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With RFK, Jr.’s Confirmation Almost Certain, There Is Growing Concern for the Health of Black Americans

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The third week of Donald Trump’s administration delivered more unprecedented racism in modern politics and more pushback.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., who Trump has nominated to lead the Department of Health and Human Services,  moved one step closer to confirmation last, but without support from Senator Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD). 

During RFK’s confirmation hearing, Alsobrooks – one of two Black female U.S. Senators – questioned him about comments he’s made about African Americans’ immune systems. 

Kennedy has said, “We should not be giving Black people the same vaccine schedule that’s given to whites because their immune system is better than ours.”

Alsobrooks asked him to explain his suggestion, adding, “So what different vaccine schedule would you say I should have received? With all due respect, that is so dangerous.”

According to a Mayo study, African Americans do present a higher antibody response after MMR (Measles, Mumps and Rubella) vaccination compared to white people. But the author of the study says that does not mean there needs to be a different vaccination schedule because race, sex and other factors often generate different responses.  

The tense exchange made headlines and directed a laser focus on Kennedy’s well-known controversial position as an anti-vaccine leader. 

Federal health workers targeted

There  is more trouble for Black federal health workers after NBC News reported that a website known as “DEI Watch List” published the photos, names and public information of some workers in health agencies, describing them as “targets.”

Workers listed on the website had supported DEI initiatives, donated to Democrats and the majority of them were African American.

Dr. Benjamin Georges, the executive director of the American Public Health Association said, “This is a scare tactic to try to intimidate people who are trying to do their work and do it admirably. It’s clear racism.”

Georges has also described Kennedy as “unqualified” to be the nation’s chief health officer.

If confirmed, Kennedy would oversee a $1.7 trillion annual budget and 13 agencies, including the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health.

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Republican-led Redistricting Could Cost Congressional Black Caucus 1/3 of Its Members  

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The Congressional Black Caucus recently sounded the alarm, calling the Republican-led gerrymandering efforts across the country an assault on Black voter protections.

According to the CBC, 19 of its 62 members may lose their seats after the redistricting and the Supreme Court’s gutting of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The high court sanctioned Congressional maps providing a “partisan” advantage, but not a racial one. Critics say the developments open the door for dramatically decreased Black representation in Congress.

Representative Yvette Clark, who chairs the CBC, described the national redistricting strategy as a “power grab.” 

CBC members and political scientists describe the mid-decade redistricting plans, which were initiated by President Donald Trump, as an attack on Black voters.

In Tennessee, the state legislature successfully split the district that includes Memphis, a predominantly Black urban area, into three districts.

“Overall, the Congressional district plan is Black vote dilution at an industrial scale,” stated Dr. Sekou Franklin, the executive director of the John Lewis Center for Social Justice at Fisk University. “It eliminates the largest urban and naturally-cohesive Congressional district, of which Black voters can elect a candidate of their choice. This has not happened since before the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.”

Missouri Congressman Emanuel Cleaver, who has represented the 5th Congressional District which includes Kansas City for more than two decades, faces an uncertain future. The Missouri legislature targeted Cleaver by dividing the district, a Democratic stronghold, into three districts. The Missouri Supreme Court rejected challenges to the map, declaring it constitutional.

Vice President J.D. Vance campaigned today in the now Republican-friendly district, remarking on the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling. 

“We had that great Supreme Court case that said a crazy thing, like maybe we shouldn’t discriminate against people based on race, right, very common sense,” said Vance.

The CBC has pushed back against the gerrymandering trend and announced plans to continue challenging the Republican efforts.

In a statement, members added: “We are working with partners in state legislatures across the South, alongside the legal and civil rights communities, to challenge these maps in court and mobilize our communities to the ballot box.”

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Trump’s Use of “low IQ” Insult Reveals His View of Black Americans

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In a recent social media rant, President Donald Trump hurled his favorite insult at House Democratic leader, New York Congressman Hakeem Jeffries, calling Jeffries “low IQ” and a “thug.” Trump’s denigration came as he called for Jeffries to be charged for allegedly inciting the violence at the Washington Correspondents Dinner two weeks ago when a gunman attempted to assassinate Trump. 

In conversations held publicly around news desks and in homes, barbershops, and backyard BBQs, one of the questions that invariably surfaces focuses on whether Donald Trump is a racist. Most Black Americans have a ready answer. Mother Jones raised the question earlier this week in an article, and their analysis of his use of the insulting description, “low IQ,” offers credible evidence. 

In the last 10 years, Trump used “low IQ” 75 times, and more than half of those times, he applied it to prominent Black Americans. Here’s a look at the numbers. 

  • Vice President Kamala Harris: Targeted 23 times; Trump has called the Vice-President “very low IQ individual”.
  • Congresswoman Maxine Waters: Targeted at least 8 times; described as an “extraordinarily low IQ person”.
  • Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson: Attacked as “that new, Low IQ person” on the Supreme Court.
  • Minority Whip Hakeem Jeffries: Called a “totally low IQ person” and a “thug”.
  • Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson: Targeted 5 times.
  • Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett: Referred to as a “low-IQ person” during a Meet the Press appearance.
  • Radio Host Charlamagne tha God: Labeled a “low IQ individual” in response to his public comments.
  • Other Targets: He has also questioned the intelligence of figures like Basketball Superstar LeBron James, Newscaster Don Lemon, and former Trump Supporter Omarosa Manigault Newman.

Jeffries responded with a post of his own, referring to Trump as the “dumbest” president in history.

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Unemployment Is Almost Double for Blacks, Yet Black Approval for Trump Has Increased

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High gas prices continue to dominate the headlines as the U.S. and Iranian stalemate over the Strait of Hormuz persists. Compounding consumer frustration–especially for Black Americans–is an unemployment rate almost double that of the national average and other ethnic groups.

For Black Americans, the March 2026 unemployment rate was 7.1% while the national average was 4.3%. Earlier in the year, the unemployment rate was even higher, fluctuating between 7.3% in January to 7.7% in February.

During the past few months, the unemployment rate among Black men and women, who are  noncollege graduates, has dropped. But overall, the unemployment rate among Black men is higher in 2026 than it was this time last year.

Black women with college degrees and those who work in public sector jobs have seen professional progress eroded under Trump’s attacks on federal workers and DEI policies.
Despite the impact of Trump’s policies on Black Americans, recent polling shows he has found an opening among a block of voters historically loyal to Democrats. A 2025 Gallup poll found  22% of Black voters approved of Donald Trump’s leadership compared to 13% in 2017 during his first term.   

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