When
California governor, Gavin Newsom, woke up on Wednesday, September
15, 2021, I hope he fell to his knees and said, “Thank you,
God, thank you, Black women.” To be sure, there are many others
to thank, from the energized Chicanx/Latinx community to the
Democrats who surged to the polls at the last minute. Some of the
more prominent who thronged to his side were Black women, including
Vice President Kamala Harris, Congresswoman Maxine Waters, California
Board of Equalization member Malia Cohen. Others include grassroots
women whose names you’ll never know but whose work was
invaluable. They had get-out-the-vote drives. Street fairs. Voter
awareness events in parks and playgrounds. They were determined that
the recall effort would fail and even more determined when talk show,
host Larry Elder, jumped into the race as the conservative favorite.
Those
who worked for Governor Newsom weren’t necessarily his biggest
fans, but they appreciated all his work to develop a progressive
agenda. They enjoyed his appointment of Dr. Shirley Weber as
Secretary of State. They appreciated his support of Vice President
Harris and President Biden. Despite his flaws and unforced errors,
they appreciated his leadership on covid matters (like the French
Laundry debacle). And they turned up and turned out, although with
laggardness that put the outcome of the recall in doubt, especially
in mid-August when Elder was polling very close to Newsom.
Democrats
ought to be ashamed that things got that close. In a state that has
twice as many Democrats as Republicans, there should never have been
a question about the outcome of the vote. Frankly, there never should
have been a recall election. But if Republicans can’t get their
way the old-fashioned way (by winning), they’ll try the
renegade way by stealing. So we were treated to allegation after
allegation of voter fraud before a single ballot had been counted. We
heard reports that some partisan poll-watchers were aggressively
challenging voter signatures in the name of preventing fraud.
Republicans have been able to gain all these advantages because
Democrats, in a word, have been sleeping.
President
Joe Biden would be the first to assert that Black women made a
difference in the 2020 election. Women like LaTasha Brown, Melanie
Campbell, Barbara Arnwine, and so many others crisscrossed the
country, urging people to get out and vote. Sometimes it wasn’t
an easy case to make. President Biden has been in public office long
enough to have a record that energizes some and causes others to
cringe. Too many Black men (around one in six) believed the hype and
voted for Trump. As hard as that is to understand, it is reasonable
to note that Black people are not a monolith, and we don’t vote
in lockstep. That makes the Republican embrace of arch-conservative
Larry Elder (he would have given reparations to slave owners) all the
more cynical.
Some
Republicans see Elder as the new face of conservatism. Others see him
as a Black man who can hoodwink Black people into voting against
their interests. One critic described him as “white supremacy
in Blackface”. She was kind.
Elder
is coyly considering a gubernatorial run against Newsom in 2022. He
may have some momentum, having garnered 46 percent of the votes to
replace Newsom, but given that Californians soundly rejected the
recall effort, will he have the numbers? His 46 percent of the 37
percent who voted in favor of the recall amounts to a paltry 14
percent or just one in seven votes. The California recall process
distorts both the voting outcome and Elder’s relative
unimportance.
Still,
Elder isn’t going anywhere. The popular talk-radio host is
likely to use his electoral experience to expand his audience and
ratings. And with the help of Fox, he may multiply his base. There is
little or nothing that Democrats can do about Larry Elder, but there
is plenty that we can do about pushing a Democratic agenda.
Democrats, just do your work. Organize, strategize, keep the momentum
going. Stop thinking that you have to “play nice” with
Republicans because they sure ain’t playing nice with you. If
you care about health care, education, clean air and water, economic
justice, call it out. And if you care about the political space in
which we live, say thank you to the Black women who helped make it
happen.
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