When
Artur Davis, savvy member of the Congressional Black Caucus,
filed to run for Governor of the State of Alabama it provoked
one of the biggest head-scratching discussions among Blacks
in Washington, DC.�� Was he smoking something they mused,�
was it a case of unmitigated arrogance for which politicians
are too well� known, or was it just a case of taking the
new ideology of post-racialism for a ride in one of the
toughest arenas in the country?�
Davis
answered this question by crafting a campaign strategy that
was designed to appeal to general election voters.� The
first sign of this was his decision to vote against President
Barack Obama�s health care plan, the only member of the
Black Caucus to do so.� Then, gearing up for the primary
election, he proceeded to reject the endorsement of powerful
Black organizations in Alabama, such as the New South Coalition
and the Alabama Democratic Conference, both of which proceeded
to endorse Davis� white opponent, Agriculture Commissioner
Ron Sparks.�� Sparks had criticized some of Davis� votes,
including his vote against the health care bill, otherwise,
he was a convenient foil.
Sparks
won the primary (63-37%) by a crushing margin of thirty
points or nearly 80,000 votes, a resounding defeat for Davis
and a strategy that was unrealistic from Jump Street.��
Why?� Alabama is not now and never has been ready for post-racial
anything.�� Several years ago, I had the pleasure of working
with Joe Reed, head of the Alabama Democratic Conference
and also head of the State teachers union, along with some
Black members of the Alabama State Legislature.� I was very
impressed with the fact that they knew where they were,
what they faced and practiced a realistic racial politics.
Davis
had designed a flawed strategy that flew in the face of
the reality that blacks live with in Alabama every day.��
So, not only did it violate political reality by rejecting
the Black vote which was half of the Democratic primary
election vote in that state,� but the social reality of
a mythical �coalition� that was supposed to move past race
never materialized.� Maybe it would have worked in the Northeastern
part of the country, but not Alabama.� Davis should have
taken a lesson from the mayoral campaigns of David Dinkins
or Harold Washington, or Doug Wilder�s election as Governor
of Virginia and other blacks who ran for citywide or statewide
offices where blacks were in the minority.� They also had
the necessity to build outward from their base to achieve
interracial political coalitions but did not decide to junk
the Black vote in the process and go for the white vote
hoping that some blacks would follow and build a coalition.�
Barack Obama, also dependent on a multi-racial campaign
strategy, appealed strongly for the Black vote in places
like South Carolina, Pennsylvania and others.
But
most important, when I think about the legacy of struggle
that Black people in Alabama waged for the right to vote,
even if Davis were to have gone all the way and won election
as Governor, that legacy would have been devalued.� Is that
a post-racial event to be proud of?� Sometimes, it isn�t
whether you win or loose, but how.
I
am proud of the way in which Blacks in Alabama used their
vote to restore their sense of power over part of the political
process in that State.� At the end of the day, politics
also asks a question more fundamentally than perhaps any
other profession, �what do you stand for?�� If a Black candidate�s
only answer is that one wants power with no connection to
the historical legacy that allowed him or her to stand for
office and to win, then perhaps the project was not worth
supporting in the first place.� I say this because of the
tendency of post-racial politics to down-play the legacy
of Africa American history as though it is no longer relevant.�
Given that, if such candidates are successful in their pursuit
of elected office, there is no hint of predictability about
whether their power will be used to deal with the unfinished
agenda of Black inclusion in American society.�
Ultimately,
one wished Davis could have become Governor of Alabama,
but not at this price.� This result is a huge nail in the
coffin of the new post-racial political phenomenon, described
as the next big thing by authors such as Gwen Ifill, PBS
television anchor, in her new book, The Breakthrough:
Politics and Race in the Age of Obama.�� This election
shows that it is bound to fail if it does not follow the
first rule of politics, the nature of the constituency is
fundamental and the science of campaigning for office is
about choosing the right numbers to form a winning coalition
within that base.
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. |