(CNN)The
recent announcement that 12 Russian nationals have been indicted by
Robert Mueller for hacking the Democratic National Committee during
the 2016 election is another reminder of how vulnerable our democracy
is to such breaches.
The
indictments charge that via hacking, phishing attacks, money
laundering and interference on multiple other fronts, Russian
officials worked to sabotage Hillary Clinton's campaign. This
arguably helped conservative efforts to usher Donald Trump into the
presidency.
During
the US-Russia summit Monday in Helsinki, Trump sided with Russian
President Vladimir Putin and accepted his denial that Russia
interfered with the election.
Now,
in this 2018-midterm election season, as some
predict a blue wave of resistance to Trump,
his policies and alarming authoritarianism, Republicans want to split
up the Democratic political opposition and divide black and Latino
voters. And Russia looks like it wants to help here, too. But this
time it won't work.
The
most recent example of this strategy is the #WalkAway
hashtag,
which is presented
as a grassroots effort by former Democrats who
are critical of the party's alleged intimidation, confrontation and
lack
of civility and
want people to walk away from the party.
However,
#WalkAway has also now been connected to Kremlin-linked Russian bots,
and it is now the seventh most popular Russia-influenced hashtag as
of this writing, according to the website Hamilton
68,which
tracks Russian influence on Twitter as part of the Alliance for
Securing Democracy, an initiative of the nonpartisan German Marshall
Fund. The purpose of this now-astroturf
campaign
is to manipulate public opinion by creating the illusion that this is
a popular movement. In reality, #WalkAway has become pure propaganda,
a psychological operation.
Some
of the tweets using the hashtag condemn
illegal immigration,
claim "Blacks
were sold a false bill of goods," and
proclaim "the
African-American community is leaving the Democrat plantation in
droves." Candace
Owens, an African-American conservative and communications director
of Turning Point USA – a
pro-Trump student political group with
a "Professor
Watchlist " database
that tracks professors who "discriminate against conservative
students" — has promoted
the #WalkAway hashtag. Owens,
who has called police
brutality a myth and
said "unlimited
illegal immigration has harmed the black community for decades,"
claims
black voters are walking away from the Democratic Party.
In
a video
called
"Illegal Is The New Black," Owens suggested that Democrats
oppose secure borders because they want to bring in new Latino
voters. Turning Point USA will conduct black
outreach in battleground states such
as Pennsylvania and Michigan for the upcoming elections, with a plan
to engage
less politically active African-Americans, all
for a Republican victory.
Attempting
to peel off votes by dividing black and Latino voters over the issue
of immigration, and suggesting the Democrats favor "illegal"
immigrants over African-Americans misses the forest for the trees,
and that is the whole point.
When
Therese
Patricia Okoumou, a
naturalized US citizen of Congolese origin, climbed the Statue of
Liberty earlier this month to protest the separation of migrant
children from their families, she reminded us that black people are
immigrants, are fighting for immigrant rights, and are among those
undocumented immigrants and noncitizens who face detention and
deportation.
Black
immigrants, a population that has increased
fivefold since 1980, numbering
4.2 million in 2016,come
from the Caribbean, Africa and South America, and include thousands
of DACA recipients and Dreamers. In 2015, according to the Pew
Research Center, unauthorized black immigrants living in America
account for 15% of foreign-born black people. Black non-US citizens
disproportionately face deportation on criminal grounds (due to
racial profiling, interaction with law enforcement and criminal
grounds), according to a 2016 report
from New York University Law's Immigrant Rights Clinic and the Black
Alliance for Just Immigration.
Meanwhile,
with Trump ending
temporary protected status for
Haitians, Salvadorans and Hondurans, an
estimated 273,000 American-born children,
if they choose to stay in the United States, may be separated from
their parents.
While
conservatives may predict a massive black defection from the
Democratic Party over immigration and other issues, there is —
to put it mildly - no evidence of such an exodus, much less a switch
to the Republican Party, whose policies are often hostile to people
of color and include support of an administration bent on eliminating
civil rights and
comfortable with separating migrant children from their families.
Like
all other voters, African-Americans vote their interests. Black
women's civic
participation groups are
bringing their A game and are energizing black voters in the South,
leveraging the power of one of the Democrats' most important
constituencies.
And
there are other demographics that will put a damper on the strategy
of conservatives and Russia Twitter bots.
Latino
voters are
crucial as the second
largest ethnic group behind whites. Puerto
Rican voters, including
tens of thousands displaced due
to Hurricane Maria, will play a key role in states such as Florida.
Millennials, poised
to become the largest living adult generation,
are energized by issues such as gun
control and can change the midterm landscape. And
white suburban women have organized
on the local level since
the 2016 election. Democrats are getting engaged and joining forces
with independents and Republicans who are frustrated.
As
Republicans manage
a shrinking base of angry white voters, Democrats,
with lessons learned from 2016, can overcome conservatives and
Twitter bots and claim victory with hard work and organization, a
strong message and authentic, dynamic candidates.
But
clearly the Democrats must do more, particularly if they want to take
advantage of the current political environment and leverage the
widespread resistance to GOP policies. The party has faced criticism
for failing to support black
women candidates, and
nearly 200
black female leaders sent
a letter to Democratic leadership, putting them on notice for failing
to protect Rep. Maxine Waters from attacks from the White House and
criticism from some members of the Democratic Party.
Republican
operatives who want to stop the blue wave have various options,
including efforts aimed at voter suppression, voter purges, racial
gerrymandering, and, with the help of their Russian handlers, Twitter
bots of the variety that helped
bring victory to Trump.
About 50,000
Russian bots tried
to impact the 2016 presidential election, and Twitter suspended
some
70 million questionable accounts in May and June. Interfering in the
election may have worked in 2016, but in the 2018 midterms and the
2020 presidential election, voters of color and Democratic voters in
general won't be fooled. Not this time. Too much is at stake: no less
than the very future of American democracy.
This commentary was originally published by CNN.com
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