[NYTr] Racism: Why Top GOP Candidates Skipped the Black College Debate

All the News That Doesn't Fit nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Oct 1 19:07:11 EDT 2007


Alternet - Sep 28, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/63907/

Why Top GOP Candidates Skipped the Black College Debate

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson

It was galling to hear the top gun Republican presidential candidates
Rudy Giuliani, John McCain, Mitt Romney, and Fred Thompson weasel out
of the Republican presidential debate scheduled for Sept. 27 at
historically black Morgan State University with the well-worn ploy of a
scheduling conflict. It probably wasn't much consolation to the debate
sponsors that the fearsome foursome candidates also flagged out of the
YouTube, Univision, and the so-called values debates at Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida.

Some chalked their no-show at these yak sessions to a case of the GOP
reverting back to its ugly type. That being a return to its long
standing pre-Bush Jr. political encrusted political mantra to say and
do as little about civil rights and social issues. Bush supposedly
changed all that. Though few blacks bought his much ballyhooed vow to
make the GOP a big tent part of diversity, it at least held out some
promise of eventually transforming the GOP into something other than a
clubby good ole white guys dorm party. But calling the GOP's
candidates' debate snub as a reversal to benign neglect is much too
simplistic.

The GOP candidates didn't bug out solely because they have an acute
phobia of discussing racial matters, or worse because they have a
phobia for black folks. The big four are hard nosed politicians. They
count numbers first and last, and the number that counts most is 270.
That's the electoral count that it takes to rebag the White House. In a
year when millions hold the GOP in only slightly higher regard than
disgraced former Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick and O.J.
Simpson, the GOP must do anything and everything it can to again win
the South and the stretch of states from the heartland to the West.
They have the big chunk of the votes to win those state's electoral
votes.

The GOP candidates can't rely again on the Christian right to deliver
en masse. It's too fragmented, alienated and disillusioned with GOP
scandals and broken promises. The GOP's trump card is conservative but
centrist white males. They make up a big share of the America's
electorate. In a debate at the Reagan Library in Simi Valley in May,
the GOP candidates tipped their hand on how they aim to get their votes
in 2008.

They wrapped themselves tightly in the mantle of Ronald Reagan, and
each jockeyed to position themselves as the heir apparent. At the
debate, the ten presidential candidates bellowed out his name nineteen
times. Their Reagan love fest was not solely a calculated political
ploy to play on the name of the man that millions still hold in
reverential awe. Reagan did not actively court the Christian
fundamentalists, Hispanics, and it's doubtful if YouTube had been
around then he wouldn't have anything to do with it. Reagan courted
Nixon's forgotten man.

The Reagan revolution didn't merely return America to a world in which
God, patriotism, rugged individualism, militant anti-communism and
family values ruled supreme. Reagan, far more adroitly, than Nixon a
decade before him parlayed the forgotten American sentiment and a
sanitized image of the past into a powerful conservative ideological
movement. He stoked their fervent hope that a telegenic, conservative
Republican could fulfill Nixon and Goldwater's promise to restore law
and order, clamp down on permissiveness and restore prosperity.

Reagan upped Goldwater and Nixon's ante. His first task was to
eliminate the remnants of the Great Society programs rejected by an
increasingly disenchanted public as government handouts to minorities.
He didn't totally succeed. But he further eroded public enthusiasm for
massive spending on social and education programs. Reagan fixated
Middle Americans on the government as pro-higher taxes,
pro-bureaucracy, pro-immigrant and especially pro-welfare and
pro-rights of criminals.

He painted government as a destructive, bloated, inefficient white
elephant, weighting down the backs of Americans. He claimed that
government entitlement programs that benefited the poor were a crushing
drain on the budget. The Reagan wannabes have played hard on these
themes and vowed to cut taxes and tighten the reins even more on
federal spending in their debates.

The top GOP contenders Giuliani, McCain, Romney, as well as the other
seven that stood on the podium at the Reagan library in May, owe their
political life to Reagan. Their stay the course talk on Iraq,
terrorism, taxes and curbing federal spending, and of course, staying
mute on social issues are pages straight from Reagan's playbook. The
not-so-subtle aim is to shore up any wavering GOP backing in the South.

They will continue to invoke Reagan's patented winning God, country,
and patriotic themes in debates through 2007 and in the primaries in
2008. The big four hope that Reagan's legacy and themes will be the
winning formula for them too. Saying no to a debate at historically
black Morgan State and any other similar forum is merely there way of
trying to capitalize on that formula.

[Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His new book
The Latino Challenge to Black America: Towards a Conversation between
African-Americans and Hispanics (Middle Passage Press and Hispanic
Economics New York) in English and Spanish will be out in October.] 

© 2007 Independent Media Institute.




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