President Donald Trump told Fox News in an interview that aired Friday that he believes he has “done more for the black community than any other president,” besides Abraham Lincoln.
“Criminal justice reform—nobody else could have done it. I did it,” Trump said, adding that he didn’t “get a lot of notoriety in the fact that people I did it for then go on television and thank everybody but me, and they needed me to get it done.”
The president also took credit for helping underfunded, historically black colleges and universities (HBCU), saying, “I got them funded on a long-term basis.”
“I took care of them,” Trump said of HBCU educational leaders, who the president said told him that they had to plead, year after year, for more funding.
“I got them long-term money, more than they had, much more than they had, and I got it permanently,” Trump said.
Setting up opportunity zones was another thing Trump touted, saying, “It affects tremendously the employment in areas that were absolutely dead or dying.”
Part of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, opportunity zones aimed to bring investment dollars to some of the country’s most distressed communities by incentivizing private capital investments in projects that revitalize these communities.
But the opportunity zone programs have faced obstacles, according to Sonnie Johnson, who attended a Roundtable at the White House on Wednesday between African American leaders and Trump.
Johnson said that when opportunity zone funds are allocated at a local level, they face obstacles.
“So for us as black people to actually access the Opportunity Zones, I have to go talk to Democrats. And I have to be willing to do what they want to do under their agenda, how they want it done, for me to be able to have access to the Opportunity fund—Opportunity Zone funds,” Johnson said.
“Instead of getting young blacks to invest and become entrepreneurs and become owners, you’re getting gentrification, because outside forces with more money and connections to these Democrats are able to come in and get this money a lot faster than the black people that it was actually intended to help,” he added.
At the Roundtable, Co-Chairman of the Urban Revitalization Coalition, Kareem Lanier, called Trump’s record “nothing short of historic for black America,” and listed a number of points, including the undoing of the 1994 crime bill.
“We were getting locked up at unprecedented rates,” Lanier said. “You undid the 1994 crime bill, and we are forever thankful for that.”
Trump recently took aim at former Vice President Joe Biden’s record on crime policy, calling his support for the 1994 Crime Bill an abject failure.
“Sleepy Joe Biden’s 1994 Crime Bill was a total disaster. It was mass incarceration for Black people, many of them innocent,” the president tweeted. “I did Criminal Justice Reform, something Obama & Biden didn’t even try to do - & couldn’t do even if they did try. Biden can never escape his Crime Bill!”
Trump’s remarks to Faulkner follow earlier, similar statements touting his administration’s accomplishments.
“AND THE BEST IS YET TO COME!” Trump added.