The Atlantic

Pete Buttigieg Is Ready to Talk About Racial Inequality

The candidate has struggled to attract black voters, but now he has a robust plan to signal his commitment to helping them.
Source: Amy Harris / Invision / AP

Frederick Douglass’s warning to lawmakers was sharp and direct. “No republic is safe that tolerates a privileged class, or denies to any of its citizens equal rights and equal means to maintain them,” he wrote in The Atlantic in 1866. The postwar government had not done its job, and it needed to be “consistent with itself”; consistent with the founding document that said “all men are created equal.”

America is still doing thelast month. The plan lays out a laundry list of proposals that address racial inequities in health care, education, voter suppression, and the criminal-justice system.

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