By Ron Walters | SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE SERVICES
(NNPA) - Just back from the RainbowPush
convention in Chicago sponsored by Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr.,
I was struck by the fact that neither Barack nor Michelle
Obama showed up and they live virtually right down the street.
The symbol of Obama’s absence was made even more vivid
to me because he was out making nice with Hillary Clinton
to knit together a unified campaign in the fall.
I understand that, but I also understand that he could have
showed up, when Governor Bill Richardson, who lives in New
Mexico not only showed up, but gave a rousing speech crediting
the civil rights movement for much of the political success
of the Hispanic community and his own.
I know, I know, it is common knowledge now that Barack Obama
has to distance himself from Black radicals, from his church,
and much of his community in order to make White voters comfortable
enough with him to trust him and then give him their votes.
And he will probably show at the NAACP Convention. But the
troubling trend which finds him absent from other venues that
are the substance of Black life looks like he is taking the
Black community for granted because of their thirst for his
victory.
I was not too put out when Obama did not show up at the
State of Black America, because Michelle Obama was offered
to Tavis Smiley and Obama was campaigning to win a touch primary
in Indiana.
Jackson, however, not only was material in Barack Obama’s
rise to the State Senate and the U. S. senate, he represents
to most people the living legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr.
That is important because the Civil Rights movement is implicated
in Obama’s victories, since he won 99 pledged Delegates
in nine Southern states during the primary elections. This
performance was in states where Blacks constituted one-third
or more of the Democratic party base, states where the Voting
Rights Act worked to empower Black voters to make a difference.
Without those 99 delegates, Hillary Clinton would have won
the pledged delegate race and the popular vote and most surely
would have won the nomination.
The question this raises is whether the sophistication of
Black voters in this case will eventually cost them. Blacks
have a long history of voting for Whites when the potential
returns were based on hope.
If we support a Black candidate for president of the United
States, I think that it is fair to ask whether we will have
more or less access – at least as much access as we
did to Bill Clinton – and whether he will deliver the
goods for our community.
My concern here is that theory of Black politics should
be to move our community from just hoping their political
participation will lead to resources, to exercising tough
leverage over politicians to negotiate potential returns to
our community in exchange for our vote.
In fact, one of the lessons of Rev. Jackson’s two
previous presidential campaigns is that “Hope and Trust
politics” is not as effective as the ability to trade
votes for future support. The irony is however, that when
a Black person runs for high profile office our leverage often
disappears because we are asked to trust that the person will
deliver based on their ties to the Black community.
The Black community didn’t have to play the politics
of leverage with Rev. Jackson because he had proved his fidelity
to their needs through his history and in his presidential
campaigns he spoke forcefully to their issues. I know, I know,
he didn’t win.
But I am driven to ask what the traditional notion of “winning”
is worth under circumstances where the level of trust is not
as high, because the message is absent and the candidate is
absent. In other words, how much can the Black community count
on the delivery of goods and services by a Black president
who presence and message does not privilege his own community.
What concerns me is that we are involved in a great celebration
without checking the guidepost that determine whether or not
there will be sufficient returns to our community from a Black
president in the White House. The irony is that Obama is likely
to win, we will have to accept him, but under circumstances
where he is essentially a White candidate, so we should “bottom
line” our public policy requirements now as every other
community is doing.
Dr. Ron Walters is the Distinguished Leadership Scholar,
Director of the African-American Leadership Center and Professor
of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland College
Park. His latest book is: Freedom Is Not Enough: Black Voters,
Black Candidates and American Presidential Politics (Rowman
and Littlefield)
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