Three Black senators grilled Trumpโs only Black cabinet nominee to get him to commit to affordable housing.
By Keith Boykin
โBlack Vote, Black Power,โ a collaboration between Keith Boykin and Word In Black,
examines the issues and whatโs at stake for Black America.

Iโve watched several of the confirmation hearings for Trumpโs cabinet nominees, but the hearing for โthe Black jobโ was the Blackest yet โ and perhaps also the most revealing about the next four years.
Scott Turner, the only Black person Trump has nominated for his cabinet, is almost certain to be confirmed for โthe Black job.โย
You know the job.ย
Itโs the same job that Ben Carson, Alphonso Jackson and Samuel Pierce had. Itโs the one job that Republicans love to give to a Black person: Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
Turnerโs hearing on Jan. 16 was polite and non-confrontational, especially compared to the hostility from Attorney General nominee Pam Bondi and the incompetence of Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth.
Based solely on his decorum at the hearing, Turner actually seems to be a nice guy, and just like Herschel Walker, Trumpโs pick for the non-cabinet position to be ambassador to the Bahamas, Turner is a former professional football player.ย
But itโs clear to me that Turner is in over his head โ not so much in terms of ability but in his lack of resilience to withstand the pressure from his Republican colleagues, his reluctance to advocate for fair and affordable housing, and his powerlessness to stand up to his bosses in the Trump administration.ย
The Senate Banking Committee that will vote on his confirmation includes four Black members: the Republican chair Tim Scott, who famously professed his love for Trump and obsequiously rubber stamps his agenda with a toothy smile, and three Democrats who tried repeatedly and failed to get Turner to commit to fighting for housing needs.
Delaware Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester asked Turner if he supports mandatory work requirements that would kick many vulnerable people off of Section 8. It took three times before he finally admitted that he supports these restrictions.ย
Maryland Sen. Angela Alsobrooks asked if he would oppose cuts to HUD programs for affordable housing for low-income households. โWhat I will commit to looking at these programs and to maximize the budget,โ Turner responded. That didnโt answer the question, so Alsobrooks asked again, and Turner only pledged that he โwill work with the presidentโ and Congress within โthe budget that we do have.โ
Alsobrooks then asked about Elon Muskโs proposal to lay off 75 percent of HUD workers, and Turner meekly responded: โWhat I do support is encouraging people to do the job that theyโve been called to do.โ But what exactly does that mean? That doesnโt answer the question.
Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock asked about Trumpโs proposed cuts to HUDโs budget, and Turner would only repeat his rehearsed talking points that he would โmaximize that budget.โย
And when asked if he would crack down on racial discrimination in home appraisal bias, which Kamala Harris proposed to tackle during her presidential campaign, Turner replied, โWe will continue to look into that, and I look forward to working with you on that and become more well-studied.โ
Youโre the nominee for Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, and you need to โbecome more well-studiedโ on racial discrimination in home appraisals? Thatโs not a good sign.
Weโve seen this movie before, folks. Part of the reason we have a housing crisis today is because of decisions made decades ago when Ronald Reagan appointed a nice, quiet Black Republican HUD secretary as the public face to preside over massive cuts in funding that would disproportionately hurt Black people.ย
When Congress passed the Housing Act of 1968, it committed the nation to the goal of producing 2.6 million units of housing a year, including 600,000 annually for low-income families. But when Reagan came into office, he slashed funding for housing programs and cut the proposed number of units for new construction to only 10,000. Reaganโs policies created a spiraling crisis of homelessness and affordable housing that still persists four decades later.
Most of the media attention in the coming days will focus on Trumpโs crew of controversial, combative, and clearly unqualified White cabinet nominees, but we should also pay attention to what Trump might call โthe Black job.โ
Scott Turnerโs confirmation hearing proves that Trump will not only follow but also expand on the Republican playbook of using a Black face to implement a decidedly anti-Black agenda.
This story was originally published by WordinBlack.ย


