E/CN.4/1995/78/Add.1
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in employment is still widespread in the United States, with African Americans
three times as likely as Whites to face discrimination when applying for entry
level jobs. The depressed United States economy and the global restructuring
occurring has meant that workers with little education cannot find decent
paying jobs. Others who have found new jobs in the service sector typically
receive lower wages, and most of these jobs normally do not provide medical
insurance or decent fringe benefits. Federal government policy and corporate
cutbacks again have exacerbated the worsening employment conditions.
55.
For instance, during the 1980s, the federal minimum wage was frozen
at $3.35 per hour. This policy expanded the working poor. Thousands of
persons working full-time cannot afford the basic necessities of life. Not
able to participate in the economy in any meaningful way, many in the Black
working class have opted to participate, or turn their heads while their
children participate, in the underground economy.
56.
In addition, racial discrimination in employment has been a central
objective of corporations adjusting to the emerging international realities.
The Supreme Court led in the assault in this area. The 1988-1989 Court
decided that United States law prohibiting employment discrimination should be
drastically reduced. In five cases the Court’s restrictive rulings limited
the domestic human rights machinery from protecting persons injured by
discriminatory behaviour. 27/
E.
Political participation
57.
Notwithstanding the Constitution and federal laws purportedly granting
the vote to all "citizens", numerous barriers exist to the participation of
people of colour in the political process; the chief barrier being the
structure of the system itself, which ensures that people of colour will not
be able to elect their fair share of representatives at the national, state or
local levels. In particular, the single district electoral system employed
throughout the United States, which requires winning candidates to attract a
majority or plurality of the vote, makes it difficult for people of colour to
elect representatives since in most districts people of colour are outnumbered
by White voters. For instance, although Black people make up 12 per cent of
the United States population, they occupy only about 5 per cent of the elected
offices in the country and have only 1 per cent of the seats in the Senate.
In addition, the low number of people of colour holding elected offices can
further be attributed to the fact that few of them have one million or more
dollars to spend on running for the Senate. In short, although people of
colour in the United States generally have the right to vote, they do not have
the equally fundamental right to representation.
58.
When they are appointed to positions of political responsibility, elected
African American officials, for example, whether mayors, governors, judges or
other elected officials, may face various forms of harassment - which do not
affect other elected officials - by the Internal Revenue Service and the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. Such practices were commonplace during the
1980s under the Republican Administration. A number of Black elected
officials were placed under surveillance, their telephones tapped,
subjected to investigations, spied on by cameras for corruption or
embezzlement, and juries hearing cases involving some of them were