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December 10, 2009 - Issue 354 |
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Obama Rejects Special Needs of the Black
Community |
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It was somewhat painful to write the above headline since I, along with 16 million blacks who voted for Barack Obama, did so partly on the strength of the belief that he would indeed understand and take seriously the needs of the black community. Such headlines are sweeping the country depicting his response to the Congressional Black Caucus�s (CBC) challenge to his economic policies. Last month Rep. Maxine
Waters (CA) led ten of her CBC colleagues to vote against the Financial
Services Bill coming out of committee. Their opposition was based on the
clamor from heads of a large segment of the black economy: auto dealers,
bankers, accountants, businesspersons, broadcasters and others who cannot
get credit from banks and financial agencies � even those owned by the
In an interview with Justin
Hyde of the Detroit Free Press and Richard Wolfe of USA Today,
President Obama was asked about the charges of the CBC and he said: �The
most important thing I can do for the African American community is the
same thing I can do for the American community, period, and that is get
the economy going again and get people hiring again.� Then he continued,
�I think it�s a mistake to start thinking in terms of particular ethnic
segments of the But there is a gross contradiction at the heart of his statement. If it is �mistake� to think about ethnic segments of the country in his governance, then why did he sign an executive order mandating that heads of executive agencies affect consultation with Indian tribal governments, or sign an executive order mandating the increased participation of Asians and Pacific Islanders in federal programs, or say in a speech to the Hispanic Caucus this year that when their unemployment number reached over 10% that was not just a problem for Hispanics, �it was a problem for the nation.� No such statement has been made by the White House about the 15.7% rate of official black unemployment. Indeed, if Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Clinton had felt that considering ethnicity in governance was a �mistake� what would be the character of black progress? The issue here is that these presidents did not deal with African American issues out of the goodness of their own hearts, but because there was a national crisis that called for it, or because blacks pushed them to the wall. The latter has been one of the routine answers to the question of whether President Obama would deal earnestly with problems faced by the black community, given that many whites expected that he would conduct his administration by handing out favors to them. No doubt, Obama feels he must guard against that in order to maintain white votes, but it puts blacks in a box, the only route out of which is to �make him do it.� The integrity of black political participation and the security of the black community demand a president who is responsive to their needs in exchange for the 97% investment in his presidency. His stated governing philosophy should also mean that the celebration is over and that we must make clear to him that we will not be taken for granted and we will not willingly be subject to the spoils of a trickle-down economic strategy that will take years to rehabilitate our communities. So, I think that since none of the members of the CBC, nor black economists, nor the Black Civil Rights leaders were invited to the White House Jobs Summit that in the month of January in honor of the defiant spirit of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the Congressional Black Caucus should host one and invite the people who should be there to affect a bottom up, urgent strategy. The President has thrown down the gauntlet; black leadership must pick it up. BlackCommentator.com Editorial
Board member, Dr. Ron Walters, is the Distinguished Leadership Scholar,
Director of the African American Leadership Center and Professor of Government
and Politics at the University of Maryland College Park. His latest book
is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity)
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