The presidential race is on. Hillary Clinton announced on her Web
site that she will be a candidate for president in 2008. Barack Obama
took to cyberspace to announce that he will announce. And John Edwards
outsmarted both Harvard- and Yale-trained lawyers, by announcing his
candidacy in New Orleans’ heavily-damaged 9th Ward. Much is
being written about this being the most diverse presidential field in
history, with Obama vying to become the first African-American
president and Clinton seeking to become the first female president of
the United States. This comes on the heel of Rep. Nancy Pelosi becoming
the first female speaker of the House of Representatives and two Blacks
serving in the non-traditional role of Secretary of State, Colin Powell
and now Condoleezza Rice. There is religious diversity in the
110th Congress as well. For the first time, Congress includes a Muslim
(Rep. Keith Ellison of Minnesota), two Buddhists (Reps. Mazie Hironco
of Hawaii and Hank Johnson of Georgia), and the highest-ranking Mormon
in history, Harry Reid, the Democratic majority leader. It should come as no surprise that I am all for diversity, but not diversity simply for diversity’s sake. In
declaring her candidacy, Clinton said, “I’m in and I’m in to win.” To
win. That is, after all, the goal. Who gives the Democrats the best
chance of winning in 2008? Democrats have already proven that
they know how to lose national elections. Three of the last four
presidents have been Republicans, though Bill Clinton won twice. And
they didn’t really win back Congress in the last election. Rather,
Republicans lost both chambers. For the most part, Democrats regained
power because of the unpopularity of George W. Bush and his handling of
the war in Iraq. Now, back in power, Democrats are running away from
the war, the very issue to propelled them back to power. No wonder humorist Will Rogers said, “I belong to no organized party. I am a Democrat.” The
latest Washington Post-ABC News poll has Hillary Clinton as the
Democratic front-runner, the favorite of 41 percent of Democrats.
Senator Obama is a distant second, with only 17 percent. Even more
troubling for Obama, a Newsweek poll found that Clinton’s strongest
support comes from nonwhite Democrats, not women or liberals. Although
the polls show Clinton being competitive with Republicans John McCain
and Rudy Giuliani, it is early in the political season and it is
unknown how she or Obama will fare under a withering attack from the
Far Right. Democrats can’t win by repeatedly nominating weak
candidates from the northeast, whether it’s Michael Dukakis, John Kerry
or Hillary Clinton, the early front-runner. The Party can’t afford to
write-off the South, a region where more than half of African-Americans
live. As I keep pointing out, the only time Democrats have won the
White House since the election of John F. Kennedy in 1960 has been with
Southerners –Lyndon B. Johnson, Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. What
has changed in recent years that would justify thinking that selecting
a non-Southern candidate, even one from Chicago, will produce a
different outcome in 2008? More than ever, the Party needs to nominate
a Bill Clinton-like candidate from the South to win the White House
next year. So far, former Senator John Edwards seems to fit that bill.
Other candidates from the South may still emerge. Wherever
they’re from, candidates in the primaries should be closely questioned
in forums sponsored by our political and civil rights organization.
African-American journalists – at least the ones who know that they are
Black – should be the ones pressing the candidates on the issues.
Unlike the last presidential election, the Congressional Black Caucus
shouldn’t shamelessly hop in bed with the right-wing Fox network and be
an accessory to the crime of misinforming the public. We need to
know what the candidates propose to do about preserving affirmative
action, especially in view of what happened in Michigan. We need to
know if they favor repealing the Bush tax breaks given mostly to the
wealthy. We need to know if the Democratic nominee is willing to move
beyond favoring a reduction of the interest rates on student loans to
shifting back to need-based direct grants for poor students to attend
college. What initiatives do they have for building more affordable
housing? Are they willing to cut off funding for the war? If the
Party’s nominee can’t provide satisfactory answers to these and similar
questions, it doesn’t matter if he is the first Black or that she is
the first woman to capture the Party’s nomination. At best, it would be
a pyrrhic victory for the nominee to be a different color or a
different gender yet support the same regressive policies of the past.
We need a diversity of action, not appearance.
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