The real racial dynamics of the Democratic race are beginning to emerge.
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First Black President?
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Remember back in the last century, when Toni Morrison playfully dubbed Bill Clinton our first "Black President," adding that Clinton "displays almost every trope of blackness: single-parent household, born poor, working-class, saxophone-playing, McDonald's-and-junk-food-loving boy from Arkansas?"
Back then, it was considered cool to have a "black president" -- as long as he was really white, of course! But how will the race card play in the high stakes presidential poker game now doubling down, when hidden decisions taken in darkness center on the real possibility of a real "first black president?"
If the "horse race" for the Democratic presidential nomination just turned into a "race race," Barack Obama may find that in winning the bitter battle of South Carolina, he succeeded only in losing the war against the Clintons. Let me explain. Saturday's primary in South Carolina came, as the New York Times noted in its usually understated manner, "at the conclusion of a weeklong campaign, where issues were interwoven with discussions of race."
In fact race was so dominant that the less-restrained and more accurate Associated Press concluded at week's end that Hillary had in fact won "the larger campaign to polarize voters around race and marginalize Obama (in the insidious words of one of her top advisers) as 'The Black Candidate.'"
A major contributing factor to that campaign, of course, was the not-so-subtle manner in which former president Bill Clinton cunningly injected race into the race throughout the run up to Saturday's vote -- such as his invoking Jesse Jackson's victories decades ago in South Carolina caucuses. The references served mainly to remind voters that:
A) Obama, like Jackson, is African-American; and
B) Jackson's campaigns never succeeded despite two wins in South Carolina -- in part because of white resistance to the idea of any black man leading the country.
But "it was not just the Clintons who played the race card," as the AP's Ron Fournier noted:
"There were plenty of people dealing from the sordid deck: Obama advisers who pointed reporters to the remarks; Obama supporters who took the Clintons' remarks out of context to condemn them; a Clinton surrogate who made a veiled reference to Obama's drug use as a youth; the conflict-obsessed media that exaggerated every twist of the race debate; black voters who publicly declared a black man is unelectable; and white voters who openly admitted that they or their neighbors couldn't vote for a black man.
"If nothing else, South Carolina has reminded us, sadly, that race is still an issue in America."
A cursory look at the breakdown of votes from Obama's victory shows that more than eighty percent of his support came from African-American voters in every category, across the board -- and African-Americans made up the majority of the voters in South Carolina's Democratic primary. Obama was buoyed in particular by strong support from black women, who themselves make up fully 35 percent of the Democratic primary voters there. But he carried just one of four white votes -- while white male candidate John Edwards, who came in a distant third overall, garnered the most votes from - guess who? -- white males.
See more stories tagged with: race, clinton, obama, election08, barack obama
Filmmaker and journalist Rory O'Connor is now completing AlterNet's first-ever book, which is on the subject of right-wing radio talkers like O'Reilly, and will be available early in 2008. O'Connor also writes the Media Is A Plural blog.
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