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GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder

Sep 24, 2007 9:48 AM (347 days ago) by Michael Olesker, The Examiner
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Related Topics: BALTIMORE

BALTIMORE (Map, News) - The Republican Party’s Traveling Presidential Road Show comes to Baltimore this week, minus every one of its marquee names. No Rudolph Giuliani, no John McCain, no Mitt Romney, no Fred Thompson. They are terribly busy men, all of them, far too busy to stop and spread a little warmth across a half-century cold shoulder.

Thursday’s All American Presidential Forum, set for Morgan State University and PBS, is billed as an outgrowth of last year’s “Covenant with Black America,” edited by Tavis Smiley, which detailed some of the most pressing issues facing African-Americans.

Smiley will moderate the debate. He wants the GOP candidates to talk about the lingering gaps in income, education, health care and housing between black and white America, which have endured across all these years while Democrats managed to talk a good game and Republicans managed to change the subject.

While he’s at it, Smiley might ask why these candidates think the vast number of African-American voters continue, one election after another, to cast ballots for Democrats and not Republicans.

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But, why bother?

Everybody already knows the answer, which is partly explained by all those terribly busy men, far too busy as they run for president to offer a gesture such as showing up for a nationally televised debate.

“We believe this is a missed opportunity for the Republican candidates to reach out and show the kind of unifying leadership that’s paramount, I hope, to choosing a president,” Neal Kendall, executive producer of the debate, said over the telephone the other day.

“It’s very disappointing when the leading candidates don’t come, because it sends a signal. The Republican Party has begun sending signals that they want to include African-Americans in the party. Ken Mehlman [the former party leader under George W. Bush] gave a speech about it. Jack Kemp’s made speeches. Newt Gingrich and Gary Bauer have made speeches. People within the party have helped us make this week’s debate a reality. And now this happens. It’s a missed opportunity.”

Let’s not mince words: It’s also part of the GOP’s continuing cold shoulder toward black people.

This is the party that stood in the way of every piece of legislation offered during the great civil rights years. It’s the party in which Richard Nixon offered his Southern Strategy to divide the electorate by race, George Bush I offered us Willie Horton, Ronald Reagan talked of welfare queens and George W. Bush went to sleep during Hurricane Katrina. All registering among the great symbolic hurts that linger and lock into people’s memories.

And now, as they gather in this endless campaign for the presidency, it’s the party that gathers for a national debate and delivers Sam Brownback, Mike Huckabee, Duncan Hunter, Ron Paul and perennial candidate Alan Keyes, a late entry, who is always encouraged by GOP leaders since Keyes displays for everyone the fact that there is at least one African-American in the Republican Party.

Well, two.

Five years ago, for example, we had Robert Ehrlich Jr. running for governor of Maryland. He chose Michael Steele as his running mate while his opponent, Democrat Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, chose someone whose name was lost to history 10 minutes after their campaign ended.

The running mates stunned the whole state. If anyone was going to choose the first black person to run for lieutenant governor, it should have been Bobby Kennedy’s daughter. If any party was going to run an African-American, who could have imagined Maryland’s Republicans, who didn’t have a single black member of Congress or the state legislature (or Baltimore City Council, or probably any county council, for that matter)?

Whatever Steele’s initial impact, it evaporated. The former seminarian, when faced with actual issues such as Ehrlich’s intemperate remarks on multiculturalism, conveniently took a vow of silence. After four years in office, Ehrlich was the only incumbent governor in America to be defeated in 2006. His opponent, Martin O’Malley, chose Del. Anthony Brown as his running mate.

This made the Democratic ticket “multicultural.”

Now the Republican contenders for president come to Baltimore, and their leading figures cannot bother to show up for a debate about issues affecting African-Americans. Nobody will need an explanation. To speak to a live audience of African-Americans is to visit a distant land. To talk about issues facing black people is to talk about foreign policy.

It’s been half a century of a political cold shoulder. And the Republicans still can’t figure out why black people give them years of icy stares in return.

Please send news tips to Michael Olesker at olesker@baltimoreexaminer.com.

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Comments from Examiner Readers

4:19 AM MST on Thu., Sep. 27, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Examiner Reader said:
Hey, you edited out my comment, good as it was. OK, Olesker is not garbage. But where is the balance to this left wing buffoon? Also, why should Republicans come into Socialist Maryland?

140 agree | 114 disagree
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6:38 PM MST on Wed., Sep. 26, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Examiner Reader said:
Perhaps former Governor Erlich (The Regional Campaign Manager for Rudy) can explain, why his party continues to ignore the black vote. He might also explain to his party, what effect (if any) this strategy will have on his chance of winning a state-wide election in this state.

174 agree | 108 disagree
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5:22 AM MST on Wed., Sep. 26, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

serious marylander said:
The republican party has always treated minorities badly and I can handle that. as a democrat I feel that in 2007 we are also being treated badly by the democratic party as well because now we get taken for granted. I don't feel aligned with either party right now and Mrs. Clinton by herself is not enough of an answer for me. Both parties really stink right now and politicians are self serving rather than beign servants for those whom they are supposed to serve. America is in serious trouble but yet we stick our noses in everybodys problems.

153 agree | 129 disagree
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8:46 PM MST on Tue., Sep. 25, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Examiner Reader said:
"We need to find our common ground." Really? I thought real strength was in diversity. Damned liberals.

187 agree | 128 disagree
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6:10 PM MST on Tue., Sep. 25, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Josephine Perez said:
Race is just one of the things used to divide voters. That's american politics: divide the electorate and pander to the extreme fringes. Rally the liberals: tell them the GOP is racist. Rally the evangelicals: hype gay marriage. Then the people in the middle have no choice but to gravitate left or right. I'm a fairly moderate Dem, but all this polarizing has me looking for alternatives. For example, I support Unity08 because they are committed to the radical idea reuniting the American public under a platform of values we all share. We need to find our common ground. News stories like these are detrimental to finding that common ground. This just in: the GOP under George Bush has ignored EVERYBODY, not just blacks. Duh!

129 agree | 138 disagree
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8:10 AM MST on Tue., Sep. 25, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Greg said:
Just don't vote for a candidate that does not attend the debate. If the "top four" don't care enough about black people, then they won't get my vote. I normally vote Democrat, but I want a more conservative in the White House. This country's moral values are going in the toilet.

164 agree | 135 disagree
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8:02 AM MST on Tue., Sep. 25, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Examiner Reader said:
Why is it that at every opportunity journalist use race to divide the Amercian people. Is the author of this article really so stupid to belive that Republicans are unconcerned with the black vote? Come on man, contrary to the common misconception of you liberals with a little journalism degree haging on your wall, there are still people out here who have a brain. If you want promote the Democratic party, go down to your local Dem. party headquarters and volunteer.

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6:52 PM MST on Mon., Sep. 24, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Examiner Reader said:
Why the hell should the republicans main guys come here, a predominately democratic region. The countries smartest black politicians are in the republican party so let's not hear about that "cold shoulder" crap. This pathetic (Maryland) state gave it's first republican candidate in decades a one term chance before it baled out on him. The division between parties is downright childish and frankly I'm getting sick of it. All of you staunch left and right losers need to kiss my a** and stop screwing up the country. It not about black and white (I'm really sick of that one!) and it's not about left and right; it's about being objective responsible adults! It's about actually doing things to assure a safe, quality place for future generations and not just talking about it. All of you are a bunch of hypocritical selfish obstructionists. If I could afford to leave this phoney piece of a crap country I would do it. Now bring on the stupid childish replies. So predictable.

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4:52 PM MST on Mon., Sep. 24, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Richard, Knoxville, TN said:
You should also talk about why "the four horsemen" neglected the Eagle Forum / American Family Association debate. You are not alone. Don't make it look like it is isolated.

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3:35 PM MST on Mon., Sep. 24, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Examiner Reader said:
your whole basis for argument is just preposterous. We know that it is not about blacks for Rudy...Look at his city...and his city loves him..

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2:21 PM MST on Mon., Sep. 24, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Examiner Reader said:
A few years ago, I was so sick of the Democrats taking the black vote for granted, that I switched to the Republican party. I figured, "if the Democrats don't want to economically empower blacks through education and teaching us how to stand on our own, maybe those Millionaire Republicans can teach me a thing or two." Well they taught me something alright. The GOP taught me that if you aren't a bilble toting, rich (or rich wannabe) selfish, conservative (with closeted liberal fetishes) anti-everything that isn't white, then you are SOL. I recently switched my party affiliation back to Dem a little while ago. I figure, if you have to dance with a devil, at least dance with one that knows how to do the hustle, and can carry a tune! It is sad that the state of our country reflects so much of the Republican party. A bunch of old white men trying to tell us what to do. Well there has been 42 of them, and this country is in shambles. I think it is overdue that they take a break!

169 agree | 128 disagree
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1:44 PM MST on Mon., Sep. 24, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Some Candidates said:
It is not the GOP that is giving the cold shoulder. It is a few presidential candidates. And it is all Americans who are given the cold shoulder.

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1:40 PM MST on Mon., Sep. 24, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Examiner Reader: said:
Kevin Houston, excellent post.....I am glad you posted that before i did....because before you know it, some individuals will start screaming racism....when there's no evidence of it.

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11:59 AM MST on Mon., Sep. 24, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Mitch from Tallahassee said:
There is only one thing that will benefit all Americans, whether you're black, white, brown or purple: Freedom. There is only one candidate who is consistenly pro-freedom: Ron Paul. Please give him the opportunity to tell you his beliefs, you'll find that he has the formula for turning around the train wreck that our country is heading into.

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11:39 AM MST on Mon., Sep. 24, 2007 re: "GOP gives blacks the cold shoulder"

Keivn Houston said:
Instead of trashing the whole GOP because the mainstream-media candidates didn't show up, how about a little love for the candidates who did? The entire GOP didn't slap African-Americans in the face: Giuliani, McCain, Thompson, and Romney did. And it has nothing to do with race. These guys have not shown up for white folks either. (Values Voter debate being the most recent glaring example, but also TX straw poll, IA straw poll, NH debate etc, etc.) Paul, Huckabee, Brownback, Hunter, and Keyes are showing respect and making the effort. There is no call to treat them as if they were closet-dwelling sheet wearers. Let's not smear the entire party due to the action (or inaction in this case) of a few. Later, Kevin Houston Bridgewater

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5:34 PM MST on Wed., Aug. 8, 2007 re: "One student’s never-ending struggle"

Examiner Reader said:
Stacy Weibler, in giving this interview to a newspaper reporter, suggests to me that you are clammoring for attention and publicity over your sickening lifestyle. I can assure you, Stacy, that if you were my daughter, you would no longer be a member of my family.

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