Jeb Bush and Ben Carson Only 2 of 16 GOP Candidates to Speak at Urban League Conference

Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton slammed Republican candidate Jeb Bush on racial issues Friday during a speech at a National Urban League conference in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., contending that his campaign slogan, โ€œRight to rise,โ€ is an insult to people of color. Suggested Reading Black History Month – 2022 Hip-Hop 50 Year – 2023…

Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton slammed Republican candidate Jeb Bush on racial issues Friday during a speech at a National Urban League conference in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., contending that his campaign slogan, โ€œRight to rise,โ€ is an insult to people of color.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
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The slogan fits the old Republican mantra of โ€œself-reliance and hope,โ€ notes the New York Times, but Clinton essentially said people cannot pull themselves up by their bootstraps if they are being oppressed by systemic racism in health care, jobs, education and the criminal-justice system.

โ€œPeople canโ€™t rise if they canโ€™t afford health care,โ€ Clinton said to cheers from the audience, taking aim at former Florida governor Bushโ€™s opposition to the Affordable Care Act. She also attacked his record on education and his opposition to increasing the federal minimum wage.

When Bush took the lectern, he declared, โ€œI believe in the right to rise in this country,โ€ writes the Times.

Bush and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson were the only two GOP presidential candidates to attend the annual convention of the nationโ€™s oldest civil rights group. Well over a dozen other candidates vying for the Republican presidential nomination declined the Urban Leagueโ€™s invitation to appear, mostly citing scheduling conflicts, reports the Associated Press.

Two of Clintonโ€™s rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination, former Maryland Gov. Martin Oโ€™Malley and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, also attended the event. The candidates are hoping to win African-American votes, which helped propel President Barack Obama to victory in 2008 and 2012.

Read more at the New York Times and Fox News.

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