Now
we have the Coffee Party which I suppose is a liberal counterpart
to the Tea Party that emerged in the Washington, DC area by folks
led by Annabel Park a documentary film maker who was horrified by
the ugly, menacing and anti-government spirit of the Tea Party crowd
that emerged to disrupt the flow of civil discussion about important
issues.� I�ve been asking, where are the folks who voted for Barack
Obama, believing in Hope and Change and pinning for a new post-Bush,
post-Conservative America.�
Well,
many of the ground troops of the Obama movement that were responsible
for its grass roots organizing were young adults who went back to
school, back to their professional desks or somewhere back to their
normal pursuits, but away from politics.� In their de-mobilization,
they left the field open to the crazies who have mounted a movement
not designed to be a force for change, but for the status quo and
even for retrogression, wanting to �take back America� from a future
they fear. Organizing for Change, the organization created as the
repository of the Obama campaign, has largely been ineffective in
my evaluation and David Plouffe, its head and Obama�s campaign manager,
has recently gone into the White House.��
So,
what is developing is a discussion at the level of communities across
the country about the role of government and the Tea Party and now
the Coffee Party are instruments of civic organizing in this process.�
The Republican party seems to be attempting to grab hold of the
Tea Party movement and turn it into an election day force against
Democrats vulnerable to elections in this cycle,�� At this point,
the Coffee party has not come that far and the Democratic party
has not made its move.�
Where
does this put blacks?� There is a healthy discussion going on in
the black community about the role of President Obama and his responsibility,
or the lack of it, to the Black community but with the exception
of Tavis Smiley for all the folks who believe that they have to
make him accountable to a black agenda, they have not yet put a
mechanism on the ground to do it.��
There
has been a long discussion about the efficacy of a Black political
party and many years ago, I joined Ron Daniels and others in an
attempt to create one.� The irony of that experiment was while half
of the people attracted to the idea wanted it to serve as a power-base
for elections, others wanted to only exist as a grass roots organizing
tool.� It eventually split apart along those lines.�
Today,
it is clear, however, that beyond the general discussion about accountability,
there needs to be not only a place where you get down to the �nuts
and bolts� about exactly who should be accountable about what, but
how to develop effective methodologies of tactics and strategies
to achieve it.� Thus, whether you call it a party or a posse doesn�t
matter, the point is that there is a necessity to mobilize to achieve
the ends people are talking about.�
A
Black party could enable the discussion about accountability to
focus on the cabinet agencies where the Federal budget exist to
achieve some of the things needed by the black community.� Some
of the specific programs being rolled out around jobs and a new
focus on home foreclosure and etc. look good, but others such as
�race to the top� as an educational program looks questionable to
me � and the issue is that few of these programs across the board
have been developed with the vigorous input and engagement of those
for whom the programs are supposed to be designed.
A
Black party could also monitor and engage local initiatives more
effectively.�� Where the rubber meets the road is in the local communities
and there, mayors, county officials, state legislators and others
presumably have some idea of what it takes to make black communities
whole, what resources are addressed to that task and what is lacking.�
A mobilized force could assist in this task of projecting community
needs and monitoring whether or to what extent they are met.��
What
I am suggesting has been happening to some extent with the vigilance
of our Civil Rights organizations, the Institute of the Black World
21st Century and the action of progressive black officials at the
national, state and local levels.� However, there should be a greater
role for citizen engagement and a Black party mechanism could be
the key.� What we are witnessing is the rush of media attention
to these movements, a dynamic that gives them power and places our
interests farther and farther into the background.� Mobilizing would
give us the power to regain the footing to address the truth of
our condition.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Dr. Ron Walters,PhD is a Political
Analyst, Author and Professor Emeritus of the University of Maryland,
College Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity) (University
of Michigan Press). Click here to
contact Dr. Walters. |