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Although
the Republican Party appears to have gotten as much use as they wanted out of
Michael Steele, the embattled chairman of the Republican National Committee
told supporters Monday night he will seek re-election next month.
“Yes,
I have stumbled along the way, but have always accounted to you for such
shortcomings,” he told the 168-member committee in an e-mail sent after a
telephone conference call with them. “No excuses. No lies, No hidden agenda.
“Going forward, I ask for your support and your vote for a second term.”
Going
forward, Steele will face an uphill battle. Several prominenet Republicans,
including former RNC chairwoman Ann Wagner, have annouced they are running for
Steele’s position. Many have complained about lavish spending and slumping donations
during Steele’s tenure. Some urged donors not to give to the party for races in
November and instead donate to alternative organizations such as the Republican
Governors Association. And many donors did just that.
Whenever
I think about Steele, the lyrics of Bill Withers’Use Me come to mind:
My friends feel it’s their appointed
duty
They keep trying to tell me all you
want to do is use me
But my answer yeah to all that use
me stuff
Is I wanna spread the news that if
it feels this good getting used
Oh you keep on using me
until you use me up
Michael Steele has
willingly allowed himself to be used by the GOP. And now that they have no more
use for him, they plan to discard him like a used tissue. Still, he is under
the illusion that he can be re-elected.
Steele has never been a
popular figure as chairman, winning on the sixth round of balloting. And the
only reason he won then was so that the GOP could use a Black man to counter
the nation’s first Black president. It was a role Steele relished.
He said at the time,
“Having a Black president of the United States and a Black leader of the
opposition is a wonderful testament to our country.”
Even
though the GOP made impressive gains in the last election, most Republicans
think they were successful in spite of Michael Steele, not because of him.
Over the past two years,
Steele may have set a record for gaffes.
Last year, he said: “In
the history of mankind and womankind, government – federal, state or local –
has never created one job. It’s destroyed a lot of them.”
According to the U.S.
Labor Department’s Bureau of Statistics, of the 153.7 million people in the
civilian labor force, approximately 22.5 million held government jobs as of
January 2009.
Steele can’t even get it
right when trying to woo Black voters.
When he was asked last
year about Republican efforts to reach diverse populations, Steele told a group
of bloggers, “My plan is to say, ‘Y’all come’ because of lot of you are already
here.” When someone in the audience yelled, “I’ll bring the collard greens,”
Steele added, “I got the fried chicken and potato salad.”
Many African-Americans
saw nothing funny in Steele’s comment.
In his eagerness to
attack Obama, Steele said last summer that the Afghan war was a “war of Obama’s
choosing.” Evidently everyone except Michael Steele knows that the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan were initiated by George W. Bush in retaliation for the
September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the
Pentagon.
Though quick to attack
President Obama – even when the facts proved him wrong -- Steele was even
quicker to defend riduculous statements by conservatives and genuflect for Rush
Limbaugh.
Playing to the
ridiculous views of birthers who contend that President Obama was not born in
the United States, Steele defended an assertion by former House Speaker and
potential Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich that Obama may hold a
“Kenyan, anti-colonial view.”
On his short-lived CNN
program, comedian D.L. Hughley called Rush Limbaugh the “de facto leader of the Republican Party.” Steele
strongly disagreed, saying: “I’m the de facto leader of the Republican Party.”
Steele dismissed
Limbaugh as an incendiary entertainer. But after Limbaugh lashed out at Steele
on his radio program, Steele backed off, saying “Maybe I was a little bit
inarticulate.” He added, “What I was trying to say was a lot of people…want to
make Rush the scapegoat, the bogeyman, and he’s not.”
Ironically, the
Republican Party has grown more conservative during Steele’s tenure. That had
more to do with a Tea Party movement that challenged both moderate and
conservative Republican incumbents than a leadership failure on Steele’s part..
Meanwhile, Black voters
were not eating from Steele’s political menu. In fact, the share of Blacks
voting Republican in congressional races decreased from 11 percent in 2006, the
previous off year election, to 9 percent in November.
Michael Steele could not
offer enough chicken and potato salad to change that outcome. And nor is the
likely outcome of next month’s balloting likely to favor Steele.
George
E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service,
is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his
Web site, www.georgecurry.com You can also follow him at www.twitter.com/currygeorge.
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