Assistant U.S. Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, who heads the Civil Rights Division, is not happy with New York City Zohran Mamdani’s “Racial Equity Plan.”
Mamdani tied his Racial Equity Plan to living affordability, claiming racial inequity caused the city’s affordability crisis.
“The True Cost of Living Measure offers an honest account of what it actually costs to live in this city — and who is being left behind. It shows that this is not a crisis affecting a small minority of New Yorkers. It is a crisis touching the vast majority of our city, in every borough and every neighborhood,” claimed Mamdani. “But we know this crisis is not felt equally. Black and Latino New Yorkers — who have been pushed out of this city for decades — are bearing the brunt. The Preliminary Racial Equity Plan is where we begin to reverse that pattern. These reports make one thing clear: we cannot tackle systemic racial inequity without confronting the affordability crisis head-on, and we cannot solve the cost-of-living crisis without dismantling systemic racial inequity.”
I attempted to read all 375 pages, but it’s filled with a bunch of mumbo jumbo.
Shorter Mamdani administration: White people bad.
To justify the plan, I kid you not, Mamdani claimed NYC has a history of “profound injustice” from the beginning.
Yes, the plan wasted pages detailing these “injustices” since 1624.
The key goals of Mamdani’s plan:
For example, Mamdani will force the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation (BNYDC) to develop “new training and professional development opportunities,” with a focus on those “underrepresented.”
By the end of the year, BNYDC must achieve that goal, but “in a matter that is reflective of the diversity of NYC.”
You know what’s missing from all of these sections?
Legit qualifications for jobs.
The administration does not care if the white person can perform the job better than an “underrepresented” person.
No wonder Dhillon and the Civil Rights department want to review Mamdani’s plan.
Mamdani’s plan contradicts President Donald Trump’s executive order Ending Radical And Wasteful Government DEI Programs And Preferencing, which he signed the day of his inauguration.
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