Roberto Lovato,
New
America Media
Posted on January 4, 2008, Printed on January 11, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/72713/
As news broke of Barack Obama's victory in Iowa, one of
the country's whitest states, political pundits of all
stripes quickly told us that we were witnessing a historic
shift: the end of race and racism as campaign issues. Even
CNN's dour conservative political analyst Bill Bennett waxed
multiculti as he proclaimed that Obama "taught" African
Americans that race wasn't an issue they needed inorder to
succeed in politics. Though enthusiastic about the Obama
victory, Bennett's more jocular colleague Jack Cafferty was
not quite ready to intone a full-throated Kumbaya. But he
did declare that the Illinois senator's win "gives him
currency in a state where the color of his skin may be an
issue."
NBC's Tom Brokaw credited the Mike Huckabee victory in
the Republican caucus to "his defense against illegal
immigration," an issue not viewed in racial terms by white
voters. On all parts of the political and media spectrum,
pundits and politicos are interpreting the Iowa results to
mean that we inhabit a color-blind electoral system.
While watching a black man win the vote of an
overwhelmingly white electorate is especially welcome in
such racially-charged times as ours,
and while the victory of a poor (at least in terms of
electoral cash) populist preacher over the preferred
Republican candidates of corporate America is refreshing, we
are hardly entering the age of race invisibility in
politics.
Instead, Iowa points us towards the age of invisible race
politics.
To his credit, Barack Obama has carefully cultivated an
image as a "change" candidate who takes the higher ground,
one that talks about race -- but not racism. Iowa confirms
that, in doing so, he can make even the whitest electorate
feel like it's voting to overcome the catastrophic legacy of
racial discrimination, like the Oprah viewer that gives
himself or herself a racial pat on the back for really,
truly liking her show.
"[Obama] is being consumed as the embodiment of color
blindness," political theorist Angela Davis told the Nation
magazine recently, adding that "it's the notion that we have
moved beyond racism by not taking race into account. That's
what makes him conceivable as a presidential candidate. He's
become the model of diversity in this period ... a model of
diversity as the difference that makes no difference. The
change that brings no change."
It was interesting to watch Obama deliver the most
memorable and moving caucus victory speech in memory, one
that included King-like intonations and references to the
activists who "marched through Selma and Montgomery for
freedom's cause" in the 1960s. Such inspired, impassioned
pleas follow a campaign trail-tested rhetoric in which
racism such as that surrounding the Jena Six case remains a
largely unspoken part of Obama's speeches and policy
platforms. He appears to be more comfortable getting choked
up when speaking about the fight against the racist past
than he does during those few times he talks about the
racist present.
On the Republican side, Mike Huckabee also did his part
to promote invisible race politics. The GOP underdog did so
in no small part thanks to the issue of immigration, a very
racial electoral wedge that many voters believe has nothing
to do with race.
By focusing on "illegals," "illegal aliens" and other
racial codes, Huckabee and other Republican candidates get
to ride the juggernaut of anti-immigrant, anti-Latino
sentiment gripping the country -- without appearing racist.
Pundits have even taken to calling the immigration issue the
"New Willie Horton," in reference to how, during the 1988
presidential race, a political advertisement deployed by
George H.W. Bush against Democratic rival Michael Dukakis
featured a black man convicted of murder who, after being
furloughed. raped a woman. Many African Americans and others
deemed the Horton ads a thinly veiled appeal to anti-black
sentiment in the electorate.
Latino leaders and editorials in Spanish-language
newspapers have denounced Huckabee for openly touting the
endorsement of Jim Gilchrist, one of the co-founders of the
anti-immigrant Minutemen, an organization denounced as a
racist hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center and
others. In an election that will witness the largest Latino
voter participation in history, how well the veil of
legality hides the racial aspects embedded in the
immigration issue may determine the fate of Republican
candidates like Huckabee.
Regardless of the outcome of this year's election, the
success of Barack Obama and the immigration politics of Mike
Huckabee signal clearly that we are well on our way to a new
era in race and politics. Obama's story and his echoes of
King make us feel good about ourselves and God knows this
country desperately needs that. The question we need to ask
is: "Are we willing to push him to talk seriously about
those echoes of the racial past in the present that he so
skillfully avoids?" And as far as Republicans like Huckabee,
we have to ask, "How long are we willing to accept their
unskillful use of the racist appeals inherent in their rants
about immigrants and immigration issues?" Failure to ask
these and other questions will leave us vulnerable to the
silent poison of invisible race politics.
Roberto Lovato is a New York-based writer with New
America Media. Read more of his work at
ofamerica.wordpress.com.
© 2008 Independent Media
Institute. All rights reserved.
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http://www.alternet.org/story/72713/
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