Issue
Number 15 - November 4, 2002
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From
the Publishers of The Black Commentator:
The
NAACP has placed a weak and confused guardian at the gates of its venerable
publication, THE CRISIS. Founded by W.E.B. Du Bois in 1910, the magazine
is edited by Victoria Valentine, who answers to publisher and magazine
board chairman Roger Wilkins. In an editorial remarkable for its shallowness
and laziness of mind, and dangerous in its implications for the organization's
political cohesion, Valentine managed to attack the NAACP's friends,
give comfort to its foes, and insult the intelligence of its readership.
The September
- October editorial, titled "Black According to Whom?" completely
obscures the substantive issues surrounding the new crop of "Black
leaders" touted by corporate media and funded by rightwing dollars.
Editor Valentine bestows political cover and the publication's imprimatur
to congresspersons-elect Denise Majette (D-GA) and Arthur Davis (D-AL),
and failed Newark mayoral candidate Cory Booker, describing all three
- with no justification - as "liberal like their opponents."
Booker's leadership of a Right-bankrolled organization formed solely
to promote private school vouchers becomes openness "to ideas in
education reform."
urges the THE CRISIS board to remove Ms. Valentine before she makes
further gifts of the magazine's space to proponents of private school
vouchers and others whom the Right is grooming to undermine and supplant
established Black leadership - including the NAACP. Her presence at
the magazine is wholly inexplicable.
We are pleased
to publish the following Open Letter from Harvard political scientist
Dr. Martin Kilson, a longtime NAACP supporter and author of the forthcoming
two-volume work,
The Making of Black Intellectuals: Studies on the African-American Intelligentsia.
Valentine's editorial follows Dr. Kilson's letter.
REPLY
TO VICTORIA VALENTINE'S EDITORIAL IN OCTOBER
2002 ISSUE OF "THE CRISIS'
In the leadoff editorial
in the October 2002 issue of THE CRISIS titled "Black According
To Whom," I thought the editor of THE CRISIS erred in several basic
respects. Victoria Valentine doesn't distinguish between the types of
persons among African-American political activists who opposed a group
of "challengers" to established African-American office-holders
in cities and Congress. She also implies, erroneously, that the opponents
of the "challengers" were of one political outlook, namely,
proponents of a "Black-authenticity" test for judging African-American
candidates. Furthermore, THE CRISIS editor implies, erroneously, that
the "challengers" - such as Cory Booker in Newark's mayoral
election, Denise Majette in the Democratic Primary in Representative
Cynthia McKinney's 4th Congressional District in Georgia - were either
politically benign or "liberal" in regard to key public policy
issues relating to African-American citizens.
Now while there
was a petty resort to a kind of "Black-authenticity" rhetoric
by Reverend Al Sharpton while campaigning for the Democratic incumbent
Representative Earl F. Hilliard in Alabama, and while the incumbent
Mayor Sharpe James in Newark's mayoral campaign erupted with the emotional
outburst that his challenger Cory Booker was a "faggot White boy,"
the main body of political opponents of the "challengers"
to incumbent African-American office-holders during the past year's
elections did not participate in petty "Black-authenticity "
rhetoric. I myself joined in critiquing one of the "challengers"
to incumbent African-American office-holders during the past year's
elections - namely, the Cory Booker campaign in the Newark mayoral race.
While I had no doubt
about the stupidity of Mayor Sharpe James' emotional outburst about
Booker being a "fag boy," the real substance of Mayor James'
campaign strategy revolved around the major political facts that characterized
Cory Booker's campaign. It is unfortunate that the editor of THE CRISIS
apparently made no serious effort to uncover these major political facts.
If she had done so, she would have concluded, I am sure, very little
was politically benign or liberal about Cory Booker's campaign. Cory
Booker's campaign stood for many things of political substance for the
status and conditions of African-American citizens that contradicted
the civil rights policy agenda of the NAACP. Above all, Booker's
campaign in Newark functioned as a rightwing conservative beachhead
governance base in a city with a majority Black/Latino population.
Booker's "stealth candidacy" was a precondition for realizing
this rightwing Republican goal.
A core defining
feature of Mayor Sharpe James' campaign strategy revolved around the
core political facts of councilman Cory Booker's campaign. Namely, the
numerous political linkages between Cory Booker and blatant rightwing
forces in American politics in general and the Republican Party in particular.
First, the initial public evidence of the nominal Democrat Newark councilman
Cory Booker being operationally a rightwing conservative candidate was
revealed through the ultra-conservative columnist George Will, through
his March 17, 2002 weekly column. Celebrating Cory Booker's campaign
in Newark, George Will informed America that "Booker's plans for
Newark's renaissance are drawn from thinkers at
the Manhattan Institute
think tank
." I can inform THE CRISIS editor that it is at
the Manhattan Institute where numerous rightwing opponents of the mainline
African-American leadership's civil rights agenda (the agenda of the
NAACP in regard to housing, jobs, education, criminal justice, and a
proactive federal role in vanquishing the legacy of racism in American
society) hang their hats.
Furthermore, Cory
Booker's campaign was financed mainly through a Booker-friendly network
of conservative organizations, especially ones launched to spread a
rightwing Republican agenda among African-American voters. Organizations
like the Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO), founded by the
former Black education superintendent in Milwaukee, Howard Fuller. BAEO
is a group that's vociferous in support of education vouchers - which
by the way Black and Hispanic voters have roundly defeated in major
elections around the country, e.g., California, Michigan. It is massively
funded by rightwing foundations like the Bradley Foundation and the
Walton Foundation, and gains additional resources from Alan Keyes' rightwing
Republican organization called Black America's Political Action Committee
(BAMPAC).
As a longstanding
NAACP supporter, I consider it a political obligation to oppose electoral
candidates - White and Black ones - whose function is to advance the
policy agenda of rightwing organizations like BAEO and BAMPAC, and also
the policy agenda of the rightwing forces in the Republican party, the
forces now represented by President George W. Bush's Administration.
On the other hand, liberal and moderate Republican candidates - White
ones and Black ones, such as former Senator Edward Brooke from my state
of Massachusetts - have gained my political support on some occasions.
Such liberal and moderate Republican office-holders have also sustained
a respectful outreach relationship with the national NAACP leadership.
But such respectful outreach relationship with the national NAACP
has never been a bona fide political posture or practice with conservative
rightwing leadership in the Republican party - under Nixon, Reagan,
the first President George Bush - and it is not a posture presently
under President W. Bush.
Thus, it was not
difficult for me to oppose Cory Booker's candidacy for mayor in Newark,
N.J., and I wrote a memorandum on Booker's deep linkages to rightwing
Republican groups, which was broadly circulated during the Newark Mayoral
campaign. There are, in short, just two words required to inform Ms.
Victoria Valentine, editor of THE CRISIS, about the real political character
of Cory Booker's campaign. It was a "stealth candidacy," with
Booker putting forth to Newark's voters - and especially its African-American
voters - a pretender or false "public face" as a new-guard
liberal Black politician, while in actuality his substantive "private
face" was a rightwing conservative one.
This Janus-faced
"stealth candidacy" pattern might also have been the case
with Denise Majette, who defeated the pro-civil rights agenda oriented
Representative Cynthia McKinney in Georgia. I will await further research
into Denise Majette's real political ties to determine this.
By the way, Ms.
Valentine's attempt to suggest a parallel political symmetry between
Cory Booker - a genuine "stealth candidate" - and Tennessee's
U.S. Representative Harold Ford is just plain wrong. While Representative
Ford, as a Black member of Congress, has fashioned a neo-liberal format
for himself, this neo-liberal format remains genuinely committed to
the core public policy goals of the longstanding mainline African-American
leadership's civil rights agenda. CRISIS editor Valentine even tries
to maneuver a parallel political symmetry between Cory Booker and other
young Black politicians, such as Representative Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-IL)
and Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, but this is just analytically disingenuous.
Jackson and Kilpatrick, like Representative Ford, while creatively broadening
the alliance pattern among African-American office-holders, remain
genuinely committed to the core public policy goals of the mainline
African-American leadership's civil rights agenda. In short, the NAACP's
agenda.
The NAACP is, after
all, the premier articulator and practitioner of the mainline African-American
leadership's civil rights agenda. Critics of Cory Booker's campaign
in Newark's mayoral election season, like myself, recognized the assault
on the NAACP's civil rights agenda emanating from Cory Booker's campaign,
and we accordingly publicly opposed Booker's campaign, whatever misgivings
we might have had with corruption and patronage violations under Mayor
Sharpe James' four-term administration. Happily, our opposition role
assisted in Cory Booker's defeat. It is rather disappointing to read
in the October issue of THE CRISIS that its editor, Victoria Valentine,
believes the opponents of Cory Booker were wrong. I submit that it is
Victoria Valentine who is wrong.
MARTIN KILSON
Frank G. Thomson Research Professor
Harvard University
Black
According to Whom?,
A Message from the Editor, Victoria L. Valentine...
This
election season there were a number of heated contests in which Black
incumbents faced Black challengers. In these races pitting Democrats
against one another, most of the focus has been on the fact that the
incumbents have been political veterans who have rarely faced real competition
and their challengers have often been younger, relatively green candidates.
But there are other
qualities about the opponents that the veteran politicians have exploited
in their efforts to hold onto the support of their constituents. The
political establishment has characterized the challengers as not authentically
Black, an indictment once only lavished (with equal ridiculousness)
on Black republicans.
The newcomers are
liberal like their opponents, but because they may have attended Ivy
League schools, haven't grown up poor enough, have a diverse base of
support and may be more moderate on key issues, they are being cast
as not Black enough.
Some young politicians,
including Rep. Harold E. Ford Jr. (D-TN) and former Newark City Councilman
Cory Booker are open to ideas in education reform, that are controversial
to civil rights veterans who fought to integrate public schools. And
candidates such as Denise Majette, who defeated Rep. Cynthia McKinney
in the Democratic primary for the 4th district of Georgia, and Artur
Davis, who successfully challenged Rep. Earl F. Hilliard (D-Ala.) for
his seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, have courted controversy
in the Black establishment because their campaigns were significantly
supported by Whites and Jewish organizations outraged at their opponents'
views on the Middle East. Rev. Al Sharpton, campaigning in Birmingham
for Hilliard, said, "Everybody that's our color is not our kind.
Everybody that's our skinfolk is not our kinfolk."
The most poignant
example occurred in this season's mayoral election in Newark, N.J. Mayor
Sharpe James, who has served since 1986, faced a viable opponent in
33-year-old Booker, a tenant lawyer who had already beaten a four-term
incumbent for a seat on the city council. Next, Booker who grew up in
a New Jersey suburb, and graduated from Stanford University and Yale
Law School before heading to Oxford on a Rhodes Scholarship, challenged
James, 66, in the mayoral election. James managed to garner 53 percent
of the vote and will serve a fifth four-year term. But the campaign
was ugly. It was widely reported that James called booker a "faggot
White boy." According to New York magazine, James' spokesman explained
the slur as an "emotional reaction."
There's no doubt
that these up and coming leaders are passionate about their race. And
that's likely why they entered politics to begin with - to better the
lot of the African American community. But as beneficiaries of civil
rights and other legislative advancements accomplished by their predecessors,
rising Black politicians like Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.) and Detroit
Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick have benefited from integrated environments at
school, work and home. While their priorities remain with issues of
traditional concern to Blacks, they also have expanded interests and
expertise. Which was the goal, I thought, of us overcoming.
Once in office,
Black politicians trying to build coalitions and work on business issues,
for example, have enough problems dealing with the biases of those outside
the race without worrying about being judged by those within the race.
It really should
come down to the issues. The Black community has traditionally voted
as a bloc (sometimes with success, sometimes not) in areas such as welfare
and education reform and tax cuts, but increasingly, depending on income,
age and education level attained, African Americans greatly differ on
these matters.
If we don't agree
with a Black politician's stand on issues (or are concerned about the
source of his or her financial support), we just shouldn't vote for
them, not question their Blackness.
Website of THE CRISIS
http://www.thecrisismagazine.com/
e-Mail address for Letter to the Editor of THE CRISIS
[email protected]