Obama and Racial Politics

I typically try to avoid race politics, but some occassions require comment. It angers me when people assume I am a racist simply because I am a Republican. Unfortunately, Republicans have been stereotyped as bigots. It’s nothing new, but many Democrats abuse the stereotype, pandering to minorities for votes (despite supporting policies that hinder minorities). Thus, I was very upset to hear Senator, and Presidential hopeful Barack Obama’s comments on race and voting while in New Hampshire. According to The Telegraph, Sen. Obama is quoted as saying:

Later, he downplayed votes could be cast against him due to the color of his skin.

“Are some voters not going to vote for me because I’m African-American? Those are the same voters who probably wouldn’t vote for me because of my politics,” he said.

The undertone is that those who disagree with his politics are typically racists. It is a subtle hint that he believes Republicans to be racist. Suffice it to say that I have plenty of reasons not to vote for him, and none of them are the color of his skin. Rather, it is the quality of his politics (highly pro-aborition, supports a minimum wage increase, will push for Socialized health care, cut-and-run in Iraq, etc…).

Putting aside the facts that the Republicans freed the slaves, passed the Civil Rights act (over a democratic filibuster), and more recently gave us both the first two African-American Secretaries of state and the first Hispanic Attorney General, the youthful Senator is somewhat confused. It’s far more likely that Howard Dean, Hillary Clinton, Robert Byrd, and Joseph Biden would support his politics than would George Bush, John McCain, or the typical Republican, yet recall the many racially insensitive comments made by Dean, Clinton and Biden…and consider that Senator Byrd was a high-ranking Klansmen!

Furthermore, consider the case of so-called “white-flight”, the phenomenon of whites voting for the opposing party when their candidate is black. Contradictory to what Sen. Obama may want you to think, Democrats are more likely to not vote for a candidate because he or she is black. The stereotype of the racist Republican is not only inaccurate, if anything it is Democrats that tend to be racist.

Lastly, consider the following. Before entering politcs Obama stated

he and a black friend would sometimes speak disparagingly “about white folks this or white folks that, and I would suddenly remember my mother’s smile, and the words that I spoke would seem awkward and false.”

As a result, he concluded that “certain whites could be excluded from the general category of our distrust.”

Yet, in his second memoir (after entering politics), his feelings seemed to have changed, stating that “I’ve never had the option of restricting my loyalties on the basis of race, or measuring my worth on the basis of tribe,” contradicting much of his original memoir.

If Senator Obama doesn’t want race to influence his race, I would suggest he not make it such a large part of his identity, his politics, and his rhetoric.

Cross-Posted at The Gentle Cricket

6 Responses to “Obama and Racial Politics”

  1. Obama and Racial Politics at Conservative Times--Republican GOP news source. Says:

    [...] Original post by thegentlecricket and software by Elliott Back [...]

  2. Unpartisan.com Political News and Blog Aggregator Says:

    Edwards Introduces Plan For Health-Care Coverage…

    Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards yesterday issued a blueprint aimed at providing heal…

  3. Lore loves pictures Says:

    Yes I agree, Obama is great, but I think he is too young to be president.

    Thank you for sharing this story with me !

  4. SamwiseGamgee1984 Says:

    First, congratulations on such a well-written article. I read it on Reuters, which means that your words have reached an incredibly wide audience.

    It’s too bad that its major premise is a rather large logical fallacy.

    Regarding the very first quote you cited by Sen. Obama, you seem to have incorrectly paraphrased his comments as, “All Republicans are racist,” when what he really said was, “Racists are more likely to vote Republican”. An easily made semantic mistake, to be sure, but a rather large one in terms of meaning.

    Also, if anyone else bothered to click the link to the second citation in your article, they’d read that Republicans as well as Democrats will vote for the other party’s candidate if they are of the same race. While you are correct in saying that some Democrats unfairly paint themselves as the “race-friendly” candidate, the Washington Post article merely says that there is still a long way to go in eliminating race as a factor in people’s political beliefs - a goal which should be held by both parties.

  5. 123beta Says:

    Obama and Racial Politics…

    I typically try to avoid race politics, but some occasions require comment. It angers me when people assume……

  6. African American Political Pundit»Blog Archive » “Black/African descent” or “Other” Says:

    [...] Is the California Conservative right? If Senator Obama doesn’t want race to influence his race, should Obama not make race such a large part of his identity, his politics, and his rhetoric. Or is his advisers taking control of his conversation? [...]

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