Hillary
Clinton loves black people. And black people love Hillary—or so it seems. Black
politicians have lined up in droves to endorse her, eager to prove their
loyalty to the Clintons in the hopes that their faithfulness will be remembered
and rewarded. Black pastors are opening their church doors, and the Clintons
are making themselves comfortably at home once again, engaging effortlessly in
all the usual rituals associated with “courting the black vote,” a pursuit that
typically begins and ends with Democratic politicians making black people feel
liked and taken seriously. Doing something concrete to improve the conditions
under which most black people live is generally not required.
Hillary
is looking to gain momentum on the campaign trail as the primaries move out of
Iowa and New Hampshire and into states like South Carolina, where large pockets
of black voters can be found. According to some polls, she leads Bernie Sanders
by as much as 60 percent among African Americans. It seems that we—black
people—are her winning card, one that Hillary is eager to play.
And
it seems we’re eager to get played. Again.
The
love affair between black folks and the Clintons has been going on for a long
time. It began back in 1992, when Bill Clinton was running for president. He
threw on some shades and played the saxophone on The Arsenio Hall Show.
It seems silly in retrospect, but many of us fell for that. At a time when a
popular slogan was “It’s a black thing, you wouldn’t understand,” Bill Clinton
seemed to get us. When Toni Morrison dubbed him our first black president, we
nodded our heads. We had our boy in the White House. Or at least we thought we
did.
Black
voters have been remarkably loyal to the Clintons for more than 25 years. It’s
true that we eventually lined up behind Barack Obama in 2008, but it’s a
measure of the Clinton allure that Hillary led Obama among black voters until
he started winning caucuses and primaries. Now Hillary is running again. This
time she’s facing a democratic socialist who promises a political revolution
that will bring universal healthcare, a living wage, an end to rampant Wall
Street greed, and the dismantling of the vast prison state—many of the same
goals that Martin Luther King Jr. championed at the end of his life. Even so,
black folks are sticking with the Clinton brand.
What
have the Clintons done to earn such devotion? Did they take extreme political
risks to defend the rights of African Americans? Did they courageously stand up
to right-wing demagoguery about black communities? Did they help usher in a new
era of hope and prosperity for neighborhoods devastated by deindustrialization,
globalization, and the disappearance of work?
When
Bill Clinton ran for president in 1992, urban black communities across America
were suffering from economic collapse. Hundreds of thousands of manufacturing
jobs had vanished as factories moved overseas in search of cheaper labor, a new
plantation. Globalization and deindustrialization affected workers of all
colors but hit African Americans particularly hard. Unemployment rates among
young black men had quadrupled as the rate of industrial employment plummeted.
Crime rates spiked in inner-city communities that had been dependent on factory
jobs, while hopelessness, despair, and crack addiction swept neighborhoods that
had once been solidly working-class. Millions of black folks—many of whom had
fled Jim Crow segregation in the South with the hope of obtaining decent work
in Northern factories—were suddenly trapped in racially segregated, jobless
ghettos.
On
the campaign trail, Bill Clinton made the economy his top priority and argued
persuasively that conservatives were using race to divide the nation and divert
attention from the failed economy. In practice, however, he capitulated
entirely to the right-wing backlash against the civil-rights movement and
embraced former president Ronald Reagan’s agenda on race, crime, welfare, and
taxes—ultimately doing more harm to black communities than Reagan ever did.
Read the entire piece.
http://www.thenation.com/article/hillary-clinton-does-not-deserve-black-peoples-votes/
http://www.thenation.com/article/hillary-clinton-does-not-deserve-black-peoples-votes/
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We
should have seen it coming. Back then, Clinton was the standard-bearer for the
New Democrats, a group that firmly believed the only way to win back the
millions of white voters in the South who had defected to the Republican Party
was to adopt the right-wing narrative that black communities ought to be
disciplined with harsh punishment rather than coddled with welfare. Reagan had
won the presidency by dog-whistling to poor and working-class whites with coded
racial appeals: railing against “welfare queens” and criminal “predators” and
condemning “big government.” Clinton aimed to win them back, vowing that he
would never permit any Republican to be perceived as tougher on crime than he.
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