Black votes matter!
So, too, do the black
lives many politicians pander to in order to get them.
However, exploiting
cultural markers—like Republican presidential hopeful Donald
Trump did by reading a scripted text in a black church or like
Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton did by giving a
shoutout on an AM urban radio show, stating she, too, always carries
hot sauce around with her—not only infuriates most African
Americans, it also insults the political intelligence both
politicians obviously think we don’t have.
The stereotyped black
church stands front and center for many white politicians looking to
woo, if not win, our votes. The perception that all a white
politician needs to do is merely show up the Sunday before the
Tuesday we cast our ballots is not only a hackneyed campaign strategy
in 2016, it’s also a clear indication that this politician has
nary a clue nor a sincere concern for the parishioners he stands
before.
When Trump spoke at a
megachurch in Detroit with native son Ben Carson in tow, it provided
good optics for a brash candidate whose pitch to us a week before at
a predominately white rally was remarkably unfiltered and
unapologetic.
“You
live in your poverty, your schools are no good, you have no jobs, 58
percent of your youth is unemployed," Trump said. "What the
hell do you have to lose?”
While Clinton’s
more measured steps toward the African-American community don’t
paint us as an urban blighted monolith, her past actions—the
creation of the 1996 “superpredator” myth to depict black
youths caught up in her spouse’s crime bill that precipitated
mass incarceration, and is still felt today—makes her appeal,
especially to African-American millennials, dead on arrival.
“What
am I supposed to do if I don’t like him and I don’t trust
her?” a millennial black woman in Ohio asked. “Choose
between being stabbed and being shot? No way!”
Adding insult to injury
when it comes to African Americans' troubled relationship with this
country’s penal system, Clinton acknowledges the too frequent
and discriminatory use of the death penalty, but she doesn’t
want it abolished.
“I
think there are certain egregious cases that still deserve the
consideration of the death penalty, but I’d like to see those
be very limited and rare,” Clinton said.
Clinton, a former
attorney, knows that many poor people spend countless years in jail
for a crime they did not commit because of ineffective counseling and
poor legal representation. And the presumption that African Americans
and Latinos are more culpable of a crime because of the color of
their skin makes her campaign pitch to Black Lives Matter
activists—where prison reform is a key tenet of their
platform—ring hollow.
Since the passing of
the 1964 Civil Rights Voting Act there have been ongoing tactics to
suppress minority voting, such as changing polling locations,
changing polling hours or eliminating early voting days, reducing the
number of polling places, packing majority-minority districts,
dividing minority districts, and the notorious voter ID laws that
disproportionately disenfranchise minority voters. North Carolina’s
Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals just recently overturned the
requirement to show photo ID because it was instated “with
racially discriminatory intent.”
These ongoing tactics,
along with candidates like both Trump and Clinton, who pop up in
perceived and stereotypical black spaces, will catch a few of us
swimming upstream. But they would do enormously better pitching a
consistent campaign message that’s heard at every one of their
pit stops, rather than giving African-American voters a wink with a
tepid appearance at a black church or “sistah” shoutout
about toting hot sauce.
|