representation - William
Lucy's shop floor labor troops mixing with
grassroots activists, business and investment
types, and political luminaries.
An Internal
Dialogue

No matter
how the organizers frame the convention, the
corporate media already have a pre-fabricated
story. Undoubtedly, they will frame the event in
terms of whether or not it represents a threat to
the Democratic Party. "This one is not expected to be totally
a political convention in the nature of the Gary
convention," said Ron Walters, in an interview with the
(Black) National Newspaper Publishers Association
news service.
"I would not think it requires
Blacks dropping the Democratic Party
identification. We don't have a political
institution. We need it for strategy making. We
need it for mobilization. We need it for
fund-raising. What happens is that it becomes a
vehicle that can be used for bargaining and
these things are done in the interest of the
Black community."
William Lucy stresses that the
convention is concerned with Black people working
on solutions to grave socio-economic problems, not
a game of positioning, posturing or
maneuvering:
"This is not being billed as a
partisan activity. I'm not advocating bolting
the Democratic Party. I think what we're saying
is that we want to establish an agenda that the
party will have to react to. I think without
question, the overwhelming majority of the Black
voters still favor the Democratic Party and its
Democratic policy platform. But I think that the
fact of the matter is that we've got to have an
agenda of our own that we will impress on
the party as if to formulate its platform. We
can't keep having knee-jerk
reactions."
There are enough contradictions to
resolve - or to live with - within the
Black polity, without the relentless confusion
sowed by corporate actors and their surrogates.
However one may judge the outcome, Gary I
dramatically revealed that generation's tremendous
hunger for both unity and action. A generation and
a half later, when the early elements of the
so-called hip hop generation are already growing
bald and fat, the hunger remains.
We have a lot of time to catch up
on, in a political and economic climate that grows
exponentially colder. But, as we used to say,
"Black folks draw heat."
For logistical information on the
National Black Peoples Unity Convention, the
organizers ask that you call
202-955-5000.
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