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There are profound lessons to be learned from the ongoing travails
of Congresswoman Cynthia
McKinney (D-GA), under siege by white America at large, the
leadership of her own party, and the chairman of her own caucus.
In the aftermath of McKinney’s run-in with a Capitol Hill police
officer, we have witnessed an orgy of unadulterated defamation
that is actually directed at Black women in general. In rejecting
and denouncing McKinney’s defense, her tormentors demonstrate
that the very concept of racial profiling was never sincerely
accepted among most white Americans, and that 9/11 is just an
excuse for undoing decades of legal and political struggles against
the abominable practice.
So virulent and shameless have been the attacks
on McKinney – spewing
caricatures of the six-term lawmaker that reflect whites’ own
hallucinatory visions of Black people – it leads us to conclude
that racists are conducting a kind of ritual, an exorcism to
cast the “militant Black” out of the national polity, once and
for all. Disgustingly, a number of Black voices have joined mob,
in order to prove that they are reasonable and trustworthy Negroes
who won’t intrude on white folks’ illusions of innocence.
Most distressingly, the McKinney affair dramatically demonstrates
that the Congressional Black Caucus has been eviscerated as a
body. The CBC is revealed as collectively gutless, devoid of
any semblance of Black solidarity, without which it has no reason
for being.
CBC Hits New Low
We at BC had previously believed that April,
2005, when 37 percent of the 42 Black House members voted for Republican
bills, was the lowest point in Congressional Black Caucus
history. A year later, the CBC has found a new nadir. On the
evening of April 5, undoubtedly on orders from House Minority
Leader Nancy Pelosi, CBC chairman Mel Watt gathered twenty or
so members to browbeat McKinney into firing her legal team and
cease appearing before the media. Watt absented himself from
the beat-down, so that it would not appear to be an “official” CBC
event.
As congressional aides wandered in and out
of the room, some Members dutifully echoed Pelosi’s demand
that McKinney not frame the March 28 confrontation with
the policeman as a “racial” incident, and that she issue an apology
on the House floor the following morning. According to several
sources who spoke with BC on condition of anonymity,
and based on an account given by McKinney staff assistant Faye
Coffield to a weekly Atlanta meeting of the Georgia Coalition
for the People's Agenda, a “consensus” was reached that McKinney
would deliver the apology and abandon efforts to defend herself
in the media (although not her legal team).
The next morning, at the appointed hour,
McKinney was prepared to offer her apology to the House. But
Mel Watt had already put
the word out that CBC members were to renege on their part of
the deal. The Caucus must not stand with McKinney when she stepped
to the microphone. Mel Watt, Nancy Pelosi’s poodle, attempted
to enforce his Mistress’s wish that McKinney appear utterly isolated
and alone. Nothing should distract from the Democrats’ non-strategy
of doing and saying nothing until mid-term elections in November.
The Republicans must be allowed to self-destruct without interference.
McKinney’s charge of racial profiling was a distraction from
the Democratic non-strategy – so she must be shunned. Mel Watt
was the enforcer – the designated shunner-in-chief.
Pelosi appears to harbor a deep hatred for
McKinney, whom she cannot control. Most recently, the 51-year-old
Georgia lawmaker
defied the Leader’s orders, voting in favor of a Republican bill,
cynically modeled on Democrat John Murtha’s measure for a quick
exit from Iraq. She was among only three
Democrats, and the only CBC member, to do so. McKinney also
ignored Pelosi’s order that Democrats boycott
hearings on Katrina and leave the field to Republicans.
However, Pelosi has been the aggressor all
along, bent on bringing the CBC and other progressives to heel
as she pursues her spineless
non-strategy for victory by default over the GOP – a scenario
that by definition requires African Americans to mute their own
demands, to be quiet and compliant. When McKinney returned to
congress in January 2005 after a two-year hiatus, Pelosi denied
her seniority, bumping her down to freshman status despite her
previous ten years on The Hill. Not a
peep from the CBC, cowed by their Leader and, recent events
have shown, packed with members who are themselves fearful that
McKinney’s militancy will raise the bar of constituent expectations
for their own performances on Black people’s behalf.
On the House floor, the morning of April
6, Pelosi/Watt had set McKinney up for further humiliation.
Not only would she be
required to deliver an apology that would be seen as an admission
of guilt (by those who had already condemned and defamed her),
but the absence of CBC members at her side would mark her as
a lone “extremist,” a “loon” whose politics could be dismissed
out of hand. Why, even McKinney’s own colleagues won’t stand
with her. She’s crazy (like the rest of those darkies who cry
racism).
According to several congressional sources, McKinney confronted
a gaggle of CBC members, reminding them of the consensus agreement
of the night before, in which they had promised a display of
physical solidarity at the microphone in return for her concessions.
White Congresswoman Marcy
Kaptur (D-OH), seeing the commotion, hurried over to the
Black circle: “I’ll stand with you, Cynthia.” Others stepped
forward to fulfill their pledge, despite CBC chairman Mel Watt’s
treacherous machinations.
Here is a partial list of those who were videotaped standing
with McKinney when she read the words of apology that
had been demanded of her:
* Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (MI)
* Sheila Jackson-Lee (TX)
Only nine of the 20-plus CBC members who
had reached “consensus” on
standing with their sister the night before, bucked Pelosi’s
petty dictatorial edict – and straw-boss Mel Watt’s attempt
to enforce it.
Once upon a time, the CBC could collectively
call itself “the
conscience of the congress.” No more.
Multi-Profiling and Sheer Malevolence
By bowing to Pelosi, Black congresspersons
reinforce her and other white’s belief that they can pick and choose the African
American leaders and representatives they deal with, and isolate
the rest, while still retaining mass Black support for the
Democratic Party. Such Blacks are enablers of racism, and must
eventually pay the price at the hands of their constituents,
who are no different than the Black Georgia voters who sent
McKinney to Washington six times. Worse, in urging McKinney
to drop the “racial” aspect of her defense – to pretend that
she was not racially profiled, when they know that police
profiling is near-universal – they do grave injury to fundamental
Black interests.
Days after his attempt to pound McKinney
into dust, the duplicitous Mel Watt related to the Charlotte
Observer his own scary run-in
with Capitol police “a year or so ago”:
"I was running to
the floor to vote and an officer said, `Can I see your ID?'
and I said, `No'
and kept running. I looked back and he had his hand on his
gun. Then another (Capitol) police officer said, `Member.'
He recognized me (as a House member). It just so happened that
the first (officer) was white and the other one was black ...
I was probably very rash. In retrospect, I thought to myself,
`You had to be out of your mind.' I was trying to get to a
vote and he had a job to do."
Watt understands very well that the Black
officer, who didn’t
go for his gun, but instead called his white partner off, was
intervening in a case of racial profiling. Yet Watt’s desire
to stay in the good graces of his Leader, Pelosi, drives him
to conspire against a fellow Black congressperson, Cynthia
McKinney, whose recent hair makeover is said to have made her
fair game to be accosted by Capitol police. Said McKinney:
“Do I have to contact
the police every time I change my hairstyle? How do we account
for the fact that
when I wore my braids every day for 11 years, I still faced
this problem, primarily from certain police officers.”
Nobody knows better than Black officers
that racism is rampant in the Capitol Police force. Of the
1,200 officers, 29 percent
are Black, and many still have racial bias suits outstanding. "You
have, basically, a renegade police department up here, that’s
been operating under the protection of Congress," said Charles
J. Ware, an attorney representing the Capitol Black Police
Association.
But it’s not just race. Police officers,
like workers in any organization, spend much of their time
talking shop. For
Capitol police, the subject of their shop-talk is the members
of congress they are hired to protect. Cynthia McKinney is famous – no
less so on Capitol Hill. She is the Black woman viciously branded
as a friend of “terrorists,” the most uppity African American
in the federal legislature. The cops are quite aware of what
she looks like, new hair-do or not.
A McKinney lawyer got it right when he told
a Howard University press conference that his client was targeted for
reasons of “sex, race and Ms. McKinney's progressiveness."
The cops know who McKinney is – they have
profiled her politically. Michael
C. Ruppert, former Los Angeles cop and current honcho of
the popular web site From the Wilderness, has felt the police
hostility directed at his longtime friend, Cynthia
McKinney:
” I have walked the halls of Congress with
Cynthia McKinney maybe eight to ten times. I have walked into
and out of the Cannon and Longworth house office buildings
with her. I have walked to hearings in the Rayburn house office
building with her. I have walked the underground tunnels from
one of those office buildings directly to the edge of the House
floor and its anteroom with her. I can tell you one thing for
certain because I have seen it and I have felt it. Cynthia
McKinney and her staff get treated differently from just about
anyone else on the Hill. It’s subtle, but so is the taste of
dirt when it’s in your mouth.”
Although the Capitol police have failed
to produce a surveillance tape of McKinney’s confrontation
with their officer, the congresswoman captured one incident
in the movie, “American
Blackout,” now being screened at sites around the country.
The film depicts McKinney’s investigation of voting irregularities
in the 2000 elections. One segment shows the congresswoman
being accosted by police as she and her party approach the
Longworth building of the Capitol. McKinney turns to the camera
and reports that police subject her to such treatment “all
the time.”
Does that happen to 535 members of congress “all the time”?
Not hardly.
California Rep. Tom Lantos, according to the web reference
site Wikipedia, “ran
over a teenager in the Capitol parking area and refused to
stop despite screams from the crowd. He never apologized for
the hit-and-run either." The Boston Globe reported that
Lantos was not charged with hit-and-run, but was only fined
$25 for ''failure to pay full time and attention." However,
a teacher accompanying the student was threatened with arrest
by Capitol police when she chased Lantos’ car, demanding that
he stop.
Apparently Capitol police are quite zealous
in protecting their lawmakers – if they are white.
In an otherwise inane, anti-McKinney article, Black columnist
Earl Ofari Hutchinson gave some historical perspective to recent
events:
“In
past years, the Caucus raised heck when a white Republican
Congressman
punched a black Capitol police officer and a year later Ohio
Democratic Representative Louis Stokes was hassled by Capitol
police. And the Congressional Black Caucus rushed to their
defense.”
Not this time, not for Cynthia McKinney.
The Congressional Black Caucus is broken.
Sex and the Federal City
Around midnight on
April 8, Saturday Night Live’s Kenan
Thompson performed a grotesque, bewigged skit in which
he conjured up a fat, sloppy, dull-witted, belligerent, loud-talking,
no-listening, from-deep-in-the-ghetto character who was supposed
to be – Cynthia McKinney. Of course, this TV minstrel’s interpretation
bore no resemblance to the congressperson – daughter
of one of Atlanta’s first Black policemen, a former faculty
member at Clark Atlanta University, world traveler and sought-after
speaker, six-term legislator. But that did not matter. Although
SNL does superb work caricaturing public personalities, its
usual standards did not apply in McKinney’s case. The skit
was a dehumanizing assault on Black women as a group,
with “Cynthia” standing in for the female gender of her race.
A specific profile of Black women
exists in the minds of vast sections of white America. As
Dr. Abdul Karim Bangura relates
in this
issue of BC, in “an analysis
of White students’ stereotypes of Black women by professor
of women’s studies and sociology Rose Weitz at Arizona State
University and Wakonse fellow Leonard Gordon at the same
university, the students primarily characterize Black women
as loud, aggressive, argumentative, stubborn, and bitchy.”
White men (and women,
and some Black men) on and off Capitol Hill are eager to
vilify and diminish
McKinney, to call her a “bitch,” a “racist,” “crazy” and
all manner of epithets. This abuse is actually directed against
the defamers’ twisted idea of who and what Black women
are. So diseased are their minds, they see only their sickness-induced
delusions. White supremacy allows them to translate their
delusions into public policy. September 11 gave them a free
pass to run buck wild, with no apologies, under the umbrella
of “homeland security.”
Black Voters Will Decide
It can be no consolation
to Rep. McKinney that she is just a convenient target for
what we
now recognize as a great resurgence of racism in the United
States. The South rules, a South that is not defined geographically,
but socio-politically. White Americans have become much more
homogenous in the electronic and high-mobility age – to the
detriment of sanity. Their never-forsaken dreams of domestic
and planetary racial conquest were given a Frankenstein-like
jolt and boost by the Bush regime, which spoke directly to
the predatory core of American myth and historical practice.
Emboldened, they have snared Cynthia McKinney in one of their
IRTs: Improvised Racist Traps. She awaits the decision of
a grand jury.
The moral and political
collapse of the Congressional Black Caucus could not come
at a worse
time – but it has occurred. Corroded by corporate money,
dependent on corporate media – with the near-extinction of
independent Black media – adrift in the gulf between the
needs of the Black masses and the narrow aspirations of the
miniscule hyper-mobile Black classes, and still steeped in
rank male chauvinism, much of Black “leadership” cannot abide
a genuinely progressive, charismatic female in their midst.
Many also look on in sulking jealousy at the burgeoning unity
and militancy of Latinos, whose grassroots are on the move,
and whose media support their cause.
The CBC cannot even support each
other.
When CBC members urged Cynthia McKinney
to forsake the truth, to hide the ugly fact of racial (and
political, and sexual) profiling, they gave enormous aide
and comfort to the enemy. If there was one victory
that African Americans had achieved in the post-Civil Rights
era, it was to make racial profiling legally, politically
and socially unacceptable. This victory was the fruit of
countless suits, demonstrations – all manner of political
struggles – and the legacy of the legions of dead, maimed,
jailed and humiliated victims of profiling who became the
focus of sustained Black action.
September 11 provided the excuse
to undo decades of anti-profiling victories. Profiling is
reckoned to be a good thing. Now the racists seek to reestablish
arbitrary and capricious white supremacy, with legislation that
would de facto deputize every police officer as an agent
of “homeland security” who need not respect the constitution
in the case of “suspected” undocumented immigrants. At that
point, all persons of color become grist for the suspicion
mill. Just as the Capitol policeman chose not to “recognize” Cynthia
McKinney as a congressperson, any cop could willfully fail
to recognize his fellow Americans and strip them of their
rights. Such a regime already exists in designated “drug
zones” in urban America, where everyone is suspect.
Yet the CBC allows Republicans and
racist Democrats to jeer and bully Cynthia McKinney into
a legal cul-de-sac, because she dares to cite profiling.
The masses of African
Americans know the deal – they are profiled constantly in stores, when
observed outside their neighborhoods, on the highways, when
breathing while Black. McKinney’s version of events does
not seem bizarre to them. Although the laughing racist hyenas
convince each other – with the tacit help of CBC chair Mel
Watt – that McKinney is on the ropes, it is the Black constituents
of Dekalb County who will decide if she is “crazy” for standing
up for her (and our) dignity and rights.
When McKinney arrived back in Atlanta
shortly after her confrontation with the uniformed profiler,
State Representative Tyrone
Brooks, president of the Georgia Association of
Black Elected Officials, was among
those to greet and support her: "It's really
not about Cynthia McKinney,” said Brooks. “It's about African-Americans
in America who are victims of racial profiling every day."
Much of the Congressional Black Caucus seem to have lost touch
with this reality. As a body, they have lost their moorings,
and must be rehabilitated, surgically. A bunch of them have
got to go.
BC Co-Publishers Glen Ford and Peter
Gamble are writing a book to be titled, Barack
Obama and the Crisis in Black Leadership.
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