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Theodore Cross
From: Obama is the Superior Choice for African Americans
The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education
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.
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."
ASummary of the Standard Measures of
Black Inequality in the United States
Black White
Unemployment Rate (June 2007) 9.0% 4.2%
Teenage Unemployment (June 2007) 37.3% 16.6%
Median Family Income (2005) $35,464 $63,156
Poverty Rate
for All Persons (2005) 24.9% 8.3%
Child Poverty Rate (2005) 34.5% 10.0%
Mean Family Net Worth $5,598 $88,651
College Graduation Rate 41% 61%
Life Expectancy 73.3 years 78.3 years
Percent College Graduates (All Adults 2005) 18.5% 3 1.0%
Percent High School Grads (All Adults 2005) 85.6% 93.4%
Infant Mortality Rate
for every 1,000 live births 13.6 5.7
Male Prison Inmates
per 100,000 population 3145 471
Families Who Own
Their Home 48.2% 75.8%
Source: Journal of Blacks in Higher Education.
What do the campaign platforms of the two main contenders have to
offer on the subject of racial inequality? Senator Clinton's
presidential campaign Web site lists 10 issues that lead her agenda
in a Clinton presidency. At the very top of her list is
"Strengthen the Middle Class." There then follow nine other Clinton
concerns. They are providing affordable healthcare, ending the war
in Iraq, energy independence, fulfilling our promise to veterans,
supporting parents and children, restoring America's standing in the
world, being a champion for women, comprehensive government reform,
and strengthening our democracy.
These admirable goals, aimed as they are at the white American
heartland, offer little specific appeal to the aspirations of most
African-American voters who, in their choice of a presidential
candidate, hope for a strong and explicit executive program to
defend and advance the life chances of African Americans. Ever since
the 1960s when blacks won the legally protected right to vote, they
have always counted on a Democratic platform that addressed some of
their most serious problems. But Hillary Clinton's platform offers
nothing.
It is true that Senator Clinton's campaign speeches include
expressions of support for the plight of poor blacks. But it is her
formal political platform that tells the story. The words "black" or
"minority" never enter the text of her official program for America.
Given Hillary Clinton's well-known progressive views on social and
racial issues, one would have expected to find key words in her
platform such as "inner-city schools," "reduction of poverty,"
"revitalizing America's cities," "increased access to job training,"
and "support of Head Start programs for youngsters from low-income
families." One would have expected too that Senator Clinton's
platform would address such issues as community development programs
for inner cities, increased support for minority college students,
support for black farmers, programs to create capital and encourage
entrepreneurship in black communities, and tougher penalties for
hate crimes. Yet all of the standard campaign promises that a
liberal Democrat typically offers to blacks are completely absent
from her announced program.
The explanation is clear. Senator Clinton, as was the case with her
husband before her, is furiously moving toward the political
center and redefining herself as a moderate. In her announced
program there is not even a dollop of written concern for guarding
or advancing the aspirations of blacks and other minorities. The
reason is that many of her most important voting constituencies are
unfriendly to efforts to help blacks. Many of the groups on whom she
depends for a successful run for the presidency tend to be
conservative on racial issues. They include white ethnics, farmers,
union leaders, small business owners, blue-collar workers,
conservative Democrats, white parents of public school children, and
that very large group of voters called Reagan Democrats. Jewish
interests that have suffered in the past from the burden of
restrictive racial quotas are especially hostile to most government
programs targeted to assist blacks.
It's safe to say, too, that many white Americans, who are at the
core of the Clinton pool of voters, believe that many of the
problems of blacks are self-inflicted. They tend to the view that
government programs to help blacks are ineffective and a waste of
money. Many among Clinton's likely supporters consider that
antipoverty programs, even when cast as racially neutral, are really
black programs in disguise. True, it is acceptable to Clinton voters
for the senator publicly to empathize with the severe problems of
black America. But any explicit program that spends public money to
help blacks always has the potential to severely damage her chances
for the Democratic nomination for the presidency. In short, the
leaders of the Clinton campaign appear to believe that if she
announces any form of a black program, she kills the support of
voters she needs.
Now let's turn to the platform of Senator Obama. His campaign Web
site, published on the Internet for all to see, bears down hard on
all of the major issues of concern to blacks. These include fighting
poverty, improving our schools, voting rights and election reform.
Unlike Clinton, he outlines a comprehensive program to reduce
poverty, revitalize America's urban areas, and empower black
Americans.
Here in more detail are the Obama proposals as outlined in his
campaign position paper:
Increased funding for the Community Development Block Grant program
which provides housing, job training, and other services to
impoverished urban areas.
A $1 billion, five-year expansion in job and career training
programs for low-income Americans.
The creation of a series of "Promise Neighborhoods" across America
patterned after the Harlem Children's Zone in New York City.
Low-income families in these promise neighborhoods will be offered
parent counseling, childcare, job training, healthcare, financial
advice, afterschool programs, technology training and other services
to help them escape the cycle of poverty.
An expansion of the Head Start program for preschool children in
high-poverty areas.
An increase in the maximum Pell Grant award for low-income college
students.
Expansion of the Nurse-Family Partnership where nurses visit
low-income expectant mothers at home to ensure that they receive
proper prenatal care.
An increase in the earned income tax credit which will allow
low-income working families to keep more of the money they earn.
A proposal to increase funding for the Jobs Access and Reverse
Commute program so that low-income workers can get to their jobs at
a reduced cost and the children of these workers can receive free
public transportation to childcare facilities.
The establishment of an affordable housing trust fund that will
produce 14,000 new units of affordable housing for low-income
families each year.
Increased access to capital for blacks and other minorities through
Small Business Administration programs.
Job training, substance abuse and mental health counseling, and
employment opportunities for people who have been incarcerated.
Since blacks are five times as likely as whites to have been in
prison, these programs will disproportionately benefit African
Americans.
To further raise the minimum wage rate and the child tax credit.
Obama has put a lot on the table, maybe too much. Nevertheless,
announced here on the Obama Web site is an
elaborate and unqualified proposal to use presidential power to deal
with some of the most severe problems of African Americans and other
minorities. There are no politically expedient bows to the hardships
of America's white middle class. In his declaration of a concrete
program for blacks and others who have had a difficult time, there
is no doublespeak or ambiguous language. Senator Obama deals with
racial issues head on. He enters the arena of race with his
six-shooters blazing.
Senator Clinton, on the other hand, ducks, straddles, changes the
subject, or remains silent. Her evasive strategy on issues of race
was revealed in an early August appearance at a convention of
African-American journalists. Hillary Clinton was asked whether she
was "black enough" to hold the allegiance of African-American
voters. Sidestepping the question, Clinton replied that she was
proud of her party for having a black, a woman, and a Latino
competing for its nomination.
The case I make for Obama rests primarily on the strength of his
campaign proposals for black America. His platform becomes
compelling when contrasted with the Clinton program that offers
nothing. But there is another important reason why Obama should be
the choice of African-American voters.
Think back to the great role models of the African-American past,
such giants as W.E.B. Du Bois, Frederick Douglass, Thurgood
Marshall, and A. Philip Randolph. In fields unrelated to civil
rights, one thinks of iconic figures such as Zora Neale Hurston,
Langston Hughes, E. Franklin Frazier, Percy Julian, and Carter
Woodson. In recent years there have been unprecedented
breakthroughs. A black man and a black woman have been named United
States secretaries of state. Another black woman has been chosen
president of a great Ivy League university. Today, a dozen or more
African-American men and women hold the highest executive positions
in America's largest and most powerful corporations and financial
institutions. Only a generation ago, their fathers, who were often
college graduates, had to settle for jobs as postal workers or
low-level civil servants.
Now in the upcoming election, there is a possibility of the arrival
of an African-American role model whose influence and stature could
far exceed that of any black person in the past. There is a chance
today, a possibility never remotely considered since the founding of
this country, that a black man, in a multiracial society where
blacks are a minority, may be elected to the most important and
powerful position in the world. When one contemplates this thrilling
prospect — however distant it still may seem — one looks forward to
a massive surge of black support for Barack Obama.
A Note on the Prospect of an Obama
Nomination in the Democratic Primaries
Now let's suppose that after consideration of all the issues facing
the nation, both foreign and domestic, as well as the general
abilities of the candidates, Barack Obama becomes the choice of a
far greater percentage of black voters. It remains true that very
many African Americans will still deny him their votes unless they
believe that he stands a reasonable chance of winning the
nomination.
If we examine the situation state by state, this is not a campaign
of David vs. Goliath. In many state contests black voters have the
voting strength sufficient to deliver a margin of victory to Obama.
Blacks traditionally make up about one quarter of all voters in
Democratic primary elections nationwide. But in some key states such
as South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, blacks can be
a majority of all voters in the Democratic primary election. The
reason is that in these states huge numbers of whites vote in the
Republican primary. In these southern states this greatly enhances
the power of the black vote in the Democratic primary. If blacks
turn out in large numbers and produce a solid vote for Obama, the
Illinois senator could easily win a plurality in very many, if not
most, of the southern states with significant black electorates.
Elsewhere, the new schedule of Democratic presidential primary
elections works in Obama's favor. The primary schedules
are continually changing as states jockey their primary dates in
order to strengthen their influence on the elective process. Yet one
can make some estimates. As I write in late August, the first major
test is Iowa, now scheduled for January 14. In Iowa a recent poll
shows Obama running one percent ahead of Clinton. This is a
remarkable achievement in a state that is 94 percent white. An Obama
victory in Iowa would be a severe, if not fatal, blow to the
candidacy of John Edwards. Also, it would do significant damage to
Clinton's momentum toward winning the nomination. Whatever the
outcome, a strong, early-on showing for Obama in predominantly white
Iowa would be an exciting demonstration of his appeal to white
voters.
A win, or even a strong third-place showing in Iowa, would boost
Obama's chances in New Hampshire a week later. Clinton currently
leads polls in New Hampshire. Her campaign in New Hampshire began
early. She holds a huge majority among women voters in the state.
But voters in the New Hampshire primary are known to buck pollsters'
predictions and they often change their allegiances in the last week
of the campaign. The impressive Deval Patrick victory in the 2006
gubernatorial election in Massachusetts shows that white voters in
New England are willing to support a black man for high executive
office.
Putting aside the results in predominantly white Iowa and New
Hampshire, Obama will be a formidable candidate in the races that
follow. The Florida and South Carolina primaries are now scheduled
just one week after the first primary in New Hampshire. In all
probability, at this early stage there still will be a large slate
of white Democratic candidates. Blacks will make up 25 percent of
the Democratic primary voters in Florida and, if past voting
patterns prevail, a majority of the Democratic primary voters in
South Carolina. With the hope that the white vote is split among
several candidates, a large black vote for Obama would almost
certainly give him a plurality in these states. This outcome would
build huge momentum for Barack Obama in the important primaries that
come next.
Following these two key early primaries are the Super Tuesday
primary elections in a large number of states now set for February
5. Among the states currently scheduled to hold primaries on
February 5 are Alabama, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Delaware,
Missouri, New York, New Jersey, Oklahoma, and Georgia. All these
states have significant black voting blocs. As stated, Georgia and
Alabama blacks may be a majority of all voters in the Democratic
primary. In Delaware, Arkansas, New Jersey, and New York, blacks
will be at least one quarter of all Democratic primary voters. With
the momentum from plurality victories in South Carolina and Florida,
Obama would stand an excellent chance of winning a plurality in a
number of the Super Tuesday states if black voters deliver 75
percent or more of their votes to the Illinois senator. Obama also
will win a share of white votes in these states. On Super Tuesday
Obama might be able to deal a knockout blow to the presidential
ambitions of Hillary Clinton.
Many political observers believe that after the dust settles on
Super Tuesday it will be clear who the Democratic nominee will be.
But if the nomination is still in doubt, Obama would be in a good
position the next week to win in Virginia and Maryland, two states
with large percentages of black primary voters. These are the only
two states now scheduled to hold primaries in the week following
Super Tuesday. The District of Columbia is also scheduled to hold
its primary on February 12. Obama would be well positioned to win
all of these three primaries. Lawmakers in Pennsylvania are also
contemplating moving their primary to February 12. Here too blacks
make up as much as one quarter of the Democratic primary electorate.
If the nomination still has not been secured, primaries in Ohio,
Texas, Illinois, and North Carolina, now scheduled for March but
subject to change, could provide another chance for Obama to lock up
the nomination. There are large numbers of black voters in these
states. Again a heavy black vote for Obama is critical.
Polls show that the electability of Hillary Clinton in the general
election is in serious doubt. A recent Zogby poll found that 46
percent of Americans said they would "never vote for her." Her
national likability rating is about 30 percent, the lowest of the
major candidates. Even 42 percent of people who self-identified
themselves as moderates in the Zogby poll of voters nationwide said
they would never vote for Clinton. Her greatest vulnerability
remains that she voted for the Iraq war when, of course, Obama
opposed it.
Barack Obama offers a fresh and positive message. Whenever he speaks
he reveals a powerful intellect and competence. He has a charming
quality of homemade likability. Yet voters also see a strong
demeanor of gravity and integrity. Obama shows none of the qualities
of opportunism, shrillness, and unbridled ambition that so many
voters dislike in Hillary Clinton. He far outshines any of the
potential GOP contenders.
Obama offers a concrete program for black America. Hillary Clinton
offers none.
Copyright © 2007. The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education. All
rights reserved.
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