Virginia and
the rest of the old South always voted for Democrats for president
when the Democratic party stood for racism, and for Republicans
when the Republican party stood for racism, until tonight. Virginia
just voted for a Democrat for president, while the Republican party
still carries the banner of racism. In fact, the Republican candidates
played up their racism more this year than in other recent elections.
In addition, the Democratic candidate was black. It’s a new South.
Virginia
is now a blue state, as is Florida, and at
the time I wrote this it looked likely that North Carolina would be, too. Other new blue states are: Ohio,
Iowa, Colorado, New
Mexico, and Nevada. Other
undecided states that used to be red are: Indiana,
Missouri, Montana, and
Alaska. It’s a whole new
map.
Of
course, nothing is that black and white. Barack Obama’s father was
black and his mother white, so we call him black. When 51 percent
of a state votes for a party, we apply that label to the state.
Virginia voted 52 to 48
for Obama, and at the same time voted 64 to 35 for Mark Warner for
Senate. Warner is a Democrat, but a white one. According to exit
polls, only 41 percent of white Virginians backed Obama, and 20
percent of whites said race was a factor in their decision to back
McCain. Meanwhile 40 percent of blacks said that race was a factor
in their decision to back Obama, which 91 percent of blacks did.
What put Obama over in Virginia was not the end of racism, but the end of support for George
W. Bush, of whom 72 percent of voters said they disapproved. At
the time I wrote this, North
Carolina was too close to call for president, but had elected a
white Democratic senator by a margin of 53 to 44 percent. And 71
percent of North Carolina
voters said they disapproved of George W. Bush.
Here
in Virginia’s Fifth District, we’ve long been misrepresented by one of
Congress’s most aggressive racists, Virgil Goode. Tonight I was
present for the victory speech of his Democratic challenger, Tom
Perriello. But the vote was so close that Goode may challenge the
outcome. At best, I guess we should say that Virginia
is purple. Like the nation as a whole, Virginia
pulled off an election in which the presidential outcome matched
the exit polls and the popular vote and did not have to be decided
by lawyers. But there were 863 polling place problems reported to
Election Protection, and many voters in the Fifth District voted
on DRE machines, which means that no recount of their votes will
be possible.
Obama
has an even more militarist and corporatist platform than Bill Clinton,
and yet the past eight years have made Obama seem like, and be,
a dramatic change for the better. We should celebrate, and the world
will join us in celebrating, the defeat of the party of Bush and
Cheney. And yet we cannot celebrate having allowed them to remain
in office for eight full years. We need to push now to impeach them
and to prosecute them for their crimes. Restoring the rule of law
to the White House in that way will have a bigger impact on the
behavior of future presidents than any election. While unity and
bipartisanship sound pleasant, they should not become justifications
for lawlessness.
The
Democrats, come January, will hold the White House and sizable majorities
in the House and Senate, including a filibuster-proof 60 seats or
very close to it in the Senate. (And Republican senators from states
with Democratic governors could be given cabinet positions, and
the District of Columbia
could be given one or more senators.) The Republican party may be
on the way out of existence. The question is what we can make of
the Democrats, what we can persuade them to do. If they are truly
democrats with a small d, they will have a lot to accomplish and
almost no excuses not to do so.
They
can begin with the positive steps advocated by Obama during his
campaign: afterdowningstreet.org
We can build on those advances by insisting on more decisive measures
to shift our resources from war to peace and green energy. We can
start now by lobbying the president elect to hire and appoint as
his staff and administration, individuals who represent change we
can believe in.
Click
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on the BC Readers' Corner Blog
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, David Swanson, is co-founder of the AfterDowningStreet.org
coalition and a board member of Progressive Democrats of America. His website is www.davidswanson.org. Click
here
to contact Mr. Swanson. |