Rep. Ayanna Pressley will reintroduce H.R. 40, federal legislation to study reparations for slavery, on Wednesday as the Trump administration leads a wide-scale rollback of diversity, equity and inclusion efforts in the federal government.
The bill, which had 130 co-sponsors in the last session, is not likely to advance under the Republican-controlled Congress, and the White House has previously been opposed to any reparations efforts.
“We find ourselves in a moment of emboldened white supremacy and anti-Black racism, and a weaponized Supreme Court that is actively gutting protections and progress that has been made,” Pressley, D-Mass., told NBC News in an exclusive interview.
She described the country as being at “a painful inflection point.” She added, “We have a hostile administration working actively to roll back decades of progress and more recent progress when it comes to our civil rights.”
Last month, President Donald Trump issued an executive order banning DEI policies in federal agencies, calling them illegal and discriminatory, leading to federal workers being placed on leave and emboldening some of America’s largest companies to walk back corporate equity promises.
Despite the roadblocks, Pressley said it’s critical to keep pushing H.R. 40.
“I’m working actively to blunt the assaults from a hostile administration that means harm to everyone that calls this country home, but will have a disparate impact on Black Americans,” Pressley said, “because throughout history, it has been proven that when other folks catch a cold, Black folks, figuratively, catch pneumonia.”
H.R. 40 has been introduced continually over the past three decades, and Pressley is officially taking over from Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, who died last summer from cancer. Lee’s daughter, Erica Lee Carter, who completed the remainder of Lee’s term, approached Pressley about taking over the bill.
The bill’s content has not changed since it was introduced in the last session, Pressley’s office confirmed. It would create a commission to study and propose reparations for slavery and subsequent racial discrimination. Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., first introduced it in 1989, and Lee took over when he retired in 2017.
After the end of the Civil War, Gen. William T. Sherman asked a group of Black leaders in Savannah, Georgia, how the approximately 4 million newly emancipated Black people could best be supported. They proposed issuing 40 acres and a mule.
The fact that “40 acres and a mule” was never provided is seen by reparations advocates as an unfulfilled federal promise.
“Our government, regardless of who occupies the Oval Office, has a moral and legal obligation to provide reparations for the enslavement of Africans and its lasting harm on Black communities,” Pressley said.
After emancipation, reparations were self-organized through grassroots organizations such as the Ex-Slave Mutual Relief, Bounty, and Pension Association…
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