nimh
 
  1  
Wed 5 Sep, 2007 05:42 pm
mysteryman wrote:
So she says the surge is seeing some success,and she wants more people in the army??

Yet,wasnt she one of the ones saying that the army was taking people who only saw it as a way out of poverty, or that those who joined the army only did so because it was they only way they could get an education.

Now she wants more people in the army?

That seems to be a contradiction.

I dont see it. What's the contradiction, exactly?

Many people join the army because it constitutes their only chance at getting an education and finding a way out of poverty - if Hillary said that, she was right. So if you accept that, further increasing the size of the army merely means that you're both improving the country's defense and offering more people that chance at getting an education and a way out of poverty, right?

Not exactly my favoured way of going about the problem, mind, but I dont see how it's a contradictory approach. Wouldn't that just count as a win-win situation?
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Wed 5 Sep, 2007 06:11 pm
sozobe wrote:
Meanwhile, I'm impressed that Hillary has managed to grab the "experience" mantel. How does that work, exactly? I remain resistant to the idea that being first lady -- even an unusually involved first lady -- is really the kind of experience that matters.


Michael Crowley has a good take on that on TNR today - havent seen anyone approach that issue this way before:

Quote:
BUT FIRST: ARE YOU EXPERIENCED?:

Hillary Clinton unveiled a new advertisement today, which you can find below. Its thrust is "change," but the new theme of her campaign is a mashup of "change" and "experience." As HRC said in New Hampshire this weekend:

"'Change' is just a word without the strength and experience to make it happen. And I know some people think you have to choose between change and experience. Well, with me you don't have to choose."

So far this "experience" theme seems to be keeping Hillary in the lead over Barack Obama. But what does she really mean when she talks about "experience"? Given that Hillary has spent just over one (cautious) term in the Senate, she's clearly talking about her time as First Lady (and to a lesser extent as First Lady of Arkansas). Yet Hillary actually says very little about the particulars of her White House years. She and her surrogates frequently refer to the 82 nations she's visited. And all the "work" she's done on important issues. But apart from her failed health care reform--which for obvious reasons she doesn't emphasize--Hillary almost never talks about sitting in on her husband's key policy meetings, or otherwise shaping substantial components of his agenda.

Whereas one of the surprising things I discovered when I wrote my recent piece about Hillary's foreign policy was just how engaged and influential she was on those issues during the 90s. I found that she played an important role in pressuring her husband to bomb Bosnia and, especially, Kosovo. And yet one rarely hears her talking about such episodes in specific terms--if ever.

Why not? Probably because right now Hillary gets to have it both ways: She enjoys this vague claim to "experience," without getting bogged down in specific issues, because people only have foggy notions of her role as First Lady. (I haven't thoroughly read the two new biographies about her but if they clearly answer this question few reviewers have mentioned it; a quick skim of Bernstein's book suggests that he mostly focuses on her scandal-management.)

So here's an idea for Barack Obama: Start pressing Hillary for some specifics about all this experience--particularly on issues that might rile up the party's base. What role did she play in her husband's decision to sign the welfare reform bill? Did she have anything to do with NAFTA? What did she have to say when her husband reached a 1997 balanced-budget deal with Republicans--a deal that Richard Gephardt blasted as a sellout?

And if she claims to have been out of the loop on those issues, well, then should she be claiming all this "experience"?

Who knows if that would work. But it seems to me that right now Hillary is getting all the benefits of being "experienced" without really having to defend many of the particulars that experience entails.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Wed 5 Sep, 2007 06:18 pm
The problem with American politics is simply that most Americans are foggy about all important issues both domestic and foreign. Most Americans didn't know where Iraq was on the map before the Gulf Wars, and there's a good bet most still don't know where it's located.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 04:36 am
Excellent article and analysis. I would add a few more items to the Obama "To Do" list.

One: a major overhaul of his campaign's middle management that is so interested in protecting their own position in the campaign heirarchy that they have insulated Obama from and are mis-managing the internal campaign problems.

Two: eliminate the splinter groups he has sanctioned on his website with official web space and staff support. It is causing nothing but problems with the "why aren't we on the list" complaints.

Three: Delete or rewrite the generic response letters. In an effort to be responsive to each individual who communicates with the campaign, generic boilerplate letters thanking them for their support are sent regardless of the topic of communication. Most often those generic letters cause anger and frustration to the recipients because the inane boilerplate response creates an impression that no one read or was interested in the content of the original letter and there is no follow through addressing the content. The volunteers would be better off receiving no response rather than the current one.

http://thephoenix.com/article_ektid46807.aspx

Quote:
Rule out the Vice-Presidency

For some Democrats, a Clinton-Obama ticket is the best of all possible worlds. It unites the party's two front-runners. It gives Obama more national experience. The speculation is so rampant that this will be the ultimate choice that supposedly even Fidel Castro has predicted a Clinton-Obama pairing.

Obama needs to put a stop to the speculation now. Any talk of the vice-presidency diminishes him. It's not a job he should want, because it's a political dead-end and holding it would forever destroy his star quality. Besides, Clinton would never pick him in a thousand years. Obama's too much of a threat to her own ability to establish an executive aura, and it's not clear whether he's the best choice for her politically.

Even more important, as long as voters are able to dream of a Clinton-Obama ticket, Obama will be unable to take full advantage of the differences between him and the front-runner. It's time for him to put an end to the common line we hear in the debates: that "We Democrats are united about everything." Which brings us to suggestion number two:

Spell out the differences between your candidacy and Hillary's Hire a good speechwriter
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 05:19 am
Lots of good stuff on this page, thanks for posting it.

I agree with calling Hillary on the experience thing.

And I agree with a lot of Butrflynet's post too. I really wish he would write his own speeches more! I totally get the limitations, but he's good. One of the best speeches he's made on the campaign trail (IMO), the one about the importance of black fathers stepping up, was one he wrote at the last minute when his speechwriter forgot about that event.
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 06:59 am
No opinion or analysis on this one (for now :wink: ) - it's just an interesting article!

Quote:
Young, Black, and Post-Civil Rights

There's a new generation of African American political leaders, and they aren't confining their careers to black districts -- they're calling for race-blind, not race-based, policies.

Terence Samuel | September 4, 2007
The American Prospect

On a blustery winter afternoon in January 2005, I went to see Harold Ford Jr. in his congressional office to talk about his upcoming campaign for the U.S. Senate. He guessed he would need about $12 million for the campaign. In terms of actual hurdles, though, he expected to be more disadvantaged by being a Democrat than by being African American.

I was quietly, but completely, blown away.

Had the country changed that much? Was race not the biggest, most confusing totem on the American political horizon? I understood that in 2004 Barack Obama had been elected to the Senate. I understood about the New South. I was in Virginia when Doug Wilder became lieutenant governor, and I had covered the campaign when he became the first black governor elected in the nation's history. But even with the most generous benefit of the doubt, Ford was still talking about Tennessee, where the Ku Klux Klan was born, where Martin Luther King Jr. died, and where only two black people have ever been elected to Congress, both of them named Harold Ford.

History takes the slow boat and the long way out. Indeed, to the extent that the South has grown increasingly hostile to Democrats for more than a generation, it was the party's positions on race and civil rights that made it so unpalatable to so many Southern whites.

Yet it was clear that Ford, a Southerner, was absolutely serious.

So how much has the country changed? This is the question of the moment as we watch the mutations in our national racial DNA triggered by Barack Obama's presidential campaign. Obama, we are reminded constantly, is a singular political talent. But he is in many ways the full flowering of a strain of up-tempo, non-grievance, American-Dream-In-Color politics. His counterparts are young, Ivy League professionals, heirs to the civil-rights movement who are determined to move beyond both the mood and the methods of their forebears.

Where their predecessors went to historically black colleges and universities and often became ministers, this generation of leaders, born in the 1960s and 1970s, went to law school and began building political resumés. Ford went to Penn as an undergrad and law school at Michigan; his father studied mortuary science and went into the family's funeral-home business before going into politics.

These new leaders are not what used to be called race men. They argue, somewhat convincingly, that they don't need to concern themselves primarily with the uplift of their race. They appeal to black voters, to be sure, but to white ones as well. They talk about income inequality, not black unemployment. They rail against inadequate educational opportunities, not the endemic poverty in black neighborhoods that results. They attack globalization and outsourcing, not necessarily the loss of high-wage, low-skill manufacturing jobs that built and sustained large working- and middle-class black communities after World War II.

And they don't want to be just mayors or congressmen from majority-black districts. They want to be governors, senators, and presidents. They look like Ford, Obama, and Deval Patrick, the governor of Massachusetts. They resemble Anthony Brown, the African American lieutenant governor of Maryland, and Artur Davis, a congressman from Alabama, both of whom, like Obama, graduated from Harvard Law School. They look like the Rhodes Scholar mayor of Newark, New Jersey, Cory Booker, who is often accused of not being black enough, and like Adrian Fenty, the new mayor of Washington, D.C., who appointed the first nonblack public-schools chancellor in 40 years. They are mostly Democrats, but they also include a handful of Republicans -- Michael Steele, the former lieutenant governor of Maryland, who was the unsuccessful GOP nominee for the Senate in 2006, and former Oklahoma Congressman J.C. Watts -- who as a matter of ideology have been preaching that the old racial calculus ought to be a less prominent feature in our politics and our lives.

"It is happening as a matter of inevitability," insists Davis, who is considering a run for governor of Alabama in 2010. His odds are long, but more importantly, he is on a short list of very serious candidates, and his race is no longer the inherent bar to victory it once had been.

Much has changed for the black politician. African Americans, despite their loyalty to the Democrats, are no longer united by the urgent and singular need to end racial injustice. And white Americans are far more open to black candidates than ever before, opening up a far wider array of public offices than was available a generation ago. This has allowed the new black politician to craft a message that appeals to a broader constituency, a message that is not steeped in race. "Why not talk about the American Dream, that is a dream that is shared by black and white and brown … Americans?" asks Brown.

Compelled to reach beyond what is perceived as their natural political base, these candidates and their message may hold the keys to the future of the Democratic Party. It is a message that eschews divisions, particularly racial ones; it taps into an optimism, real or manufactured, that we are all in this together, full of possibility; and it avoids the negative and what detractors call victimhood. Patrick's 2006 campaign slogan in Massachusetts was, "Together We Can," and it is no coincidence that Patrick had the same political consultants as Obama, whose 2004 senate-campaign slogan was, "Yes, We Can."

This is, in essence, the message of the Democratic Party, which has been accused, sometimes fairly, of being less a party than a collection of interest groups. And there may be no more treacherous ground for a Democratic candidate to traverse than addressing the concerns of black voters, crucial to any success, while not seeming beholden to them. Actually, the job may be easier for black Democratic politicians, who can preach togetherness with a reduced burden of having to establish their bona fides with black voters.

Obama is doing all this, but he is not the first. When I met with Ford in 2005, he was 34 and had been elected to the House five times, each time with between 60 percent and 80 percent of the vote, from his majority-black district in Memphis. His father, Harold Ford Sr., had held that seat for 22 years before him. But the younger Ford was moving on, building himself into the prototype crossover black candidate -- moderate, affable, eloquent -- who would win state and national elections.

It was, after all, four years before Obama's big speech at the 2004 Democratic Convention that Al Gore chose Ford to deliver the keynote address at the party's convention in Los Angeles. Two years later, in a move that many deemed reckless, Ford challenged Nancy Pelosi for party leader in the House. He got crushed, but for someone who had already been thinking about a run for the Senate, it likely did not hurt him at home to take on one of the premier liberal faceplates of the party.

He was a man in full. And despite criticism that he was not progressive enough or that he was in the thrall of a pandering, unprincipled centrism that was killing the Democratic Party, it seemed clear that Ford's was a promising political future. His 2006 campaign was not a sacrificial one. Desperate to retake control of the Senate, Democrats were going to cast their lot with an African American in the South for one of the only open GOP seats of the cycle.

"The race issue is big," he told me, "but the biggest issue I face is being a Democrat."

Clearly America has changed. Who can deny the enormity of racial progress in the 150 years since the Dred Scott decision or in the 50 years since the Little Rock Nine, or even in the 15 years since Rodney King pleaded helplessly, "Can we all get along?" Ford refers to himself as part of the "diversity generation" that grew up valuing difference rather than mediating racial strife. They've lived the dream, and represent a generation of black Americans who do not feel cut off from the larger society. Indeed, Obama's raising $33 million in three months is the very definition of this progress.

"The country has evolved on race," Davis says. "I think in the next 15 years there will be six to 10 African Americans who, if their careers take the right turns, will be in position to contend for the presidency. That's breathtaking."

In all likelihood, they will be less liberal and more centrist than those who came before them. Ford opposes gay marriage and supported the war in Iraq. Davis is anti-abortion and pro-gun. Obama, who comes from a liberal city in a Democratic state, also opposes gay marriage, and he angered many progressives and party members when, in his first few weeks in the Senate, the new liberal champion voted for a tort-reform bill that was one of the president's top priorities.

There is open and often bitter speculation about whether this new breed had to pay too great a price for its success, by distancing itself from the causes and crusades that advance the interests of black people. There is little evidence of that in substance, but the shift in tone and perspective troubles some. "The subtext of his appeal is in what he does not say," writer Amina Luqman opined in The Washington Post, about Obama's avoidance of difficult historical questions on race. "It's in his ability to declare that things must get better without saying who or what has made them bad. It's how he rarely chastises and how he divides blame and responsibility evenly; white receiving equal parts with black, poor equal parts with rich."

John Conyers, the 40-year House veteran from Detroit, sees them as the organic next step in a long, historic march, but notes that "some of them are not as progressive as they should be from my point of view."

And while Conyers is not among them, there are those who see in that less progressive approach a calculating cynicism to pander to whites by distancing blacks. "Some of these guys have exploited that in a political sense, intentionally or not, to appeal to white voters," says the Rev. Al Sharpton, an old-time agitator.

Still, many say that these political changes are natural and positive development. "They are what we wanted to happen," writer, scholar, and veteran activist Roger Wilkins told the Associated Press about the new black politicians. "You are getting some of the real fruits of the civil-rights movement. I don't view them as in opposition to us; but people born in 1961 see the world differently than people born in 1931."

If black politicians are allowed to practice a different kind of politics in America today than a generation ago, the reasons can be reduced to two essential factors: Black voters have broader interests and more diverse political demands, and white voters are increasingly open-minded about what their leaders should look like.

African American home ownership is at an all-time high. In 2006, 81 percent of African Americans older than 25 had graduated from high school, compared with 44 percent in 1976, or 28 percent in 1966. Poverty among blacks has dropped from 41.8 percent in 1966 to about 23 percent in 2005. Blacks are the only group among whom voter turnout is rising. And the election of African Americans to public office has taken off: In 1970 there were 1,469 black elected officials in the United States, while today there are more than 9,100. There is no missing the historical irony in the fact that Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana top the list of states that have elected the most blacks.

Those officials, in some ways, are evidence of victories in fights that need not be refought. "We could not get past those threshold inclusion issues," says Davis. "We could not be talking about health-care disparities in 1965, when people could not even vote."

But white voters have changed, too, says David Bositis, of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a think tank in Washington focused on African American issues, and this has allowed African American voters to seek offices representing constituencies much wider that an all-black ward or a majority-black city or congressional district. "White voters have changed so that they are willing to support, and strongly support, black candidates, and black candidates … are now offering a vision, an agenda, a politics where they are trying to appeal to all voters, and which more white voters are willing to accept."

In 2006 Ford ran a Senate campaign that appeared to show that race was no longer the dominant and decisive issue it once had been in American political culture -- until, that is, race did Ford in. Ford's campaign followed the overall Democratic playbook: He talked about high gas prices, economic unfairness, the failed war in Iraq. Interestingly, when he attacked Bush, he did it from the right, ridiculing the president's immigration plan, for example, as an amnesty for illegal aliens.

And then, with one week to go and the polls putting Ford and his opponent, Bob Corker, in a dead heat, the Republican National Committee put out a television ad showing a young white woman in a strapless dress, announcing: "I met Harold at the Playboy party." Her shoulders bare, she beckoned at the end of the ad, "Harold, call me!" Ford lost by a margin so small -- less than 3 percent that any small factor might have made the difference. But the Tennessee campaign is remembered mostly for that ad, which conjured up some of the saddest elements of America's gnarled racial history: The lynching of untold numbers of black men in the South between the end of the Civil War and the end of World War II for crimes, often imagined, that ranged from raping white women to insulting them. The baggage is old, but real and still raw. The effectiveness of the ad depended on one's sense of and sensitivity to history. Clearly it was not meant to evoke morning in America.

Still, Ford emerged from the election with his political bona fides intact and even enhanced. Almost immediately, he talked of another bid for the Senate in 2008. Now he has set his sights on the governor's mansion in Nashville, which will be vacated by term-limited Democrat Phil Bredesen in 2010.

Al Sharpton is calling me back during a break from his radio show. Sharpton is what is casually described as a traditional civil-rights leader. He is definitively old school and savvy enough to understand that when "new generation" black leaders are praised for their "credibility," their "viability," or their ability to "transcend race," the political translation is that they are not Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson or Louis Farrakhan.

He dismisses the notion that the new politics is all that new. "There have always been black people who worked inside the system, while some worked outside it," he says. "Thurgood Marshall was on the Supreme Court when Martin Luther King was still alive. This ain't generational. Barack Obama and I are the same generation, Deval Patrick and I are the same age." (Sharpton was born in 1954, Patrick in 1956, and Obama in 1961.)

"I think the civil-rights movement has produced leaders who are not civil-rights leaders, but that was the whole point of the civil-rights movement, to give people a chance to live up to their potential," Sharpton says. "The thing that gets me is that when you get some black leaders who are not civil-rights leaders, whether it is Barack Obama or Colin Powell or Tiger Woods, people act like they did that all by themselves, that they opened the door for themselves."

Tensions over the blackness of black candidates have simmered for years, between Booker T. Washington's accomodationist self-help movement and W.E.B. DuBois' more aggressive black activism, between Malcolm X's threats of violence and King's devotion to nonviolence. But today there is something new: "In just my lifetime the meaning of leadership for African Americans has changed," says Congressman Davis. "When my mother came along you could teach, but you couldn't teach white children, you could lead, but you couldn't lead white people. This is a different space. Now you could live up to your potential."

The critical question, and it has yet to be answered, is whether living up to one's potential means leaving behind issues that are important to black people. Like the fight for affirmative action, for continued government protection against race-based discrimination in employment, education, housing, and other critical areas. Despite all the measures of progress, African Americans remain a disproportionately large portion of those suffering the ravages on the nation's continued inequality: Three in four white families owned their homes in 2005, while only 46 percent of blacks did; the median income for white households was $50,622 in 2005, while black median household income stood at less than $31,000, a 40 percent disparity that has existed since 1980; and blacks in the United States have an 18.6-percent chance of going to jail at some point in their lives, compared with 3.4 percent for whites.

Nonetheless, the new black politicians seek race-blind, not race-based, solutions. "I can't think of a single issue in American political life where you can still say 'This will exclusively affect blacks,' or 'This will only affect whites,' where you can say what this means for the Black Agenda," says Davis, who admits that in a lot of cases the consequences "fall more acutely on black people."

These new leaders say they leave advocacy for African Americans to civil-rights organizations. Ron Walters, who was the campaign manager on Jesse Jackson's presidential campaign, says that's how it should be. "I think a lot of times people, the media especially, confuse civil-right leaders with political leaders," Walters said. "The reason African American communities needed civil-rights organizations was because of the injustice and abrogation of rights that existed in our communities. That is not a job for political leaders, and we still need civil-rights leaders." In this division of labor, civil-rights leaders -- who have always spent a lot of their effort petitioning political leaders for redress -- can now in theory make their case to more highly placed and more sympathetic black leaders.

The emergent strain of American Dream politics from black politicians is attracting a lot of attention at the very moment that some of the civil-rights-era, freedom-fighting types are reaching new heights of political power in the place where historically it has been most significant, the House of Representatives. Last January, Detroit's Conyers, first elected in 1964, became chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. Charles Rangel chairs the powerful Ways and Means Committee, and Mississippi's Bennie Thompson is the new chairman of the Committee of Homeland Security. And before she died in April, California's Juanita Millender-McDonald was head of the Committee on House Administration.

The old guard and the young Turks are mutually respectful, acknowledging that their experiences and opportunities are different because times have changed. "Could you imagine if John Conyers was a 35-year-old lawyer beginning his political career now?" Davis, 39, asked, suggesting that Conyers' political talent today would have taken him beyond the job of veteran congressman.

For his part, Conyers says he is "very enthusiastic about Obama's campaign, because he represents a new dimension to what we saw with Shirley Chisholm, Jesse Jackson, and Al Sharpton," African Americans who ran for president over the past 40 years. "I think it is very critical that we move along with him." (Conyers does not think the Democrats' best chances lie with Obama, however. "What I hope is going to happen is that we get a Clinton-Obama ticket, which I think gives us the best chance to win.")

But the true prize for African Americans may be Obama's opportunity to try.

On a rainy, humid afternoon deep in the Alabama summer, people were lined up around the corner, waiting to get into the ballroom of the Sheraton Hotel in downtown Birmingham. More than 2,000 of them paid $25 each to attend an event where they would be served no food, not even a pretzel.

Davis stood on the stage marveling at the crowd. "You have to be from Alabama to appreciate this," he said to Obama, whom he was about to introduce. "I've never seen a more diverse crowd -- black, white, rich, poor. It was amazing," he told me later. "That is not the norm in Alabama politics. Usually the black political community tends to do its thing, and the white political community does its thing."

There is a lot of Alabama in Alabama politics. "Not 10 minutes away from that ballroom was the 16th Street Baptist Church where those four little girls got killed in 1963," Davis told me. He asked for a show of hands of people who were around in 1963. There was a sprinkling.

"I bet that you could never have imagined that someone like me would be standing on this stage, getting ready to introduce someone …" The crowd erupted. Davis never got to finish the line. "It was astonishing," he recalled later. "To be a black politician born in America after 1960 with the rhetorical skills to communicate a vision to voters, it is possible to have the same career aspirations as white politicians with similar skills," says Davis. "Everything now is in the zone of possibility."
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 07:29 am
Quote:
But the true prize for African Americans may be Obama's opportunity to try.


That's the true prize for ALL Americans and why he appeals to so many varieties of us. It is a timely blending at the crossroads of his international/multi-cultural background, upbringing and skills and America's need for a lot of healing both internally and externally.

"What is that appeal?" you might ask.

That, too was answered in the article. For me and a lot of others it is this:


Quote:
"The subtext of his appeal is in what he does not say," writer Amina Luqman opined in The Washington Post, about Obama's avoidance of difficult historical questions on race. "It's in his ability to declare that things must get better without saying who or what has made them bad. It's how he rarely chastises and how he divides blame and responsibility evenly; white receiving equal parts with black, poor equal parts with rich."



I just wish the professional campaign handlers would get out of his way and allow his brillance to shine.
0 Replies
 
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 08:03 am
Saw Obama last night on the Daily show. John Stewart asked him about Hillary and the experience thing and he gave a pretty complimentary answer, acknowledging that she did a lot of heavy lifting on issues while she was first lady. His angle, though, is that experience is worth something because we expect people with lots of experience to have good judgment, and that it's the good judgment we are really interested in.
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 08:17 am
Good angle!

I'd still like him to follow up on that a bit more as per the article nimh posted though. It's not dirty politics, it's legitimate questions.

How'd the appearance (on the Daily Show) go in general, in your opinion?
0 Replies
 
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 08:43 am
I thought he did well. The only drawback is that I kept expecting him to be funny (it IS the Daily show) but he smartly avoided sounding like he was campaigning on the set. There was another part where they were talking about why governors usually have a better shot at winning. I'll see if I can dig it up because I don't remember the exact the words.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 09:24 am
An amazing number of interesting analytical articles are popping up this month.

This is a 10-page article. It compares the platforms of Senators Clinton and Obama on political and social issues of commanding importance to most voters. You'll find the whole thing here:


http://www.jbhe.com/obama1.html#obama

Here's the first 3 pages of it to get you started:

Quote:


Barack Obama is the Superior Choice
for African-American Voters

Theodore Cross



For the first time in the history of our country, a black man has a credible chance of becoming president of the United States. After the long nightmare years of slavery, lynchings, Jim Crow, and enduring race discrimination, one would expect that, in the upcoming presidential primary contest, Illinois Senator Barack Obama would be the overwhelming choice of black American voters.

Not so! National polls show that Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are drawing about equal shares of the black vote.

The standard explanation is that Hillary Clinton is the inherited winner of solid numbers of black voters because of the tremendous popularity of her husband among African Americans. We all remember how President Bill Clinton campaigned in black neighborhoods and churches, showed compassion and deep concerns for poor blacks, and sought out the opinions, advice, and even the forgiveness of black leaders. His remarkable ability to relate to African Americans, a quality missing among almost all white politicians, earned President Clinton both loyalty and affection among many millions of African Americans. In fact, he was so admired in the African-American community that in 1998 Princeton professor and Nobel laureate Toni Morrison called him "our first black president."

But Bill Clinton's success in winning the affection of African Americans is only part of the story. Senator Hillary Clinton in her own right has turned out to be an appealing candidate for black voters. In her so-called Team Hillary, she has assembled highly effective organizations of dedicated supporters in black communities throughout the nation. Her campaign's legal counsel is the widely admired African-American lawyer Cheryl Mills, the former White House deputy counsel who defended Bill Clinton in his impeachment trial in the U.S. Senate. In key states where the black vote is large, and possibly critical in primary outcomes, she has recruited skilled and experienced African-American advisory groups. At the grass roots, Team Hillary has placed scores of faithful bands of African-American campaign workers scattered about in key parts of the country.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Theodore Cross is editor of The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Senator Clinton has won a number of flat-out endorsements from influential African Americans. Her supporters include Philadelphia Mayor John Street, former New York City Mayor David Dinkins, author and poet Maya Angelou, composer and recording mogul Quincy Jones, and Robert L. Johnson, founder of the influential Black Entertainment Television network. Already she has the important backing of at least seven members of the Congressional Black Caucus.

In the style of President Bill Clinton before her, she makes regular appearances at black churches where she pays homage to black civil rights pioneers. She artfully uses Bible references and religious imagery to endear herself to black congregations. Last spring Hillary Clinton won glowing praise from the black press when she joined dozens of America's most famous black leaders in singing "We Shall Overcome" at the sacred shrine of black America, the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. Successfully sidestepping charges of pandering to black voters, she deftly shifts to a southern drawl as she sings the popular black hymn:

"I don't feel no ways tired. We got to stay awake. We have a march to finish."

In her campaign to lock up black support, there are no qualms about playing the race card. Senator Clinton scored with black voters when she declared in a June debate at Howard University that the country would be more worried about HIV/AIDS if the disease were disproportionately affecting whites instead of blacks. The powerful political impact of her statement was not diminished by the circumstance that her facts were incorrect. The annual federal budget for HIV research is $3 billion. This is more than the nation's entire appropriation for research on either heart disease, Alzheimer's disease, or breast cancer. But Clinton's assertion that racism drives white-controlled government decisions on the allocations of disease research stoked anti-white anger and won her acclaim among black voters.

Probably no one at the Howard University event, black or white, was aware of the fact that in August 2006 Hillary Clinton was the only one of 20 senators of the Republican-controlled Senate Health, Education, and Labor Committee to vote to gut a plan that would have redirected more AIDS funds to heavily black communities in the South. Her vote prompted the National Black Chamber of Commerce to publish full-page newspaper advertisements denouncing Clinton as being "two-faced" on the issue.

In fact, as I write today, there seems to be a prospect of almost inevitability of her winning the Democratic presidential nomination. It may be that to date upwards of 7 million black voters have been drawn into the Hillary Clinton camp. And this has occurred despite the fact, as I shall show, that the announced political programs of the two leading candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination would call for an entirely different result.

Let's now compare the platforms of Senators Clinton and Obama on a political and social issue of commanding importance to most black voters. This is the huge and persisting racial gap in the United States in unemployment, poverty, healthcare, and education. To be sure, black voters in the United States no longer automatically vote skin color in any particular election contest. Nor do they always ask which candidate is best for black people. Yet among the majority of African Americans, the issue of race and racial inequality persists as a concern of paramount importance. The famed commentator on presidential elections, Theodore White, once said there are three great and enduring issues in the United States. They are "war and peace," "bread and butter," and "black and white." In black America today, as always, "bread and butter" and "black and white" rise to the very top where they sometimes challenge even the issue of "war and peace."

http://www.jbhe.com/obamachartmedium.gif
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 09:32 am
This what you are looking for, FreeDuck? I don't have cable so don't have access to that show. Thanks for bringing it to my attention:


http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,294234,00.html

Quote:
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 09:50 am
Quote:
September 6, 2007 - Clinton Opens Lead Over Giuliani As Dems Surge In Ohio, Quinnipiac University Poll Finds; Little Unity Among Republicans
http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x1284.xml?ReleaseID=1102&What=&strArea=;&strTime=0
0 Replies
 
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 10:21 am
Yep, that was it.
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 11:40 am
Butrflynet wrote:
"What is that appeal?" you might ask.

That, too was answered in the article. For me and a lot of others it is this:

Quote:
"The subtext of his appeal is in what he does not say," writer Amina Luqman opined in The Washington Post, about Obama's avoidance of difficult historical questions on race. "It's in his ability to declare that things must get better without saying who or what has made them bad. It's how he rarely chastises and how he divides blame and responsibility evenly; white receiving equal parts with black, poor equal parts with rich."

I just wish the professional campaign handlers would get out of his way and allow his brillance to shine.

It's funny that you quote that exact paragraph. (Uhm, so scratch that bit about me having no analysis/commentary on this one..)

As a whole, the article really worked to remind me just how special and good a thing Obama's run is, in so many ways. It's historic, it's symbolically enormous, it both signals and could further promote great advances in US racial politics.

But in all the length of the article, among all the important values it highlighted Obama's candidacy as having, it was this exact paragraph that brought me down to earth again, and reminded me of the question what Obama brings to the debate in terms of the regular issues of the day. In fact it encapsulates exactly what my objection against Obama's "unifying" rhetorics has been.

Consider this again: "he divides blame and responsibility evenly; white receiving equal parts with black, poor equal parts with rich." It's not even that this feelgood rhetoric doesn't, at first blush, mean anything; it's that it does carry an implicit, underlying message that is plain wrong!

At one fell swoop, it sweeps the whole poignant social problem that America (and the West as a whole) faces, in this era of liberalisation, globalisation, and "reform" of whatever's left of the welfare state, under the carpet -- for the sake of a politically advantageous cozy togetherness vibe. Pretending that rich, poor, black and white are all equally to credit and to blame obfuscates the real and acute crisis that poor and regular working folk suffer - and suffer due to very concrete business practices and government policies!

The escalating unequality between rich and poor, the actual regression of social mobility (now lower than it was a generation ago), the evisceration of properly paid manual and technical work in favour of worse-paid, low-security temporary "flash" work, the struggle that social and welfare programs face even as tax rates for the richest 1% are slashed; these are not just things that 'happen'. They are not things that rich and poor, white and black, are equally responsible for in this comfortably "let's all just get along" way.

They constitute real and concrete ways in which a corporate class that is awarding itself ever more outlandish wages and bonuses actively squeeze a stagnating middle class dry. Under GWB, big business has been given free rein to ignore labour standards, keep unions out, ignore environmental and work safety standards, etc etc. That is something that needs to be confronted and reverted under a future Democratic Presidency. If Obama really does spread a message, like the writer suggests here, that, hey, everyone's equally to praise and to blame so let's not go after anyone just because he is rich or poor or white or black, then he is actively undermining his own capacity to do something about these issues later on.

That's the conservatives' game: conflating the interests of the rich with the population as a whole, calling tax cuts that overwhelmingly benefit the corporate ultras a measure for the middle class etc. It is the conservatives' cause to make sure that you wont, you know, actually hold the corporations and executives responsible for the disappearance of your job, the neglect of your work safety, the switch-over to shorter contracts and less job security, the outsourcing, the disproportional executive bonuses.

Now how they do that, is by giving you the feeling that what is good for any of us, is good for all of us. By giving you the feeling that we all in the end have the same interests, and that, you know, whatever the situation is now, it's because of all of us, so let's not point fingers! To go along with that message as a Democrat is to help raze the very awareness, understanding, frame of reference, that you need people to have if you're going to get a more redistributive politics going again once you're President.

Ack. Now compare John Edwards!

Quote:
Edwards' decades as a trial lawyer are often brought up, but [..] never [for] their personal impact. That's a mistake. He spent the bulk of his adult life fighting those cases, and the stories and people and corporations he came into contact amounted to a searing, visceral course in old-style populism. [W]hat does spending day after day confronting the grievous, heartbreaking damage done to individuals and families by powerful, profit-driven corporations do to a man?

"Every single day," says his wife, Elizabeth, "what he saw, were good people, in great need, who were being mistreated by big corporations. Corporations that knew that they had done wrong, and often insurance companies that were taking a calculated risk going to trial [..]. And that's what he did. He went to work every single day, and that's what he did. [..] If you took that person, a person who chose that as his life, you would end up with the politics that he's talking about today."

In 2003, when John Edwards wanted to present himself to the electorate, he, like every other world leader wannabe, wrote a book. But unlike most campaign tracts, Edwards' effort, Four Trials, doesn't say a word about his experience in the Senate or plans for the country. Instead, it recounts four trials Edwards fought, two against corporations, two against doctors. More to the point, it introduces four individuals who Edwards fought for - sympathetic, decent human beings, whose hopeful endurance in the face of impossible, deeply unfair circumstances makes clear who Edwards believes the heroes to be. [..]

When we sit down for our interview, one of the first questions I ask him is whether he thinks of himself as a populist. "If I knew what that meant," he laughed, "I could answer that question." But as I start to offer a definition, he interjects: "Can I answer first, then you tell me? I don't want my answer to be influenced by the other definition. If being a populist means standing up for regular people so they don't get," and here he pauses, searching for the right word, "stomped on by powerful multinational corporations, the answer is yes." [..]

Edwards, to be sure, is not anti-business, and he's quick to decry "pitting one group against another" for political gain, but his answers lack the deification of business and business leaders that so often lace elite Democratic rhetoric. This, again, speaks to background. Career politicians spend their lives raising money, not making it. As they ascend in prominence and power, their need for well-heeled supporters grows ever greater, and the caliber and impressiveness of the corporate titans they meet increases proportionately. A good corporate friend is not only a good friend; he's a financial savior, am indispensable political asset. [..] It breeds, for the politician, a certain, inevitable, idealization of like-minded corporate executives. [..] "The Clintons," Harris writes, "had organized their lives around politics, not money, yet they were fascinated by people who had made money and understood it, especially when these people were not conservative Republicans. [..]


He's probably not going to make it through, but what America needs is someone with Edwards' convictions. Not a Clinton, and not the kind of Obama conjured up in that paragraph above.
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 11:52 am
I haven't commented on that article yet, I was cogitating and figuring out what I didn't like about it. Basically, it's written by someone who hasn't read "Dreams from my Father," IMO. There is a whole LOT about inequity and race issues there.
0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 11:54 am
Obama needs to decide if he wants to be a 'black leader' or president of the USA IMO.
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 11:59 am
What does that mean in practical terms, though, Brand X?
0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 01:53 pm
Oh, he's in now, he's got Oprah! Laughing

Excerpt:

Report: Oprah Winfrey May Play Broader Role in Barack Obama's Presidential Campaign

Date: Thursday, September 06, 2007
By: BlackAmericaWeb.com and Associated Press

As presidential candidate Barack Obama takes his message of hope to the American people this week, the Illinois senator could enlist the nation's wealthiest black American as a surrogate to help move him from Chicago to the White House.

According to The Washington Post, media mogul Oprah Winfrey "is in discussions with [Obama'] advisers about playing a broader role in the campaign -- possibly as a surrogate on the stump or an outspoken advocate -- or simply bringing her branding magic to benefit" Obama's candidacy.

http://www.blackamericaweb.com/site.aspx/bawnews/oprahbarack906
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Thu 6 Sep, 2007 01:56 pm
I saw that!

Good news.

She endorsed him a while ago now, but the stuff about having him and only him (out of the presidential candidates) looks gooood.
0 Replies
 
 

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