Congressman Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., speaks at a free foreclosure prevention summit to provide families who are delinquent on their mortgages or facing potential foreclosures with the information and resources they need to secure their homes Saturday, June 6, 2009 in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Gail Burton)
Congressman Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., speaks at a free foreclosure prevention summit to provide families who are delinquent on their mortgages or facing potential foreclosures with the information and resources they need to secure their homes Saturday, June 6, 2009 in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Gail Burton)

WASHINGTON — Maryland Congressman Elijah Cummings, whose merciless interrogation of Michigan Gov.  Rick Snyder at a recent congressional hearing on the ongoing Flint water crisis has drawn over 100,000 viewers on Youtube, said the Black Lives Matter movement needs to be in Flint because Snyder, Michigan Republicans and the governor’s supporters do not care about the lives of the residents of the mostly black city.

“When we talk about black lives matter, that’s another place they need to be” Cummings said during an interview last week.  “It’s nice to interrupt Hillary Clinton’s rallies, but they need to be all up onside of this.”

Cummings is the ranking Democrat on the Congressional Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, the congressional panel hearing holding hearings on the Snyder administration’s decision to switch the source of the city of Flint’s water and their response to the health crisis that ensued as a result.

Cummings said it was clear to him during the meeting and after the meeting that Snyder and his fellow Republicans just don’t care about the people of Flint, which is 57 percent African American.

“They don’t value their lives,” Cummings said during the interview at Howard University. “I don’t know why. They don’t seem to have any remorse. They want to blame everybody else.”

Cummings said documents subpoenaed by the committee from the Snyder administration showed that they were aware of the full extent of the lead contamination in Flint’s water, and they disregarded it.

“His chief of staff knew that there was a major problem for more than a year,” Cummings said.

“There is nobody else between a chief of staff and the principal, nobody. He is either a poor administrator or he has poor staff, either way he shouldn’t be governor.”

Cummings has called for Snyder to resign and said during the hearing, “Gov. Snyder’s administration caused this horrific disaster in poisoning the children of Fint.”

Apparently, his voice and others are being heard among Michigan residents.

An EPIC MRA Poll released last month revealed that the governor’s approval ratings have plummeted. The poll found that 41 percent of voters believed he should resign, which is up from January’s 29 percent.

It also found that 75 percent of voters believed Snyder didn’t handle the Flint water crisis well.

“If the federal government was not in there helping out, the state would be doing almost nothing,” Cummings said. “To this day, Snyder and his administration have not bought the people of Flint one single bottle of water.”

A majority of recovery efforts in Flint are supported by volunteers and the federal government, he said.

Several lawsuits have been filed against Snyder, including a federal racketeering lawsuit by hundreds of Flint residents that alleged the city’s water crisis was intentional and created to balance the city’s budget.   The governor has used nearly $1million in taxpayer money to hire a law firm to help him maneuver through the civil and criminal complaints against him.

Though Snyder cannot run for re-election in 2018, he is also facing recall efforts.   The Rev. David Bullock, a Detroit pastor and activist, is one who has begun  a petition to ask voters to end his term sooner by recalling  the governor this November.

Bullock has 60 days to amass 790,000 signatures to be in accordance with state law that requires a petitioner to collect the number of signatures equal 25 percent of the number of voted cast in the last general election.

According to one newspaper, Bullock, who  began his efforts Easter, has already collected an estimated 108,000 signatures.

“I haven’t seen this kind of momentum in a long time,” Bullock told  “The Guardian.”

“The energy and animus, at least a week out, is very encouraging.  I think we ought to massage this energy and allow it to continue to grow. I think we got a great shot.”

If the recall is successful, Michigan Lieutenant Governor, Brian Calley would serve the remainder of Snyder’s term.