If the lineup at a convention for minority journalists is any indication, we know who’s really running the show.

Deray MckessonAttorney General Loretta Lynch is serving as the warmup act for “Black Lives Matter” leader and occasional Baltimore city school administrator DeRay Mckesson at the National Association of Black Journalists (NQBJ) and the National Association of Hispanic Journalists (NAHJ) 2016 Convention, according to a release from the groups.

Lynch will participate in an “armchair conversation” with MSNBC’s Joy-Ann Reid and NPR’s Maria Hinojosa.

According to the release, “activist” Mckesson will sit alongside Secretary of Education John B. King on a panel “immediately following the conversation with the Attorney General.”

It unclear whether the pair will discuss the dismal performance of urban schools — Baltimore in particular — or if they’ll simply tag team on Mckesson’s anti-police crusade.

Recent standardized tests found only 12 percent of Baltimore 8th graders were proficient in math, while just 14 percent of the same students were rated proficient in reading, according to the Baltimore Sun.

EAGnews reported in June about Mckesson:

Mckesson previously worked in the district’s office of human capital as a strategist, as well as an assistant to the director, between August 2011 and December 2013, according to Fox Baltimore.

Mckesson was the senior director of human capital in Minneapolis.

He is expected to serve in his new position in Baltimore, at an annual salary of $165,000, at least through the fall, while district officials complete a nationwide survey for a permanent replacement. Mckesson will oversee a $4 million budget and 56 employees, the Sun reports.