When Hillary Clinton invoked the 1968 assassination
of Robert F. Kennedy as a justification for staying in the
2008 Democratic presidential race, she revealed how desperate
she has become.
“My husband did not wrap up the nomination
in 1992 until he won the California primary somewhere in the
middle of June, right? We all remember Bobby Kennedy was assassinated
in June in California. I don't understand it,” she said in
an interview with the editorial board of the Argus Leader
in Sioux Falls, S.D. Although some would chalk up her comment
to fatigue or a lack of sleep, Clinton had similarly invoked
the slain senator several times in recent months.
Talking assassination is serious business.
Throughout the world and throughout history, the assassin’s
bullet has made martyrs of positive change agents. The bullet
has stopped leaders of democratic movements, and often those
movements themselves, in their tracks. The names Gandhi, Biko,
Lumumba, Allende, Rabin and Sadat are just several that come
to mind.
And in the United States, a number of truth
tellers and change agents have been assassinated, figures
such as Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Fred Hampton, and Medgar
Evers. The FBI under J. Edgar Hoover had a policy of preventing
the rise of a “Black messiah,” a matter of public record rather
than urban legend or some wild-eyed conspiracy theory. Lovers
of freedom are aware of the damage done to this nation because
these individuals are no longer among us, taken from us before
their time, before their work was completed, through violence
and hatred.
To be a high-profile, charismatic leader of
color in America is to find oneself under the gun, in a figurative
and a literal sense. Sen. Obama and his family have received
death
threats, causing him to
receive Secret Service protection earlier than any presidential
candidate. Meanwhile Obama’s foot soldiers have experienced
the full brunt of racial epithets, defamation, bomb threats
and vandalism throughout the inhospitable underbelly of this
nation. For Clinton to make light of this American reality
- and to contemplate the assassination of her Democratic rival,
an African American, as a political tactic - is to demonstrate
a level of instability, insensitivity and cold-heartedness
which belies, even betrays, her qualifications for the office
which she seeks.
For the Clintons, it has been a long journey
to the bottom of the barrel. It all started with Clinton’s
“kitchen-sink” strategy to “mess up” her rival, Sen. Barack
Obama, and render him unelectable.
The Clinton
camp played the race card in a manner that would have made
any Jim Crow politician blush. From the start, President Clinton
did his part to stoke the fires of racial division in the
South Carolina primary by comparing Obama to Jesse Jackson.
At
the same time, Sen. Clinton downplayed Martin Luther King’s
role in the passage of civil rights legislation. This led
to the
revocation of the Clintons’ Black pass, and the exodus
of Black voters to Obama. In an attempt to woo White voters,
Sen. Clinton further disrespected African American voters
by denouncing
and scape-goating Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Obama’s pastor.
Meanwhile, as BlackCommentator.com reported in its
April 20, 2008 special investigative report, Senator
Hillary Clinton Must Explain the Praising of a Group of KKK
Supporters, in the 1990s President Bill Clinton expressed
his support for the United Daughters of the Confederacy, a
White supremacist organization that Hillary Clinton has yet
to denounce. And Sen. Clinton won West Virginia and Kentucky
by exploiting racism and appealing to what she referred to
as “working,
hard-working Americans, white Americans.”
But
none of this could stop Obama. The Clinton camp tried to change
the measure of success in the Democratic primaries, and manufactured
all sorts of metrics, aside from the metric that really counts,
the number of delegates, to define victory. Counting the votes
in Michigan and Florida, states that were penalized by the
Democrats for breaking party rules and holding early primaries,
became a cause célèbre and civil rights issue for Clinton.
This, despite her promise not to campaign in those states,
a promise made when she was the frontrunner and thought she
would win the nomination in February 2008.
It
is not surprising to many observers that when all else failed,
and there was no other way to catch up with Obama in the delegate
count, Clinton’s strategy was to wait it out, hoping that
something bad would happen to Obama to render him ineligible
and otherwise unavailable for consideration for the presidency.
Apparently, hoping for the demise of her opponent was part
of the Clintonian calculus.
And Clinton’s latest assassination
comments further reveal the contradictions regarding her candidacy.
She cannot have it both ways. Hillary Clinton cannot claim
to be a feminist whose candidacy has fallen victim to misogyny,
yet
engage in raw, unabashed appeals to white-skin solidarity,
and endorse military aggression against innocent women and
children in Iraq and Iran. Red meat, testosterone and
hubris dressed in a pants suit do not equate to feminism.
Touting her civil rights record while waiting
for her Black opponent to be slain, Clinton does nothing but
debase the public discourse and show her true colors. It suggests
an unhealthy desire for power at all costs, and at the very
least, a sore loser with sour grapes over a poorly-run campaign.
Most of all, it suggests that Clinton has a
lot on her mind these days, and no good can come out of what
she has been thinking.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, David A. Love, JD, is a lawyer and
journalist based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to the
Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service,
In These Times and
Philadelphia Independent Media
Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention, and Prisons
(St. Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a former Amnesty International
UK spokesperson, organized the first national police brutality
conference as a staff member with the Center for Constitutional
Rights, and served as a law clerk to two Black federal judges.
His blog is davidalove.com. Click
here
to contact Mr. Love.