Over
the last few weeks, Republican Party Presidential Nominee,
Newt Gingrich, has found a way to make himself relevant
again. Not to the Republican Party, because are trying to
find a way to sink him. Newt has become relevant to the
always dysfunctional (and uncomfortable) race discourse
in this nation.
This
time around Newt is trying to explain the class divide in
America by constructing an hypothesis around who attracts
wealth and who doesn’t, and why. Newt says Blacks and Latinos
don’t understand how to attract wealth. He says Asians do.
Newt
suggests that it is somehow a racial work ethics problem
and if blacks would just let go of welfare, their lives
would change forever. Really?? This follows his analysis
- if you can call it that - around how black men can find
work by simply picking up a broom. Newt has a skewed perspective
on race. Always have. And he has this thing about wealth
being tied to black people. Welfare is not a “black thang”
or a “Latino thang.”
Whites
statistically have more people receiving welfare, but Blacks
and Latinos have a greater percentage of recipients per
their percentage in the population. That’s how he gets away
with that. Newt knows that welfare resonates with the struggling
middle class in this country. This time around, instead
of attacking people on welfare - his tact to suggest how
people can get off welfare while assailing President Obama
as the “Welfare President.” Newt is quick with it, and he
is slick with it. He has made an art of trying to intellectualize
racism…for political advantage, of course.
In
the 1990s, after the Republicans took over the House of
Representatives for the first time in 50 years, Newt led
the 1994 “takeover” with a people’s mandate to reduce government
spending. Called the “Contract on America,” Newt led an
anti-taxation, anti-affirmative action, anti-welfare platform
that pushed then President Bill Clinton to the wall on welfare
reform. It played Clinton’s two largest support bases, poor
black and middle whites against each other. Congress passed
the Welfare Reform Act of 1995 and Clinton, facing re-election,
was forced to sign it. Gingrich won. Clinton lost. The “welfare
to work” job training aspect of the legislation was largely
a failure, producing fewer jobs than the Republicans give
Obama credit for creating. It contributed to the explosion
of homeless in the African American community, but it was
by and large ignored.
The
fate of the poor continues to be ignored by Congress today.
For those people who have become staunch poverty advocates
and wonder why the poor are ignored, you only have to look
as far as Newt Gingrich. He is the one who intellectualized
racism by codifying race. Poor translated to almost exclusively
black, as did welfare. “Urban” translated to wherever blacks
lived, so money and resources where diverted away from the
poor and urban areas.
What
we know about African Americans is that they don’t have
the same access to capital as even poor or middle class
whites do, largely because of the stigmas and codes that
have been put in place by the leader of the new school of
racism, Newt Gingrich.
As
a Presidential candidate, he is reintroducing that same
codified rhetoric into the President’s race. His term for
Obama as Welfare President is a code. Every time he says
“Welfare President,” he is seeking to remind his base, and
others to never forget that there is a “Black President”.
We know Newt Gingrich…the intellectual racist. And we know
what he is doing by continuing to stigmatize African Americans.
By
intellectualizing racism, he is leaving his signature card
with Americans that still have a race problem with Obama.
We can’t let it work.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing
director of the
Urban Issues Forum
and author of
Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com. Twitter @dranthonysamad. Click
here
to contact Dr. Samad.
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