The
acquittal, Friday, April 25th 2008, of the 3 police officers
accused of killing Sean Bell in November of 2006 will complicate
Barack Obama’s efforts to win the presidency in November
2008. His candidacy already mired in the racial machinations
of his opponents, Hillary Clinton and John McCain, Obama will
find himself having to maneuver between the need to speak out
on the most egregious, high profile example of institutional
racism and police brutality since the Rodney King Incident and
the need to deflect Clinton and McCain’s racialized attacks
aimed at fomenting white fear of blacks and other non-whites.
While
it has helped him win white votes, Obama’s approach to
dealing with such racism by pointing to the black and white
pictures of the civil rights past will not help him with his
base in the black community and other communities. With the
16th anniversary of the Rodney King incident looming on the
horizon this August 29th, none of us will be in any mood to
hear calls to “hope” or “change” without
similar calls to “justice”.
Unfortunately
for Obama’s presidential bid, calls to justice from African
American and other groups often trigger fear among some (not
all) white voters. The platechtonic political shifts brought
on by the Republican party’s Southern Strategy were premised
on precisely these racial and political calculations. With the
help of political strategist Kevin Phillips, Richard Nixon pointed
to black anger as a way to persuade to white southern voters
that the Republican Party could best represent their interests.
At
a time when blatant racial codes have given way to the subtler
racism of a post-Southern Strategy era, Obama finds his
historic presidential bid bogged down by the new racial codes
being engineered by the Clinton and McCain campaigns-and the
mainstream media. Responses to the Sean Bell verdict will surely
provide new codes, more political and racial fodder to those
who won’t let the Jeremiah Wright scandal rest; those
who seem to make racialized remarks involving Obama right before
big primary votes; those who appeal to white fear among voters
by linking Obama to fabricated images of black anger.
Obama’s
attempts to speak about real black anger during his Philadelphia
speech appear to have been not well received if the media’s
ongoing obsession with Jeremiah Wright is any indicator. Failure
to use his rhetorical gifts to speak forcefully to and about
real black and non-black anger about the Sean Bell verdict may
re-animate doubts about commitment to that part of his base
that is not white middle and working class.
Beyond
Obama, all of us need to raise our voices and point at the abyss
of our country’s institutional racism as was painfully
and transparently reflected in the Sean Bell verdict. We might
want to start by pushing Obama, Clinton and McCain-and the mainstream
media- to speak honestly and continually about what the 50 bullets
in Sean Bell say about justice in the 50 states of our tattered
and bloodied union.
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator Roberto Lovato is a contributing
Associate Editor with New America Media. He is also a frequent
contributor to The Nation and his work has
appeared in the Los Angeles Times,
Salon, Der Spiegel, Utne Magazine, La Opinion, and other
national and international media outlets. Prior to becoming
a writer, Roberto was the Executive Director of the Central
American Resource Center (CARECEN), then the country’s
largest immigrant rights organization. Click
here to contact him or via his Of América
blog.