April 6, 2006 |
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Cover Story Portrait of a Negro Corporate Politician Kasim Reed: Lawyer for the Rich and Racist by BC Editor Bruce Dixon |
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Atlanta corporate attorney and Democratic Georgia state senator Kasim Reed was deeply distressed at our March 13 BC cover story "Blacks and Browns: The Need to Make Common Cause." We know because he told us so. BC spelled out the tale of Reed's shameful attempt to ape the demagogic meanness of Republicans on the immigration issue. In a bill that had no chance of passage, Reed proposed, among other things, to lock up anyone who applied for a job in Georgia with a fake ID for five years. With no detectable irony in his voice, Reed assured BC in a phone conversation that he was acting to "protect the jobs and living standards" of black families in Georgia.
We asked Reed about the incongruity between posing as an advocate of the rights of working families and the union busting practices of his law firm. Amazingly, the man told us that he couldn't be responsible for what all 13,000 lawyers at the firm actually did, and that he should be judged on his own record. Supposing for the moment that this is an acceptable answer, his bio page on the company web site tells us all we need to know about that record.
There it is. The black state senator who rails against brown immigrants for "taking black jobs" practices employment discrimination law - for employers - and civil rights law for the corporate violators of civil rights. With that bit of context firmly established, we here reprint Reed's email to us:
The only factual error in our BC cover story was that the Republican leader of the Georgia senate in 2002 wasn't a former Democrat. We never said Reed was a DLC member. We did call him a "DLC Democrat" because the DLC claimed him as "New Democrat of the Week" on their website. That's good enough. As for BC ignoring the damage Republicans do, we slammed Reed precisely for following the Republican lead on criminalizing immigration. And we didn't bore our readers with the employer sanctions aspect of Reed's bill because they are empty threats. Employer sanctions have been on the books since the 1980s. BC wasn't the only publication not to take Reed's bill any more seriously than he did. "...Reed had no hope of passing his bill," noted Atlanta's Creative Loafing newspaper. "... the plan was for it to be rejected by the GOP so Democrats wouldn't look soft on illegal immigration in the fall elections.'' In the real world, proposals to criminalize immigration or to lock up folks who apply for a job with a false ID are demagogic. Nobody is going to round up, imprison and deport millions of people back to their countries of origin. They may propose it to provoke divisions and get votes, but it's just not going to happen.
For black America, the immigration issue is all about labor market competition. So-called legal "guest worker" programs solve the labor market problem in favor of employers, by allowing an employer to directly "pull the trigger" and initiate deportation proceedings against immigrant workers who step out of line. Thus "guest worker" programs preserve the two-tier labor market that employers dearly love. Solving the labor market problem in favor of black America would require a level playing field where discrimination of all kinds is outlawed and everyone has the right to organize and join unions, to bargain collectively and to strike. Everybody. Back in BC’s August 22, 2002, issue we printed a passage from black South Carolina Representative Jim Clyburn in which he told how, back in the early 1970s, as an aide to his state's governor, he ran across an economic development memo that was certainly not meant for his eyes:
Finally, in his letter, Reed claims that he took up the immigration issue because the federal government "failed to act." Leaving aside the principle that he failed to learn at Howard University Law School - that a state can no more have its own immigration policy than print its own currency or float its own navy - there are lots of other issues the federal government has failed to act on where states could conceivably take the progressive lead. BC asked a local pastor, Rev. Timothy McDonald of Atlanta's First Iconium Baptist Church, what issues he would suggest Reed tackle, if it was about acting where the federal government failed:
We are afraid that if the thin-skinned senator and corporate attorney from Atlanta found BC's first mention of him displeasing, he won't like this issue any better. BC is not Black Enterprise, or Ebony magazine, or BET's "How I'm Livin'." Unlike these kinds of "black oriented media" the purpose of real journalism is not to market lifestyles and products. It's not to showcase the homes, careers and possessions of African Americans who have "made it." The press is the only profession with its own constitutional amendment so that it can fearlessly speak truth to power. The next time Kasim Reed wants some favorable press he should call up BET. Maybe they'll feature his place on the next "How I'm Livin'." BC Editor Bruce Dixon can be reached at [email protected]. |
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