Posted on 07/01/2007 4:41:23 AM PDT by Chi-townChief
It's time for Sen. Barack Obama to define his message to African Americans if he hopes to tighten his grip on the black vote.
And trust me, he needs to tighten it.
When a powerful family like the Jacksons is split -- with some of them publicly throwing their support to Obama while other members of this political clan host fund-raisers and show up at events for Hillary Clinton -- Obama still has a lot of work to do.
And when a heavyweight like U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel vows to use his muscle to lift Clinton, and a beloved activist like actor Danny Glover uses his celebrity status to back Sen. John Edwards, a candidate who's running a distant third to the front-runners, there's trouble afoot.
Debate exposes glaring flaw Last week's historic televised presidential debate, which brought the eight Democratic presidential candidates to Howard University's campus in Washington, D.C., exposed a glaring flaw in Obama's campaign. Besides being a call to order of the black elite, Tavis Smiley's "All-American Presidential Forum" gave black America an opportunity to judge the two favored candidates up close on issues directly affecting their lives. And, for the first time, the panel of Democrats was questioned by a distinguished panel of national black journalists.
The historic moment played out against the backdrop of a startling U.S. Supreme Court decision in which the court had ruled hours earlier that race could not be used by school districts as a factor in determining where children attend public schools.
Obama should have latched on to this issue -- clearly one that strikes at the heart of the civil rights movement -- at the outset. He should have delivered a clear message that the Supreme Court ruling undermines the very intent of Brown vs. Board of Education, the crown jewel of the civil rights movement, which struck down segregation in America's schools.
He started out all right, pointing out that he was standing on the stage at Howard University, the place where a lawyer named "Thurgood Marshall and his team crafted their legal strategy" to successfully overturn school segregation.
"It it hadn't been for them, I would not be standing here today," Obama said. He went on to say that it was "their fundamental recognition that for us to achieve racial equality was not simply good for African Americans, but it was good for America as a whole, that we could not be what we might be as a nation unless we healed the brutal wounds of slavery and Jim Crow."
But the black people who came to hear the debate and those who were tuned in to PBS have already heard what is "good for America."
The question is what will the next president do to improve the quality of life for African Americans who are still affected by discrimination and racial bias in this country?
Hillary nailed it.
"For anyone to assert that race is not a problem in America is to deny the reality in front of our very eyes," she said. "You can look at the thousands of African Americans left behind by their government with Katrina. You can look at this decision today which turned the clock back on the promise of Brown vs. Board of Education. ... The march is not finished."
Clinton's critics will accuse her of pandering to a black crowd, but that's politics. When politicians speak before a predominantly Jewish crowd, they tailor their message to include solutions to the ongoing unrest in the Middle East. When politicians speak to labor, they tailor their message to appeal to unions. Every candidate who participated in Tavis' forum ought to have been prepared to give remarks specifically addressing the concerns of black people.
No reason to keep his distance It is understandable that Obama doesn't want to be pigeonholed as the so-called black candidate, but he can't be so afraid of that label that he alienates the very base that could lift him in the primary election. Frankly, his universalist strategy might work for white voters, but black voters have been taken for granted long enough. If Obama's handlers don't understand this, then he ought to be looking for some new strategists.
More important, Obama was in the perfect position to show that being pro-black doesn't mean someone has to be anti-white. I'm disappointed that he doesn't appear to know that real progress on the racial front ought to mean that political candidates who are embraced by white voters don't have to keep their distance from black ones.
mailto:marym@suntimes.com
Of course, it's all the Jews' fault once again.
=Spits my fruit punch all over the screen=
He's a motherf**king Stalinist apologist and useful idiot of the highest order. Satan would be proud. Wake up, Black folks ! YOU'VE BEEN HAD !
Remember that he is running against the wife of America’s first black president!
Obama doesnt always listen to what he is saying.
One quote from the debate was a humorous example of Obama brilliance:
We need to make sure teachers are going to schools that need them the most.
The guy isn’t quite ready for prime time.
Glover plays the victim role to the hilt and that is like a narcotic to many in the black community. Even more despicable is Edwards - an absolute shyster who lives like a king and moans about poverty.
You know if the Democrats put a black man on top of their ballot, they might get 95% of the African-American vote. Wait, they already get 95% of the African-American vote.
I know what work he can do - throw in the towel!!
b. hussein and the rest of the lib/desm all wanted shamnesty to pass so that all the illegals could do the jobs americans won’t do and als be welfare victims...
just how does that help the blacks losing all their jobs to the illegals???
look at New Orleans...all the new population and all the new construction is done by illegals!!!
What was that, $50k for a single speech about poverty ? A subject he has no personal experience with ?

"I find your lack of faith... disturbing."
I see I wasn’t the only one that had that image come to mind!
When I saw yours, that quote just popped right into my head.
Obama in his statements and in his reality considers himself black,even though his mother was white. I suppose he is a true African-American since he calls himself that and not just plain American.
I will be voting for an American. A real American, a man who stands for every American in this country,not just the African-Americans. If Obama wants to be President he has to appeal to Americans of every color. Why does he reject his white half? Think about that. His white Grandparents made him wealthy, educated him, and obviously he rejects them.
I wont be voting for a woman who only panders to blacks in an upcoming election year and who stays with a dog of a husband because he is a good fund raiser either.
Nor will I be voting for anyone who is pro-abortion, Catholic in name only, anti gun, and pro-homosexual.
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