The worst possible outcome of Tuesday’s election would have been that
George Bush won with the help of a divided Black electorate. Instead,
African Americans reaffirmed the vitality of the Black Political Consensus – our
eyes firmly fixed on the prize: peace, jobs and justice. Despite faith-based
blandishments to the sell-out branch of the Black clergy, massive deployment
of the GOP’s gay wedge issue and, most hurtfully, the Kerry team’s
initial determination to render African Americans invisible and mute
in the campaign, Blacks stood like a rock in defense of their own interests.
Undeterred by disinformation that insanely (or maybe just inanely)
predicted a doubling of Black support for Bush, African Americans placed
their numbers and sheer will in the path of the Bush II juggernaut. It
rolled over us, by fair means and foul, but our Consensus – the impermeable
historical glue that makes African Americans unique in the Diaspora – remained
intact.
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And, truth be known, we had more white people on our
side in this election than at any time in modern American history – just
not enough. The Bush men brag that their figurehead won more votes
than any president,
ever. Yet more people also voted against Bush than any previous
president. We who have never – and will never – win US-wide power on
our own, were on Election Day at the vortex of the struggle against
an enemy that makes the planet shiver.
This is the cross we bear – and it muscles us up. That’s why the Republicans
targeted Black precincts and voter rolls, everywhere – not just in
the battleground states – in the attempt to bowl over the front pins
in the Democratic electoral configuration. Republicans know where the
center of the party’s demographic gravity lies, and they went for it,
in full view of the world. After a “decent interval” of cynical niceties – a
charade that began on Wednesday and will be catered by Kerry’s DLC – the
GOP has every intention to bring to bear the full power of the Bush
II state against mainstream Black America political structures.
As “provisional” citizens, we subjected ourselves to degrading identification
interrogations, lined up like suspects deep into the night – or, as
Harvard’s Dr. Michael Dawson puts it, “standing patiently for regime
change” – only to be finally assigned a “provisional” ballot that may
never be counted, or even known to exist. African Americans didn’t
perform these electoral feats for John Kerry or any combination of
white Democrats; we did it for ourselves, because we know what’s coming
down the road.
An “inside” job
“We shall not be moved,” went the civil rights song. Four years of
mercenary Black faces in high Republican places – Colin Powell, Condoleezza
Rice, Rod Paige – have failed to move us from our righteous Consensus
for social justice and international peace, or to dim our highly evolved
vision of Black America’s singular mission. These are the cards we
have been dealt by history. However, African Americans are especially
vulnerable to demoralization from within.
In mid-October, the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies
(JCPES), the venerable Washington-based Black think tank, announced
that its 2004
survey of African American opinion showed that
18 percent of respondents “would like to see” Bush win – dramatic “news” that
the corporate media snatched up and clutched to their bosoms like the
Holy Grail. Breaking down the figures, the JCPES claimed that 29 percent
of “secular conservative” Blacks and 36 percent of “Christian conservatives” wanted
Bush to win on November 2. Eight percent of “liberal” African Americans
and 13 percent of self-identified “moderates” also wished for a Bush
victory. “I think Bush's faith-based initiative, combined with the
gay marriage issue and also Bush's sort of overtly Southern religious
personality has made him more popular among black conservative Christians," JCPES
research director David Bositis told the New York Times.
Apparently, the self-selected Black “conservative Christians” were
actually less numerous than the JCPES assumed, or didn’t understand
the question, or said what they thought the pollsters wanted to hear.
Within less than two weeks, the New York Times and the St. Petersburg,
Florida, Times claimed to have independently discovered that 17 and
19 percent of Blacks, respectively, had lined up in the Republican
column. This, as headlines screamed the full extent of the Bush administration’s
planned disruptions of Black voter activities. A disclaimer was issued
by the two white papers on October
25, warning that their data
could be off due to “large margins of sampling error because of the
small samples of black voters.” But by then, Republicans and their
media allies were gleefully celebrating the giant crack in the Black
Political Consensus, citing JCPES as the authority.
Head researcher Bositis began backing off the JCPES’s finding, telling
columnist Deborah
Mathis the 18 percent figure was “an outside
number; something in the 12-14 percent range may be more like it. Even
so,” Mathis wrote, “that would be almost double what W got from black
voters in 2000.”
When Black voters finally got to speak for themselves on November
2, Bush got 10 or 11 percent of the Black vote, respectively, according
to Washington
Post and CNN exit
polls. The ultra-high profile presence of Condoleezza and Colin, the
millions lavished on corrupt
Rev. Greedygut preachers, the endless propaganda about a growing “new
class” of Black conservatives, the disinformation from the New York
Times and, yes, from the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies – all
this and more over four years had moved the Black electorate a mere
one percent or (maybe) two into the Republican ranks.
“The turnout should wash away any doubt about the conclusions African
Americans have come to about the legitimacy of this regime,” said Harvard’s
Dr. Dawson, a noted social demographer who, along with colleague Dr.
Lawrence Bobo, has been studying racial divisions under the reign of
George W. Bush. (See , “Blacks, Whites Live in Different Moral Universe,
October 28.)
The JCPES, which over the years has accrued great authority as a source
of data and analysis about African Americans, should take much more
seriously the harm that it inflicts through data that is not put into
proper context, or just plain bad data. This is not the first time
that the Joint Center has given aid and comfort to the Hard Right through
faulty questions and imprecise conclusions (see , November
21, 2002).
The Black Consensus is perhaps our greatest resource. As distinguished
from a reflexive, unthinking sense of “unity,” the broad African American
worldview is based on generations of shared experience with the same
foe: American white supremacy. It is, in a sense, our collective genius:
the ability to sustain a humane and progressive Black polity while
under constant assault from the larger society’s corrupting commercial,
political and cultural forces – including the coercive powers of an
ever-hostile state. The Black Political Consensus should never be artificially
buttressed or exaggerated, but to the extent that it exists, it is
our sword and shield. It takes us into battle, and prepares us for
the next one. It sustained us through November 2.
Gays, Youth, Latinos and lots of whites
Union officials deeply involved in the get-out-the-vote effort in
Detroit tell of “ferocious” debates among rank and file Blacks over
anti-same-sex marriage
initiatives on the ballot in Michigan and ten other states, on Tuesday.
While urban infrastructure and services
crumbled around them, otherwise sensible African Americans allowed
themselves to be engaged by the Republican’s wedge issue. On Election
Day, Blacks were as likely as whites to vote against same-sex marriage – yet
they did not take the bait set out for them by sell-out preachers,
to vote for George Bush. There is no Black Consensus on homosexuality.
The JCPES’s “Christian conservatives” – however many there are – knew
where to draw the line.
New lines are being drawn by white youth who, starting in the Reagan
years, polled even more conservative than their Sixties-influenced
elders. Deep in the bowels of Alabama and South Carolina, where overwhelming
majorities of whites swear by Bush, white youth broke ranks this week. “Even
in the bastions of the Confederacy young people were breaking for Kerry,” Dr.
Dawson told . “That’s the most positive sign for the
future.” Indeed,
it is clear proof of the deep penetration of Hip Hop sensibilities
outside of the Black community. White rapper Eminem’s anti-Bush video-animation
“Mosh” will likely, through the perverse mechanisms of corporate
racism, cause record labels to loosen the political controls that have
stifled many Black rap artists for more than a decade. Another political/cultural
world is opening up even as the Bush men try to shut this one down.
Beyond the bling, Hip Hop activism is getting serious, portending
a radically different – but no less rooted – political aesthetic as
the Black Consensus evolves. (See , “Hip
Hop Generation Agenda,” July
1, 2004.) Maya Rockeymoore, author of The
Political Action Handbook: A How To Guide for the Hip Hop Generation,
speaks of “an unprecedented focus on the presidential campaign
among the 34 and under crowd. The challenge will be
to get them to engage in driving a transformational political agenda
beyond November 3."
Black youth are conscientiously assuming responsibility for the ancestral
legacy. For many young activists, Hip Hop is a means to share African
American wisdom and solidarity with the world. Bush can bum-rush the
polls, but this show goes on. Harvard’s Prof. Dawson is cautiously
optimistic, fearing that elections-programmed youth might “go into
a three-year funk” until the next campaign. “We have to organize from
the grassroots up. It’s a perilous future. The national government
is going to go after the NAACP and the unions.”
African Americans are approaching that future guided by a Consensus
on core issues that has so far remained largely impervious to outside
manipulation – although it is subject to diversions and distractions
such as the ridiculous debate on gays emanating from a gay-saturated
Black church!
The November 2 data on Latino voters is disturbing. Bush appears to
have garnered substantially more Latino votes than in 2000, a development
that some observers credit to deepening Hispanic involvement in the
military. Yet, no group includes more families with members in the
military than African Americans, who nevertheless are the least inclined
to support U.S. adventures abroad. Many Latinos are apparently headed
in a different political direction, but we should not draw general
conclusions without a nationality-by-nationality analysis. There is
a whole world of Spanish-speakers in the Americas. There is no consensus
on Latinos among African Americans, or among Latinos, themselves. November
2 has presented us with troubling questions.
Christians from Hell
The swelling white Republican base that triumphed on Election Day,
is a nightmare. Although their actual numbers may well have been augmented
by electronic means in counties with computerized voting (including
the whole state of Georgia, for example), there can be no doubt that
the Bush victory was propelled by something very much like a mass social
movement, with its own vocabulary and leadership structures. This is
Bush’s army, says Dr. Dawson. “The Bush administration has achieved
absolute mastery of white Protestants, particularly those with less
education. This is damning for the country and its future.”
It is actually a familiar enemy, drawn from the same “stock” that
have cut off their economic noses to spite Black faces since the end
of the Civil War. They were once the Dixiecrat base, who then became
the southern Republican base, and are now tied together with similar
white elements throughout the country by interlocking networks of churches
and the Republican Party. The corporate media feign surprise and fascination
at the emergence of this huge group of whites – a posture that strikes
many Blacks as disingenuous, since those of us with southern roots
know that crowd all too well. According to the Washington Post’s David
Broder, “the exit poll indicated that about 22 percent of [Tuesday's]
voters were white evangelical or born-again Christians, three-quarters
of whom went for Bush.” That amounts to about one-third of Bush’s total
national vote.
This indispensable core, which now acts as a mass citizen militia
for Karl Rove and other Bush commandants, scares the hell out
of many of the 44 percent of white folks who didn’t vote for Bush.
Black Americans do not need European models of fascism to understand
the grave threat these people represent to life and liberty.
They are the folks standing under the tree, while we swing from the
limbs.
These whites – or rather, their leaders – are masters of euphemism.
They swamped the polls (with some technical and political assistance)
on Tuesday with the words “moral values” on their lips – white evangelical
code for the “good people” versus the “bad” people. The ancient but
still fiercely operative Black-white paradigm has been overlaid with “Arabs,” “clash
of civilizations” and “homosexuals,” but it’s still the same onion.
The new texture of the old paradigm of oppression simply allows more
whites to act/vote on what NAACP Chairman Julian
Bond calls their “racist
impulses.” These are the impulses that fueled the Republican electoral
machine.
On the other hand, we at believe that there is a far deeper and
wider white opposition to the current regime than existed at any point
in the supposedly “turbulent” Sixties and early Seventies. Many anti-Bush
whites are aware that when Black folks were disenfranchised by a criminal
conspiracy of George W. Bush’s national government, they were
also disenfranchised. Even larger proportions of white youth know the
deal. Black people’s only obligation to them is the same one we have
to ourselves: to lead.
Kerry’s separate peace
As usual, the corporate media pretend that the Republican’s bullying
and official criminality in the weeks preceding Election Day – events
they covered – never happened. John Kerry collaborates in the
farce, proclaiming in his public concession speech that America is
in "desperate need for unity, for finding common ground
and coming together. Today, I hope we can begin the healing."
But the troops
who carried him, the Black men and women targeted for harassment
and humiliation at the polls, are bleeding on the field, many of
their votes never to be counted or even acknowledged. The vaunted
legions of Democratic lawyers that were supposed to descend on
Ohio and Florida to tear apart the rigged systems of electoral
apartheid were told to stand down on Tuesday night. PBS News Hour’s
Margaret Warner told viewers that Kerry’s legal team advocated
a “scorched earth” policy to challenge the crooked system until
it screamed – a result Democratic troops would have cheered. Kerry
overruled his lawyers, to make a false peace with the Pirates.
At Harvard, Dr. Dawson reports that “students don’t understand how
Kerry could concede before all the votes, particularly Black votes,
were counted. He owes those people, who stood for hours in line and
were asked for multiple identifications. We have another bounced check.”
And what of the provisional ballots in Ohio, which Democrats at one
time numbered at 250,000? What about all the federally-mandated provisional
ballots in each of the 50 states. Are these all to be swept under the
rug to avoid what Kerry calls “a protracted legal process?” Once again,
reconciliation between the rich and white trumps justice for Blacks
every time.
In Florida, the computer-generated Bush-heavy election returns that
so dramatically clashed with earlier Kerry-heavy human exit polls are
now explained away as the result of the stealth invasion of Karl Rove’s
church-based mass voter movement – a half-million strong evangelical
invasion force that most hard-wired Republican pundits did not even
know existed. As “Ghosts of Florida” author Tom
Grayman III writes, “by no method has it been determined that the [exit]
polling was incorrect and the voting equipment was not.”
On Washington-based XM-Radio, talk show host Mark Thompson remarked
that the “third eye” of every Black person in America was wide open,
blinking in disbelief as Kerry Democrats and Bush Republicans rearrange
the
facts about November 2, 2004.
The last thing America needs is unity with thieves, Pirates and punks.
The nation and the world need peace, jobs and justice. Let’s get back
to work.