Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.
Afro-Netizen
All Spin Zone
Altercation
Americablog
And, yes, I DO take it personally
Another Iranian Online
August J. Pollak
Baghdad Burning
Barry Lando
Bloggrrrlz Gallery
Blondesense
Bob Geiger
Body and Soul
Boing Boing
Booman Tribune
BOP News
Bush Watch
BUZZFLASH
Carpetbagger
Clean Air Blog
Cool Hunting
Corrente
CrooksandLiars
Cursor
Dahr Jamail
Daily Howler
Daily Kos
DC Media Girl
DemiOrator
Direland
Echidne of the Snakes
Elayne Riggs
Eschaton
Fact-esque
Falafel Sex, and Other Things Best Left Unsaid
Farai Chideya
Feminist Peace Network
Feministe
Feministing
Frameshop
Gristmill
Huffington Post
Hullabaloo
Informed Comment
James Wolcott
Jesus General
Lady Jayne's Blog
Liberal Oasis
Mad Kane
Mahablog
Majikthise
Media Girl
Media is a Plural
MediaCitizen
Metafilter
Michael Berube
MyDD
News Dissector
News For Real
Norbizness
Oliver Willis
Pacific Views
Pandagon
Political Animal
PopPolitics.com
PR Watch
Prometheus 6
Raed in the Middle
RH Reality Check
Robert Greenwald
Roger Ailes
Rox Populi
Sadly, No!
Seeing the Forest
Shakespeares Sister
Sirotablog
Sisyphus Shrugged
skippy the bush kangaroo
Slacktivist
SpeakSpeak
Stay Free!
Steve Gilliard
Talking Points Memo
TalkLeft
TBogg
Thatcoloredfellasweblog
The Bilerico Project
The Hutchinson Political Report
The Republic of T
The Revealer
The Sideshow
The Swift Report
Think Progress
This Modern World
TikvahGirl
Trish Wilson
War and Piece
Waveflux
What She Said!
Whiskey Bar
Working Families Vote 2008
The GOP Frontrunners Give the Finger to Black Voters
Got a tip for a post?:
Email us | Anonymous form
Also in PEEK
Poll-watch: Gallup Finds Wedding-Cake Sized Marriage Gap in Pres Race
AlterNet Staff AlterNet
Michael Moore Dares to Ask: What's So Heroic About Being Shot Down While Bombing Innocent Civilians?
Liliana Segura AlterNet
Bush Capitulates, Troop Withdrawal in 2011?
Spencer Ackerman Attackerman
This post, written by Steve Benen, originally appeared on The Carpetbagger Report

Last night, Morgan State University in Baltimore hosted a nationally televised debate for Republican presidential hopefuls, billed as the first ever tailored specifically to the concerns of the African-American community.
As has been widely reported, all of the top four GOP candidates decided not to show up. Event organizers left podiums on the stage for them, just in case they had a change of heart, but Rudy Giuliani, John McCain, Fred Thompson, and Mitt Romney all said they had better things to do with their time.
They've been taking quite a bit of heat for their absence, even from fellow Republicans. Newt Gingrich had called their decisions an "enormous error" and "fundamentally wrong," and had said the scheduling excuses were "baloney"; Former RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman urged the candidates to reconsider; and former vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp said their decisions make it seem as though Republicans do not want black votes.
But the field's second- and third-tier candidates really let Frudy McRomney have it on stage.
"I apologize for the candidates who aren't here. I think it's a disgrace that they aren't here," Sen. Sam Brownback (Kan.), a presidential hopeful, told the audience. "I'm sorry. I'm sorry to you and I'm sorry to those who are watching that they are not here."
Asked before the debate whether he accepted his rivals' claims of scheduling conflicts, Brownback said, "If it was a high enough priority, it would get on the schedule."
Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, another candidate who made the trip, called the situation "embarrassing" for his rivals. "We've come a long way, but we have a long way to go, and we don't get there if we don't sit down and work through issues," he told the appreciative crowd.
So, what were Giuliani, McCain, Thompson, and Romney doing last night?
They were raising more money.
Former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani is in California today, raising money and accepting the endorsement of former GOP governor Pete Wilson. The AP noted it was a "mixed blessing" for Giuliani "due to Wilson's hardline stand on illegal immigration," which was credited for "driving Hispanics from the GOP in California."
Sen. John McCain will be in New York City tonight, appearing in an "Exchange of Ideas" campaign event with top Reagan White House speechwriter Peggy Noonan.
Ex-senator Fred Thompson is at home in Tennessee tonight where he is also raising money.
Like Giuliani, former governor Mitt Romney is in California for a San Diego fundraiser.
Those who did show up did their best to connect with the audience.
Several of the candidates took pains to cater to the mostly black audience, blaming inequality in America on continuing racism. Brownback said he wants Congress to pass a formal apology for slavery and segregation. Huckabee promised he would, as president, improve housing opportunities for minorities and address unequal treatment of different races in the criminal justice system. He also pledged to support voting rights for the District of Columbia.
Good for them. That's part of the reason to hold the event in the first place.
For what it's worth, Romney was the most aggressive to publicly push back against the criticism.
Romney turned the tables on the debate's sponsors, the Public Broadcasting Service and Morgan State University, saying, "You call for one in the last couple of weeks in September, which is the last part of the quarter, most of us have got things lined up."
It's not a bad pitch, necessarily, but it's wholly unpersuasive. For one thing, the GOP's top tier has skipped every presidential forum with minority audiences, including those that were nowhere near quarterly fundraising deadlines. For another, when Morgan State hosted an event for the Democratic candidates, it was near the end of the second quarter, but all of them showed up anyway. It was about taking a constituency seriously, and showing a community respect.
In all likelihood, one of the top four Republicans is going to win the party's nomination. Expect to hear about this again next year.
Tagged as: brownback, huckabee, mccain, thompson, romney, giuliani, racism, race, election08, republican debate
Steve Benen is a freelance writer/researcher and creator of The Carpetbagger Report. In addition, he is the lead editor of Salon.com's Blog Report, and has been a contributor to Talking Points Memo, Washington Monthly, Crooks & Liars, The American Prospect, and the Guardian.
| Also in PEEK | |||
| Poll-watch: Gallup Finds Wedding-Cake Sized Marriage Gap in Pres Race Apparently, the married and unmarried have very different concerns. Post by AlterNet Staff. August 21, 2008. |
Michael Moore Dares to Ask: What's So Heroic About Being Shot Down While Bombing Innocent Civilians? Like Iraq, Vietnam was not a noble cause. It's time we stopped letting politicians and the press perpetuate the McCain War Hero myth. Post by Liliana Segura. August 21, 2008. |
Bush Capitulates, Troop Withdrawal in 2011? The left won the Iraq debate. Period. Post by Spencer Ackerman. August 21, 2008. |
|