Trump Vowed to "Absolutely Prioritize" Black Colleges. Then Came His Budget.…

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Students on some HBCU campuses have protested scheduled visits by Trump officials. In May, graduating seniors at Bethune-Cookman University booed and turned their backs to DeVos as she gave her commencement speech. Days later, Texas Southern University canceled a commencement speech by Texas Sen. John Cornyn after students said they did not want to hear from him because he’s a Trump supporter.

A backlash had begun brewing in February: At Howard University, DeVos met with the school's president as her first official act as secretary of education. The day after the Oval Office meeting with HBCU leaders, Howard students awoke to graffiti spray-painted on the school's main yard that read "Welcome to the Trump Plantation. Overseer: Wayne A. I. Frederick," referring to the school's president. Graffiti left elsewhere said "Wayne Frederick doesn't care about black people." (Frederick said he did not attend the Oval Office meeting.) Days later at a commemoration for the 150th anniversary of Howard's founding, members of a student activist group stood up with signs and a megaphone and called out the president in front of a packed auditorium.

"Does this [potential] increase in funding buy the allegiance of HBCU presidents to Donald Trump? That is what I think is a great concern for students organizing on campus," Allyson Carpenter, the student body president, told me back in March.

Trump "threatens to send the feds into Chicago, and we all know what that means as black people," Yvonne Hamel, a freshman and a member of the group, told me. "He openly speaks about [banning] Muslims. We have a large population of students that come from foreign countries. So we want to make sure that this [Howard] administration is not compromising" the interests of its students in exchange for funding, she said.

Howard is one of two colleges nationwide that receives an appropriation as a line item in the federal budget each year. (The other is Galludet University.) In a meeting with the student activist group in March, Frederick said the university's unique relationship with the federal government required that he keep an open relationship with the White House. He said he made a case for increasing Howard's appropriation in every meeting he'd had with a Trump official. Hamel said her group's members appreciated that argument but wanted assurance that Frederick would challenge the Trump administration on policies that could hurt Howard students. An email that Frederick sent to students and faculty the day after the presidential election—in which he congratulated Trump on his win but did not comment on the bigoted rhetoric that marked Trump's campaign—was not a good sign, Hamel said.

Fredrick did, however, rally on behalf of Howard students in the face of Trump policies: He hired a private attorney to handle the cases of two students who were prevented for several days from entering the country after Trump's travel ban took effect in January. He also stressed in the meeting with student activists that the administration does not provide information about students' immigration status or whereabouts to the federal government unless required by a court order.

At Howard's commencement this May, Sen. Kamala Harris—herself a Howard graduate—urged students to speak out against injustice in the Trump era. Carpenter said she saw Trump's failure to increase funding for HBCUs as proof that February's White House meeting was just for show. "We all knew what this was," she said. "Everyone expected this."

Trump's budget is subject to approval by Congress, which is where HBCU advocates say they will now focus their efforts. In February, they made their case to GOP lawmakers including House Speaker Paul Ryan, Sen. Marco Rubio, and Rep. Trey Gowdy during a meeting spearheaded by South Carolina Rep. Tim Scott. Wilson told me he’s hopeful there will be a bipartisan effort in Congress to restore some of Trump's proposed cuts. He said he plans to spend more time with his school’s congressional representatives on Capitol Hill in the months ahead.

HBCUs need to make sure that Congress fully grasps "the kind of impact that our institutions are having at the local, state, and national level," he says. "I think when you look at the value proposition of HBCUs to this nation, it seems to me that it's a very easy opportunity for investment."

Damn.. Those HBCU presidents did that photo op/shuck and jive showcase for nothing...
 
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......................... so I lied

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Hold on ya'll, some new poster named MutuluAfricaX will be be along shortly to explain how this will help black people.
 
"We will make HBCUs a priority in the White House," Trump said at the signing. "An absolute priority."

Lol read this and tell me he wasn't saying EXACTLY what he was saying. You're the priority to be cut.
 
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I could have told anyone this would happen months before...

matter of fact I think I did...repeatedly

 
https://www.buzzfeed.com/darrensand...nference-after?utm_term=.anymykMvl#.qyAaxP8qw

White House Going Ahead With HBCU Conference After Charlottesville

The president and CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund sent a letter to the White House with a simple recommendation for next month’s HBCU conference: Don’t do this — at least, not right now. But the White House is going forward as it continues to deal with fallout after Trump defended a white supremacist rally as including “some very fine people.”

A White House official said that a Trump administration-backed conference for historically black colleges and universities will go ahead as planned next month.

In recent days, a Democratic lawmaker and prominent nonprofit donor to the schools recommended to the White House that the National Historically Black Colleges and Universities Week Conference be postponed because of concerns “related to recent national events.”

Omarosa Manigault-Newman, assistant to the president and director of communications for the Office of Public Liaison, said in an email to BuzzFeed News that the conference was still on for its original date, and that the administration remained committed to the mission of HBCUs.

“President Trump’s commitment to the HBCU community remains strong and unwavering,” Manigault-Newman told BuzzFeed News. “Registration is currently at capacity and we are looking forward to welcoming HBCU presidents, students, and guests.”

The conference is to be held Sept. 17–19 in Northern Virginia. But after President Trump seemed to defend some white supremacists as “very fine people,” leaders in the HBCU world began to reconsider whether it was still a good idea.

The White House had already been engaged in conversations about appointing leaders to the board, finding an executive director for its HBCU initiative, and naming a chairman to lead, all before Trump’s troubled week on race, two sources close to the White House said.

Johnny C. Taylor and Rep. Alma Adams, a North Carolina Democrat, were among the voices who tried to get the White House to halt the planning. Taylor, the outgoing president and CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, wrote a letter to Manigault-Newman, dated Aug. 18, saying that there was a “pretty strong consensus” in the HBCU leadership community that the White House should hold off until good faith measures — such as appointing an executive director and advisory board — showed that the White House had a “commitment to advancing the HBCU agenda.”

Additionally, he noted that fears that the event would be counterproductive would cause some who had registered to not attend.


Adams, making a case for postponement, said in a statement that she had this month asked for an update on the progress of Trump’s executive order. “It has become painstakingly clear that these promises are not being kept,” she said.

“In this current environment, and with zero progress made on any of their priorities, it would be highly unproductive to ask HBCU presidents to come back to Washington," Adams said.

Neither Adams nor Taylor spoke in explicit terms about Trump’s handling of matters of race following the death of 31-year-old Heather Heyer, a counterprotester at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville. Trump’s assertion that there were “very fine people” among the white supremacists, and that there was violence “on both sides,” has sparked a national debate about the president’s moral authority on racial issues.

Two sources close to national HBCU leaders, and another familiar with the process, said it was unclear if Trump's rhetoric would produce a similar situation to Trump's strategic policy and manufacturing councils, both of which Trump ended with no warning after members quit. Though Manigault-Newman's statement indicated that the White House would roll out announcements on the board and advisory committee during the conference, a source advising the White House on HBCUs said he's talked to "multiple people" in HBCU circles who have privately slammed Trump's comments with disgust.

HBCUs rely on critical funding from the federal government, and few, if any, presidents would risk angering Trump with a public display. Kenneth Frazier, the CEO of Merck, who is black, recently quit an administration council — and in return was the object of a vindictive tweet from Trump. Sources in the HBCU sphere said they wouldn’t put it past the administration to cut off funding in revenge.


The HBCU group isn’t a new creation of the Trump White House; Obama's board was chaired by William R. Harvey, the president of Hampton University. Wayne A.I. Frederick, the president of Howard University, and Beverly Wade Hogan, the president of Tougaloo College, were also on the board.

The Chronicle of Higher Education reported in July that the White House was having problems finding an executive director, adding that it had tapped Jarrett L. Carter Sr., but that he withdrew from the running, citing organizational issues. "I didn’t want to be in that position, because once you say yes, and once they announce you, the White House is hands-off on answering anything," he said. "If you’re not ready with an answer, or at a least a timetable for when you’re going to have an answer, you’re at a disadvantage."

Paris Dennard, a staunch defender of the president’s positions on race and white supremacists in the wake of Charlottesville, said that rumors swirling that he was being considered for the position were not true.
 

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