Trump-backed Geoff Diehl wins GOP primary in Massachusetts governor’s race

Former state Rep. Geoff Diehl (R), who has the endorsement of former President Trump, is projected to win the Republican primary in the Massachusetts governor’s race.

The Associated Press called the race at 10 p.m. ET.

Diehl beat back a challenge from moderate businessman Chris Doughty and will take on Attorney General Maura Healey (D) in November.

Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R), who has served eight years in office, announced last year he would not seek reelection. 

Diehl received coveted endorsements from Trump and former Trump aide Corey Lewandowski and campaigned on a platform that included supporting small business, election integrity and public safety. 

However, it’s unclear how much Trump’s endorsement will help Diehl in November. Trump lost the state in 2020 with 32 percent of the vote compared to President Biden’s 66 percent and a Suffolk University/Boston Globe poll released in July found Healey leading Diehl in a hypothetical matchup among likely general election voters 54 percent to 23 percent.

The Cook Political Report rates the general election race as “solid Democratic.”

Diehl began his career in the state legislature in 2011 and later announced a Senate bid to take on Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) for her seat in 2018. He ultimately lost that Senate bid after Warren received 60 percent of the vote to Diehl’s 36 percent. 

Like Trump, Diehl has pushed dubious claims about the 2020 election, according to The Associated Press. He has backed the Supreme Court’s ruling to eliminate the constitutional right to an abortion and was against COVID-19 restrictions. 

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Former team president Bruce Allen testifies in House panel's Washington NFL investigation

Former Washington Commanders team president Bruce Allen testified before the House Oversight and Reform Committee in its investigation into workplace misconduct allegations against the NFL franchise. 

Allen, who is the son of former Commanders head coach George Allen, delivered a deposition remotely to the House panel on Tuesday after being handed down a notice to appear before the committee. 

A spokesperson for the committee confirmed to The Hill that the former team president testified before the committee.  

“The Committee is continuing to investigate the decades-long workplace misconduct at the Washington Commanders and the NFL’s failure to address it,” the panel’s spokesperson told The Hill.  “Mr. Allen served in senior roles under team owner Dan Snyder for many years, so his testimony is important for the Committee to fully understand these serious issues and advance reforms to protect workers in the future.”

A source told The Washington Post that the 66-year-old former team executive refused to testify unless he was subpoenaed by the committee. Allen reportedly would’ve been accused of violating his separation agreement with the franchise if he had testified before the congressional committee  without a subpoena. 

Both Snyder and Roger Goodell, the NFL’s commissioner, recently testified before the House panel in the team’s investigation. 

Allen’s testimony comes after the committee launched its probe into the Washington Commanders organization and Snyder in October after Allen’s email chain with former NFL head coach Jon Gruden, which contained racist, homophobic and misogynistic language and was part of the NFL’s initial investigation into the team, was leaked to the public.

The leaked email chain, which spanned seven years, also led Gruden, who won a Super Bowl with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, to resign from his position as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. 

Gruden, who recently said he was “ashamed” for taking part in that leaked email chain with Allen,  filed a lawsuit against the NFL in November alleging that the league deliberately leaked his emails to media outlets in an effort to force him out of his job. 

In a memo released earlier this year, the committee’s chairwoman, Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), said that Snyder and his legal counsel sent private investigators to the homes of the accusers and gathered thousands of emails from Allen in an attempt to show that former team executive created a toxic work environment within the franchise.

Allen, who said that the Washington, D.C.-based NFL organization had a “damn good” culture, was relieved of his duties as team president in December 2019 after spending 10 seasons with the organization. 

The NFL launched its second investigation into the team earlier this year after former cheerleader and marketing manager Tiffani Johnston, while speaking at a House Oversight and Reform Committee roundtable discussion on the matter, accused Snyder of sexually harassing her during a work-related dinner.

Snyder, who has owned the Commanders since 1999, has publicly denied the allegations against him and his NFL franchise. 

In a statement to The Hill, one of the attorneys representing the former Commanders employees involved in the investigations applauded the news of Allen’s testimony. 

“I am pleased that the Committee on Oversight & Reform continues its important work in investigating the allegations of a toxic workplace culture and financial improprieties at the Washington Commanders,” attorney Lisa Banks said in a statement. “Given his long tenure and close relationship to Dan Snyder and Commanders top management, Bruce Allen should be in a unique position to shed light on the many important issues being examined by the Committee.”

The Hill has reached out to the Washington Commanders and the attorneys for Dan Snyder for comment and more information. 

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Massachusetts AG Maura Healey wins Democratic gubernatorial primary

Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey is projected to win the Democratic primary in the state’s gubernatorial race.

The Associated Press called the race at 8:36 p.m.

Healey was considered the presumptive Democratic nominee after state Sen. Sonia Rosa Chang-Díaz (D) announced earlier in the summer she would be dropping her bid for governor.

Gov. Charlie Baker (R) announced last year he would not seek reelection after eight years in office, leaving the seat open. 

A Suffolk University-Boston Globe poll released in July found Healey beating both potential GOP nominees in hypothetical general election match-ups.

The Cook Political Report rates the Massachusetts governor’s race as solid Democrat.

Healey entered the governor’s race earlier this year and touts endorsements from Massachusetts Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D) and Ed Markey (D), Boston Mayor Michelle Wu (D), state Senate President Karen Spilka (D), and state House Speaker Ron Mariano (D).

She also enjoys endorsements from Emily’s List, Giffords, NARAL Pro-Choice America and the Human Rights Campaign PAC, among other top groups.

Healey became the first openly gay person to be elected as attorney general in the U.S. in 2014. She is in her second term.

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Hillary Clinton says she will never run for president again

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Former secretary of State and Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton on Tuesday said she will not run for president again.

“No, no,” Clinton said when asked by “CBS Evening News” anchor Norah O’Donnell if she would ever run for president again.

“But I’m going to do everything I can to make sure that we have a president who respects our democracy and the rule of law and upholds our institutions,” Clinton continued.

Clinton said former President Trump would not fit into that category and that “he should be soundly defeated” if he runs again.

“It should start in the Republican Party,” Clinton said. “Grow a backbone. Stand up to this guy.”

Trump, who defeated Clinton in the 2016 presidential election, has been teasing another run for president in 2024, and polls show he has a good shot of clinching the Republican nomination.

Clinton has said that she would endorse President Biden if he runs for reelection the same year — which he has repeatedly said he plans to do — saying that he would be “the person most likely to win.”

“Joe Biden beat in a huge landslide victory in the popular vote Donald Trump. I think that says a lot,” Clinton said in a conversation with NBC News anchor Yamiche Alcindor in late June.

On CBS, Clinton shot down any comparisons between her use of a private email server while serving as secretary of State and the recent discovery of classified materials at Trump’s Florida home, saying the two situations are “really different” from each other.

“I think it’s a really different comparison to what’s going on here,” Clinton said of her own skirmish with the FBI compared with Trump’s current situation, noting that “it appears that the Justice Department and the FBI have been incredibly patient, quiet, careful until they finally apparently thought that national security was at stake.”

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Live results: Massachusetts primary

The Associated Press is following the primary election in Massachusetts.

Follow the live results below.

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Oz declines to say whether he'll back McConnell for Senate majority leader

Mehmet Oz, the Republican Senate nominee in Pennsylvania, declined to say Tuesday night whether he would support Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) as the next GOP leader in the upper chamber if he wins in November and the party gains the majority.

During an appearance on Fox News’ “Special Report with Bret Baier,” the host asked Oz if he will support McConnell as the next majority leader if Oz were to win in the Keystone State.

“I look forward to being in the United States Senate and [am] happy to make that decision for the next leader of the United States Senate…It will be Republican,” Oz replied to Baier. 

“But you can’t make it tonight,” Baier responded. 

“Not going to make it tonight,” Oz said.

McConnell said last month that he has “great confidence” in Oz despite a slew of recent polls showing him trailing his opponent, Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. John Fetterman (D), in the polls. 

“I have great confidence. I think Oz has a great shot at winning,” McConnell said when asked by a reporter.

DEVELOPING

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Biden calls British PM Truss, reaffirms ‘special relationship’

President Biden called new United Kingdom Prime Minister Liz Truss on Tuesday to congratulate her on her win and to reaffirm the strong ties between the U.S. and the U.K.

“The leaders reaffirmed the special relationship between our countries and expressed their readiness to further deepen those ties,” according to the White House. 

Truss, the former foreign minister, took office on Tuesday and replaced former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who resigned following a series of scandals.

Biden and Truss on the call discussed cooperation on global issues, including the ongoing war in Ukraine, as well as challenges from China and preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. Additionally, they discussed securing “sustainable and affordable energy resources.”

Biden and Truss talked about their “shared commitment” to protecting the Belfast/Good Friday agreement, which is the agreement between British and Irish governments to restore self-government to Northern Island

“They also discussed … the importance of reaching a negotiated agreement with the European Union on the Northern Ireland Protocol,” according to the White House.

Biden has expressed his commitment to the agreement throughout his administration and spoke in March to Taoiseach Micheal Martin of Ireland about preserving the stability of Northern Ireland.

Truss delivered her first speech as prime minister on Tuesday at Downing Street, outlining priorities like tax cuts, economic growth, boosting energy security, and the national health care system.

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On The Money — Long COVID hits the labor market

We’ll dig into how long COVID intersects with the worker shortage. We’ll also look at President Biden’s semiconductor plan, school teacher strikes and the Labor Day air travel rebound.

But first, see why annual boosters might be on the way. 

Welcome to On The Money, your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line. For The Hill, we’re Sylvan LaneAris Folley and Karl Evers-HillstromSubscribe here.

How long COVID is impacting the US labor shortage

Persistent COVID-19 symptoms could be keeping millions of Americans out of the workforce.  

Economists and policymakers have struggled to figure out why a much lower percentage of working-age adults are in the labor force than before the pandemic.

  • The number of Americans either employed or looking for work eclipsed its pre-pandemic level in August, according to Labor Department data released Friday.
  • But the labor force participation rate remains 1 percentage point below its February 2020 level, a gap roughly equivalent to 1.6 million people.

A smaller labor force hasn’t kept the U.S. from adding jobs at a rapid rate since mid-2020. Even so, thousands — if not millions — of Americans could be on the sidelines of the rapid recovery because they’re still too sick from prolonged COVID-19 symptoms to work.   

“We don’t know what proportion of people are having very debilitating symptoms with a lot of certainty,” said Julia Raifman, an assistant professor at Boston University’s School of Public Health.  

“But we know that it is happening to some people and we know that each infection seems to increase the chances of it happening,” she continued.  

Sylvan has more here.

CHIPS ON THE TABLE 

Biden administration unveils plan for bolstering semiconductor production 

The Biden administration on Monday unveiled its plan for bolstering domestic chip production in the U.S. by using the $50 billion in funding from the CHIPS and Science Act passed this summer.

  • The administration will use the majority of the funding, around $28 billion, to establish domestic production of leading edge logic and memory chips through grants, subsidized loans or loan guarantees, the Department of Commerce said in an announcement.
  • The administration will use around $10 billion to increase production of current-generation semiconductors and chips. An additional $11 billion will be invested in research and development. 

The Hill’s Rebecca Klar has the latest

SCHOOL’S OUT

Seattle teachers union authorizes strike, potentially delaying school year start 

Unionized educators at Seattle Public Schools (SPS) on Tuesday voted to authorize a strike, which threatens to delay the start of the school year on Wednesday if a contract agreement is not reached. 

The Seattle Education Association (SEA) announced on Tuesday afternoon that 95 percent of voters authorized the strike, with three-quarters of its roughly 6,000 members participating. 

Union leaders said they are continuing to bargain with the school district throughout the day, but they may begin picketing on Wednesday morning if no agreement is reached. 

The Hill’s Zach Schonfeld breaks it down. 

FLIGHT FRENZY

Labor Day marked first holiday weekend to exceed pre-pandemic air travel levels, TSA says 

Nearly 9 million people passed through the nation’s airports during the Labor Day weekend, the first holiday weekend to surpass pre-pandemic air travel levels, according to Transportation Security Administration (TSA) data. 

The agency announced on Tuesday that it screened 8.76 million passengers between Friday and Monday, which was 102 percent of the Labor Day weekend passenger volume in 2019. 

“TSA’s highly trained and dedicated workforce facilitated secure travel for millions of passengers during the busy summer travel season with very little disruptions at the checkpoint,” TSA acting Administrator David Pekoske said in a statement.

“We were also able to continue the deployment of new technologies that facilitate stronger identity verification procedures and enhanced security screening for carry-on bags.” 

Here’s more from Zach.

Good to Know

Now that the term “quiet quitting” has buzzed around the Internet, a new phrase — “quiet firing” — is shifting the focus around workplace culture on to how employers treat their staff.   

It’s not an unusual tactic, as more than 80 percent of respondents say they have either seen or experienced quiet firing, according to a recent LinkedIn News poll.   

That’s it for today. Thanks for reading and check out The Hill’s Finance page for the latest news and coverage. We’ll see you tomorrow. 

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Energy & Environment — Water crisis raises environmental racism concerns

Advocates are linking the water crisis in Jackson, Miss., to environmental racism. Meanwhile, California is facing electric grid issues amid extreme heat, and a judge sided with the Biden administration over a challenge to oil lease sale postponements in Wyoming.

This is Overnight Energy & Environment, your source for the latest news focused on energy, the environment and beyond. For The Hill, we’re Rachel Frazin and Zack Budryk. Someone forward you this newsletter? Subscribe here. 

Advocates see justice issue in Jackson water crisis

As tens of thousands of residents of Jackson, Miss., were without clean water, some advocates say the situation stems from years of environmental racism. 

More than 80 percent of Jackson residents are Black, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Last week, those residents saw their main water treatment facility fail in the wake of flooding, leaving them without clean water for drinking, bathing or cooking. 

“While the recent flooding has been a contributor to where we are today, this is not the first time this issue has come about, where the city of Jackson is without water and unable to function,” Vangela Wade, president and CEO of the Mississippi Center for Justice, told The Hill. “Over the last 50 years, you could say that this has been brewing because of the lack of investment in the city’s infrastructure by primarily state leadership.” 

The latest water issues come after the last two years saw the city’s water system fail an Environmental Protection Agency inspection — which found the drinking water had the potential to host harmful bacteria or parasites — and the bursting and freezing of pipes during a winter storm last year left residents without water for nearly a month. 

But advocates say the crisis has been decades in the making. Jackson first became a majority-Black city in the years following integration. The white population fell from
52 percent to 43 percent through the 1980s, with another 35,000 leaving the city over the course of the 1990s, according to The Jackson Free Press. 

  • This population loss has reduced the city’s tax base and left it with far less money for basic resources. 
  • While the city tried to fight the new loss of water by handing out free bottled water to residents, they quickly ran out. Now, some of that responsibility has fallen to local community organizations.  

For years, the anti-violence prevention program Operation Good has been delivering water to residents across the city. Gino, who is the founder of the organization and asked not to have his last name published, said his group began handing out water back in 2015. 

“This is nothing new for us,” said Gino, adding that the group prioritizes taking care of the elderly and disabled first, following up with children and those living in poverty. More recently, he added, they’ve been bringing water pallets to different schools that contacted Operation Good in desperate need of providing for their students. 

Difference in circumstances: Gino said he doesn’t normally use terms like “environmental racism” but added he knows “surrounding cities that are majority white that don’t have infrastructure problems like Jackson.” 

  • “Jackson’s infrastructure problems are horrendous,” he said. “For us to be the capital city of the state of Mississippi, it does not receive the attention, financing and things of that nature that it should.”  
  • Gino said children in the city are exposed to raw sewage so often, they’ve become immune to it: it’s in their bathing water, it’s in their cooking water, it’s in their drinking water. And through it all, residents have still received water bills. 
  • “It always felt like it was a ‘Jackson problem,’ not a Mississippi problem,” Gino said. “It was a Black-people problem, not a majority-of-the-state problem.” 

Read more about the issue here, from Zack and The Hill’s Cheyanne M. Daniels. 

Heat strains California’s power grid  

A record heat wave is pushing California’s electric grid up against the point of failure this week, with officials pointing to climate change for putting continued stress on the system. 

The state issued an emergency alert for a seventh consecutive day on Tuesday, urging customers to conserve energy between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. 

“We have now entered the most intense phase of this heat wave,” Elliot Mainzer, chief executive officer of California’s principal electric grid, California ISO, said in a briefing on Monday.  

  • As temperatures in the state capital of Sacramento head toward 114 degrees, California ISO said Tuesday that demand could hit an all-time record of
    51,000 megawatts by 5:30 p.m., as solar capacity begins to taper off with sunset while temperatures — and power demand for air conditioner use — remain high. 
  • Officials said the grid was expected to be as much as 4,000 megawatts short of demand by late afternoon on Monday. 

To make matters worse, the older natural gas plants that provide additional power when demand is at its highest are less reliable in extreme heat, The Associated Press reported

“We are on razor thin margins,” Siva Gunda, vice chairman of the California Energy Commission, told the Sacramento Bee. 

California is attempting to meet demand by spinning up emergency natural gas generators — enough to power 120,000 homes. 

But those plants will provide just 120 megawatts — about 3 percent of the potential shortfall. That has the state calling on business and industry to cut power usage while asking households to raise thermostats and turn off large appliances in the evening. 

Citizen attempts to cut electricity usage over the weekend helped cut power by
1,000 megawatts — enough to supply 750,000 households, Mainzer said. 

  • “Your efforts have been making a real difference,” he said. 
  • But with temperatures set to keep rising throughout the week, if consumers can’t close the gap by cutting demand, then “blackouts, rolling, rotating outages are a possibility,” Mainzer added. 

In a rolling blackout, grid officials deal with power shortfalls by cycling outages among users. In California in August 2020, that meant outages ranging from 15 minutes to more than two hours

Read more here from The Hill’s Saul Elbein. 

WATCHDOG DETAILS ‘URGENT’ NEED TO PREVENT NUCLEAR ACCIDENT 

A global nuclear watchdog said Tuesday that there is an “urgent” need for interim measures to prevent a nuclear accident related to shelling near Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia power plant.  

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), in a report released on Tuesday, specifically called for an end to gunfire near the power plant and the establishment of a protection zone around it.  

  • “Pending the end of the conflict and re-establishment of stable conditions there is an urgent need for interim measures to prevent a nuclear accident arising from physical damage caused by military means,” the IAEA report said.  
  • “This can be achieved by the immediate establishment of a nuclear safety and security protection zone,” the agency continued.  

The IAEA noted in the report that some damage had already been caused to parts of the plant, and that ongoing shelling could have worse consequences, including the “unlimited release of radioactive materials to the environment.” 

The risk: Exposure to very high levels of radiation can cause skin burns, nausea, vomiting and sometimes death in the short term. In the long term, it can cause cancer and cardiovascular disease.  

Read more about the warning here.  

Judge sides with Biden in oil lease pause ruling 

A federal judge sided with the Biden administration in a case related to its oil and gas leasing pause in Wyoming. 

However, because of another case, the government still appears to be barred from continuing its leasing pause in several other states. 

At the start of his tenure, President Biden temporarily paused new oil and gas leasing on federal lands and waters. This pause prevented new rights to drill for the fuels on federal lands from being auctioned off.  

The ruling: U.S. District Judge Scott Skavdahl, an Obama appointee, ruled Friday that the Biden administration was within its rights to postpone lease sales in Wyoming during the first quarter of 2021.  

  • He wrote that there was “substantial evidence” to support the Interior Department’s move to put off lease sales that had been slated for March 2021 over concerns about the adequacy of their underlying environmental reviews.  
  • Wyoming filed its suit after the March lease sales were postponed, but before other postponements. Skavdahl also ruled that Wyoming did not have the right to challenge any postponements that occurred after its suit was filed.  

However: In most states, the Biden administration still appears to be barred from pausing new oil and gas leasing.  

Last month, Trump appointee District Judge Terry Doughty ruled in favor of 13 states that had challenged the oil and gas leasing pause.  

 He determined that the law requires the government to sell oil and gas leases, and therefore, the Biden administration must auction more acres for drilling. 

Read the story here.  

‘DOOMSDAY GLACIER’ HANGING ON ‘BY ITS FINGERNAILS’ 

A glacier that could cause a multi-foot sea level increase if it melted is disappearing at about twice the previously observed rate, according to a study published Monday in the journal Nature Geoscience.  

Although the findings indicate the rate of retreat has slowed in recent years, researchers also saw indications that past a certain point the recession could begin increasing rapidly again.   

  • “Thwaites is really holding on today by its fingernails, and we should expect to see big changes over small timescales in the future — even from one year to the next — once the glacier retreats beyond a shallow ridge in its bed,” co-author Robert Larter of the British Antarctic Survey said in a statement.   
  • “Just a small kick to Thwaites could lead to a big response,” added Graham.  

Researchers, led by Alistair Graham of the University of South Florida, analyzed historical data on the retreat of the Thwaites Glacier, which is about the size of Florida and considered among the most vulnerable parts of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. They found that during a five-month period in the previous two centuries, the glacier receded at an annual rate of about 1.3 miles — twice the rate observed over the 2010s.  

Another day on the doomsday beat: The Thwaites Glacier is also known as the “Doomsday Glacier” for the sea level rise its melt could cause — just over two feet. It is at particular risk due to its position on the ocean floor rather than land, making it vulnerable to warming ocean currents. 

Read more about the issue here.  

WHAT WE’RE READING

  • As water levels drop in California’s Lake Isabella, a Wild West ghost town re-emerges (SFGate
  • Russian Gas Cut-Off Scuppers German Plan to Bolster Reserves (Bloomberg
    GAO: Trump team bogged down sensitive Interior grants(E&E News
  • Democrats push White House to strengthen environmental justice efforts (The Washington Post
  • OPEC agrees to cut production after oil price slump (CNN

ICYMI

🌽 Lighter click: It’s corn!

That’s it for today, thanks for reading. Check out The Hill’s Energy & Environment page for the latest news and coverage. We’ll see you tomorrow.  

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Coming together to rebuild America’s unity

Neither of us knew it at the time, but we were standing nearly shoulder-to-shoulder when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in August 1963. One of us had traveled up from North Carolina as a state youth coordinator for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The other was spending the summer as a Senate intern. And on that day, both of us, an African-American and a Jewish-American, ended up on the western edge of the Reflecting Pool in a very diverse and unified crowd of 25,000 people as Dr. King made one of the most resonant appeals in the nation’s history for social justice and equality.

In the decades that followed, as one of us rose through the ranks of the Civil Rights Movement to become executive director and CEO of the NAACP, among other positions, and the other through politics to become a U.S. senator, we both felt as though the nation was ascending toward Dr. King’s vision of national unity in a “beloved community.” Racism was still an ever-present reality in America. Anti-Semitism persisted as well. But for the better part of both our lives, from the height of the civil rights movement to the moment one of us was nominated for the vice presidency right through Barack Obama’s subsequent election as president, racism and anti-Semitism were in retreat in America. Aspiring leaders in both political parties embraced Dr. King’s dream.

As we stood there together in 1963 under the hot sun, the nation’s trajectory hardly felt inevitable. But the civil rights movement managed to weave a diverse community into a movement determined to tap into what President Lincoln once called “the better angels of our nature.” In the months and years that followed, our two American communities — Black and Jewish — worked closely together for justice and equality. Jewish leaders like Rabbi Abraham Heschel marched with Dr. King for Black equality. Blacks stood with Jews in support of Israel’s security and independence. And the love of the Bible and the history the two groups shared — Jews having emerged from slavery in Egypt, America’s Black community from slavery here at home — helped build a bond that has lasted for decades.

The triumphs of the civil rights movement remain cornerstones of our democracy, and the spirit of good feeling remains a bedrock of our society writ large, but something has changed more recently. In the wake of an ugly march of racists and anti-Semites in Charlottesville, Va., an American president said there were “good people on both sides.” A prominent member of the House suggested that, for Jews, “it’s all about the Benjamins.” As we both noted when reconnecting recently for our joint work with No Labels, a national organization devoted to achieving unity through bipartisanship, the longstanding belief that bigotry was a loser for any figure with political ambitions — that being viewed as racist or anti-Semitic would push any public figure to the margins and defeat — has been sadly upended.

But thankfully the events of the last decade have not driven a wedge between America’s Black and Jewish communities. Despite provocations from the fringes, the bond remains. Members of the Congressional Black Caucus are among Israel’s most important allies in Washington today. And the Jewish community has broadly embraced the cause of advancing Black equality and equity. Nevertheless, we believe this unique alliance will be better and more important than it is today — that Blacks and Jews today can be more influential together than apart. We hope that younger generations of leaders in both communities will learn from our history and begin to nurture the bonds that flourished generations ago, across racial and religious lines, despite different history, but within the beloved community’s Judeo-Christian tradition.

Jews should not be the only Americans concerned about anti-Semitism as it shows its ugly face again with greater frequency. Blacks shouldn’t be the only ones concerned about continuing racism in America. These two curses are born of the same poison, and will only be countered effectively if Blacks, Jews, and every other group of Americans who believe in freedom and justice come together to face them down. The great progress the civil rights movement made in the 1960s in part was a response to the terrible travails that defined the 1950s. We may be at a low ebb today—our collective American march toward equal justice may seem stalled and facing more opposition. But we can and must respond together in a movement bathed in shared American values that can realize our founders’ dream, and Dr. King’s, of a more perfect union.

Chavis and Lieberman are both co-chairs of the group No Labels.

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