The
following interview with Rev. Al Sharpton took place at the presidential
candidate’s New York City offices.
Playboy: Almost
every press report says you are not taken seriously as a presidential
candidate. Why?
Al Sharpton: I think that is the media. Most polls have me in the middle.
The guys behind me take me seriously, and the guys ahead of me take me seriously
because we are gaining momentum. And if I do a sizeable vote, which I certainly
will, they are going to have to deal with that. I think it's wishful thinking
on the part of some of the mainstream media. I think they are being dismissive
of people on the left in general, particularly people of color. The good
news is that because they do that, they are going to wake up shocked when I come in with the vote. I bet a lot of pollsters are going to lose
their jobs when we get finished with these primaries.
PB: If you could look into the future and see that your role in this election
was going to mean George Bush would keep the White House, would you drop
out right now?
AS: If I felt that, yes. But I don't feel that. I feel the opposite. I think
that unless someone can galvanize the kinds of people I can galvanize then
we are going to have a repeat of 2002, 2000, 1998. The swing vote is not
conservative white males. The swing vote is in the young voters in the hip-hop
generation and those older voters who have become disaffected and disillusioned.
And I am the candidate that can most galvanize and attract those voters.
PB: Major aspects of your platform are based on passing constitutional amendments – the
right to a public education of equal high quality, the right to health care
of equal high quality and the ERA. Aren't constitutional amendments a drastic
and ultimately doomed approach?
AS: If you look at the right wing, they have used constitutional arguments
to energize their base – the right to bear arms, prayer in schools. In the
progressive political community we have not talked about permanent change.
As I have campaigned around the country and particularly in the South, people
become energized for permanent change. I think candidates, particularly in
the Democratic Party and on the left, are too shortsighted. We bring people
from election to election, rather than talk about changing the very fabric
of America. The right appeals to people who want to see the fabric of the
country changed. I happen to disagree with their social change, but I think
as an organizing technique, they have been far superior to the progressives
and the left side of the political spectrum. I am not willing to concede
the Bible and the flag to the right. I think that at some point we did and
it was a grave error. At one of the first forums we had as candidates,
some right-to-lifers were marching and a young lady said to me, I am not
only disappointed in you for crossing our picket line and being
pro-choice because you are a candidate, I am disappointed in you as a minister.
And I told her, It is time for the Christian right to meet the right Christians.
PB: One of your main reasons for running deals with the continued need for
affirmative action. What do you say to whites who believe blacks have gotten
preferential treatment long enough?
AS: It's important because we have not achieved an even playing field. And
if the commitment of the nation is to repair damage done, then you do it
until it is repaired. You don't do it for a time cycle and then say, okay
time's up. One of the things I argue with critics of affirmative action is
that you can't say government
should not be involved in repairing damage when government was involved in
doing damage. We're not talking about government correcting something government
didn't do. Blacks were not discriminated against out of cultural habit. This
was law. It was against the law for us to go to certain institutions. It
was against the law for us to have certain jobs. So government must undo
what government did. Isn't it interesting that these same right-wingers feel
we have to repair Iraq and other places where we have done damage? So we
have an obligation to repair our enemies, but we don't have an obligation
to our citizens who built the country?
PB: What is your take on the rumor that Carol Moseley Braun is in the race
to dilute your chances?
AS: I talked to Miss Braun several times last year, and she was talking about
running for her senate seat in Illinois. Then I heard through the media that
she was running for president. So I don't know what motivated her. We'll
see what happens. She certainly has a right to run, but so far, according
to most polls, I am favored by a majority of black voters. So if that was
the strategy, it doesn't seem to be taken well.
PB: Would Jesse Jackson have made a good president?
AS: I think so. I supported him in 1984 and 1988 and worked in the campaigns.
And I think a lot of his ideas ended up influencing the party.
PB: Such as?
AS: Jackson made South Africa a mainstream issue in this country. I remember
in 1984 when he went into the debates, people were saying the [African National
Congress] was a terrorist organization. Jackson made America shift views
on that. [He also] was able to empower a lot of people who would not have
held office. I don't think Doug Wilder would have been governor of Virginia
hadn't Jesse run. Ron Brown certainly
wouldn't have been the chair of the party hadn't Jesse run. Also, a lot of the votes
in the South that Bill Clinton used to win in 1992, Jesse registered in the
1980s.
PB: Let's say you don't get the nomination. What kind of impact do you want
to have on the party?
AS: I want to influence the direction of the party. I think the party has
moved far to the right. I think that is why we have not been effective. This
whole centrist move, which I consider a right move, hasn't worked politically.
Centrists keep saying we can't win without going to the center. Well, they
have been in charge of the party since 1992. It's 11 years later and we have
lost everything. We lost the House in 1994 with Gingrich, and we failed to
regain it in 1996, 1998, 2000 and 2002. How do you lose five Super Bowls
and not say there is something wrong with this coach and this game plan?
Aside from the fact that I don't believe in what they are saying – pro death
penalty, pro business, deregulation, pro NAFTA – politically it hasn't even
worked. They act as though they are outsiders shooting at the inside. They
are the insiders. They have control of the party, and they have failed. They
have put this party on its deathbed.
PB: Wouldn't you be able to help the party more effectively by winning a
seat in Congress, which many people think you can?
AS: I think people ought to serve at the level they feel they can serve.
I can serve nationally. Being in Congress I couldn't affect what I am affecting
nationally. For example, I have been able to handle racial profiling cases
all over this country. Vieques – I couldn't have done any of this as a congressman.
I certainly couldn't have stood with gay and lesbian rights nationally. So
you can't fight a national fight and generate a national movement from a
local seat. Also, if people are honest, there are only three or four nationally
known black political figures anyway. I happen to be one of them. So why
would I take a local seat when there are capable people to do that and there
are not very many people who can do what I do nationally?
PB: Name five African Americans, other than yourself, who could be president
today.
AS: Rev. Jackson. I would say [Clinton advisor] Vernon Jordan could be president.
I would say [Clinton labor secretary] Alexis Herman could be president. I
would say [San Francisco Mayor] Willie Brown could be president. Also [California Rep.]
Maxine Waters and probably [New York Rep.] Charlie Rangel.
PB: Would you be a more viable candidate had the Tawana Brawley affair never
happened?
AS: No. I think that anyone with my politics and profile, if they didn't
raise Brawley, they would raise something else. When you compare some of
the personal issues that they raised on a guy like Clinton, the fact that
I stood up for a young lady for justice, who I believed in, pales in comparison to some of that stuff.
PB: Are you offended that Bill Clinton is called "America's first black
president"?
AS: In humor it's fine. But when we start acting like or inferring that we
should be happy that we already had a president that related to blacks, that's
insulting. If the issue is black inclusion and empowerment, you can't use
Bill Clinton as an answer. If the issue is that he was comfortable among
blacks, fine. But I remember the night before the governor's race in New
York in 2002, all of us were onstage at the Bethel AME Church in Harlem – Clinton,
his wife, Rangel, all of us. And I said, "Senator
Clinton, I want to correct one thing. They keep saying your husband was the
first black president. I intend to be the first black president. Your husband
was the first beige president. There is a difference in being off-white and being black."
PB: If you were elected president, how would the lives of white Americans
change?
AS: Drastically and for the better. One, they would have a president that
would fight to give guaranteed health care to all Americans. That is not
a race problem. It may be more of a problem in places of color, but it is
a problem for all Americans. Second, I would not bring us into war in any
dangerous way, unless our lives were directly threatened and there was no
alternative. Third, I would fight for public education. There are many poor whites who I have met in Pennsylvania, Virginia and in the South who need
the restoration and maintenance of public education as much as people who
are closer to my background. It's something Rev. Jackson used to say: When the boats at the
bottom are lifted, it lifts all boats. I couldn't help my own without helping
everyone else, and I wouldn't be a president just to help my own. I would
be a president for everyone.
PB: You recently said, "You have a party of elephants with donkey overcoats.
There needs to be a progressive wing of the party." So, why even be
a Democrat in this day and age?
AS: I think the party is going to have to answer that. If we generate the
kind of votes and excitement [that I think we will], when we get to Boston,
the party is going to have to decide its direction. This is a classic showdown
of the direction of a political party in the United States. Joe Lieberman
represents one wing of the party, and I think I represent another. I think
Kerry and Dean are somewhere in the middle.
It's something the party is going to have to answer – whether people should continue to believe
this party is open to the ideas of progressive people.
PB: You are opposed to the war in Iraq. Why?
AS: I have said from the beginning I did not believe we were in imminent
danger. I did not believe there were weapons of mass destruction. I think
now it is clear there were not. Imminent means immediate. How do you get
out of a war and four months later say we are still looking for the weapons?
Then how were they an immediate threat? That is ridiculous. It is very important
that we understand that this president, in my opinion, lied to the American
people. He not only lied, he distracted us from going after Al Qaeda and
Bin Laden, who he committed to go after.... I think that it was an absolute
error of judgment and dishonest what Mr. Bush did.
PB: You are the only anti-death penalty presidential candidate. Why, and
do you own a gun?
[BC Note: Playboy.com is
wrong. Rep. Dennis Kucinich not only opposes the death penalty, he
introduced a bill to abolish it: H. R. 2574.]
AS: I don't own a gun. I never have owned a gun, and I have been a victim
of a stabbing. So I am not soft on people assaulting people, but I think
that it is absolutely wrong for the state to kill people. One, we see too
many cases where the state has been proven wrong. Second, it is unfair in
terms of its dispensation along lines of class and race. And third, I think
that it is embarrassing to the Democratic Party that a Republican governor
in Illinois showed more moral standing than any Democratic governor by saying,
Wait a minute, I am going to stop this. I absolutely don't understand how someone
could call himself a progressive and be for the death penalty. We have people
in the race who call themselves progressive who support the death penalty.
It's almost an oxymoron.
PB: Fast forward to the convention. You have won the nomination. Name five
frontrunners for your vice presidential slot.
AS: [New Mexico Gov.] Bill Richardson. Alexis Herman. Willie Brown. I wish
[Minnesota Sen.] Paul Wellstone was still around. I would look at [Ohio Rep.]
Dennis Kucinich, whose politics I respect. And the fifth one? I would probably even
entertain some discussions with somebody like Bob Graham.
PB: Who is more likely to be assassinated – the first Jewish or the first
black president?
AS: I hope neither, but probably the first black.
PB: Why?
AS: Because our high profile leadership has been historically victimized
more by [violence]. I don't underestimate anti-Semitism at all, but given
the historic record, it would seem that we would be more prone to a violent
attack.
PB: Many people said 9/11 was going to break down racial barriers. Have you
seen that?
AS: I think in many ways it did, particularly in the beginning. I saw in
New York a kind of unity and a coming together I never thought I would see.
But I think that Bush et al manipulated it to where it became less than unifying
over a period of time. Those terrorists that attacked the World Trade Center
didn't send an e-mail telling blacks to get out of the building, or Latinos
or Asians. They killed us all as Americans. We all died together. The question
is, can we learn to live together?
PB: What is your take on Schwarzenegger's alleged racist comments?
AS: I am not surprised. Arnold Schwarzenegger is Pete Wilson with biceps.
The irony is that many of the right wingers who say Al Sharpton never held
elective office and therefore shouldn't run for president, want to elect
an actor, who never had a serious thought, as governor. I have been involved
in public policy in the social arena in shaping a lot of this country for
the last quarter of a century. He has been in movies. The difference between
Schwarzenegger as an action man and me as an action man is that the stunt
man doesn't do my hard work. I went to jail and did the marches myself.
PB: Realistically, when do you think we will have the first black president?
Has that person been born yet?
AS: Of course I am going to say that in 2005 Al Sharpton will be inaugurated.
Short of that, I think that yes, that person has been born. I don't think
you make progress when "the nation is ready." You make progress
when people get ready to make the nation ready. The nation wasn't ready for
blacks to come to the front of the bus, but Rosa Parks and Martin King were
ready. Some of us are ready to no longer consider the limitations imposed upon us. And if we are more determined than those we are fighting,
our determination will pay off.
PB: As a former backup singer for James Brown, how would your wife's influence
change the White House and the nation as First Lady?
AS: It would be very soulful and harmonious. She is a great singer and a
great organizer and we would have a lot of fun nights at the White House.
And one thing America needs is a lot more soul.