(ThyBlackMan.com) Most racial, ethnic, religious, and political groups in the United States vote for people who appear to represent their best interests. Yet, when African Americans do the same thing, many people seem surprised – including some Blacks.
Blacks realize what is at stake in this election and have ignored the naysayers who thought just because Barack Obama’s name is not on the ballot this year, Blacks would stay home. Not only are they not staying home, we’re seeing in the Southern states – where more than half of all African Americans live – that Blacks are voting in record numbers.
African Americans in South Carolina got the Clinton juggernaut rolling.
As the New York Times observed, “She has won South Carolina in a rout, 73.5 percent to 26 percent, exceeding Mr. Obama’s own 29-point victory in 2008. She did it the same way that Mr. Obama did: with overwhelming support from black voters, who favored Mrs. Clinton over Bernie Sanders by a stunning margin of 87 to 13, according to updated exit polls – a tally that would be larger than Mr. Obama’s victory among black voters eight years earlier. Black voters represented 62 percent of the electorate, according to exit polls, even higher than in 2008.”
No, they weren’t “feeling the Bern” in South Carolina.
Nor were they feeling it on Super Tuesday in the six states where Blacks have an above-average share of the Democratic vote – Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Virginia, Arkansas and Texas.
Bernie Sanders chose to campaign in five states with a higher proportion of White voters: Colorado, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Oklahoma and Vermont, his home state.
Clinton holds a commanding lead in delegates and after the voting on Super Tuesday, Louisiana on March 5 and March 15 contests in Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, and Ohio, she could amass so many delegates that Sanders will be left with no viable option except to end his long-shot candidacy.
Being for Hillary Clinton did not mean Blacks were against Sanders. As I have noted in this space, both Democratic candidates have A-ratings on civil rights. Each would appoint Supreme Court justices in the mold of Thurgood Marshall rather than Clarence Thomas. And each is attuned to the many issues facing Black Americans, including income inequality, unemployment, and a deeply flawed criminal justice system.
The difference is that Hillary Clinton has a long relationship with Blacks, doing civil rights work in the South and going to work for the Children’s Defense Fund after graduating from law school. Bernie Sanders claim to fame is that he joined Dr. King and other civil rights leaders in the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
That was nearly 53 years ago. More than half of all African Americans were born after the March on Washington. To them, the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s is as remote as the Civil War of the 1860s.
Vermont is less than 2 percent Black. It hasn’t helped that major Black leaders there say they have been invisible to Sanders.
One of Hillary Clinton’s problems is that she gets blamed for the actions of her husband when he was president. He and Vice President Al Gore were instrumental in moving the Democratic Party more to the right prior to his election and his policies on mandatory sentencing and so-called welfare reform were harmful to many African Americans. She gets the blame for his failures as well as the esteem in which many Blacks still hold Bill Clinton.
But this race is not about the past – it’s primarily about the future. And there is no more important issue awaiting the new president than appointing at least two, possibly three, Supreme Court justices. But to do that, one must first get elected. Again, Black voters feel that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has a better chance of getting elected than Bernie Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist.
Written by George E. Curry
Official website; http://www.georgecurry.com
Older Blacks are voting for Clinton, but younger Blacks are voting for Bernie.
Bernie started his political career leading the fight to integrate schools in Chicago, and he’s never stopped fighting injustice. Hillary has done a lot for us too, but she’s made some serious mistakes. When Hillary Clinton was talking about super predators in the nineties, Bernie was telling Congress we needed to prioritize addressing the injustices that were tearing apart Black neighborhoods.
Bernie also polls better against all Republican candidates than Hillary. It’s disingenuous to say that support for Hillary is rooted in electability without mentioning the evidence suggests otherwise.
A vote for Hillary is a vote for Bill Clinton, who by the way, has one of the sharpest political minds in modern political history. To see this, one would only have examine has politics from protesting the Vietnam War by evading the draft, marrying a very smart girl like Hillary, winning the governorship of Arkansas of all places, going on late night television with sun glasses playing the tenor sax, branding himself the first Black President while helping to create the For Profit prison system, opening our borders to unsafe trucks and drivers in the name of free trade, escaping impeachment, endearing himself to African -Americans by setting up his post term headquarters on in Harlem NYC. I would not liken him to Bernie Madoff, who is a brilliant man on his own right. That is why I say a vote for Hillery is a vote for Bill. My vote goes to Bernie Sanders