Vice President Kamala Harris received a big boost with rural voters on Tuesday thanks to an endorsement from the National Black Farmers Association and its president, John Boyd.
In a statement, Boyd said Harris “has the vision to recognize the need to invest in agriculture and land ownership, new loan programs and credits, to make it easier to start and run a farm in the U.S.”
I’m urging everyone I know to vote for Kamala Harris for President!
— Dr. John W. Boyd, Jr. (@JWBoydNBFA) October 22, 2024
She has the vision to invest in agriculture and land ownership, and new loan programs and credits that make it easier for aspiring farmers to start & sustain their operations right here in the U.S.
👩🏾🌾… pic.twitter.com/oeuPEaLXNf
Black farmers, a group historically kneecapped by discriminatory policies, are acutely aware of the setbacks a second Donald Trump term could inflict on Black people, and the obstacles his first term created for Black businesses in particular.
In 2021, as part of a more than trillion-dollar coronavirus relief bill, Congress authorized $5 billion in debt relief and other aid to minority farmers who had faced discrimination. This could have been a partial but important step toward recompense for years of deliberate, government-enabled harm. But that program has been held up in court due to various lawsuits — at least one of which is backed by Trump adviser Stephen Miller, who espoused white nationalist ideas in leaked emails — alleging the aid amounts to anti-white racism.








