Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

Hi, I'm Jill Tubman, a thirty-something living on the East Coast. On my blog, Jack and Jill Politics, I talk about politics from the perspective of the increasingly influential Black middle class. You see, I didn't grow up on the mean streets of East L.A. or East Harlem. Like a lot of people, I grew up in a (relatively) diverse and prosperous suburb, post-integration. MyDD has invited me to offer you a roundup of the week's notable events at the intersection of minorities and politics.

This week, it's almost as if the Republicans got among their usual talking points -- "say something racist, semi-factual and offensive to many, preferably involving Islamofascism." Only time will tell if the "war on brown people" strategy will be effective with their conservative base, but playing the race card so bluntly threatens to activate progressive opponents and alienate moderate supporters.

* Sen. Conrad Burns (R-MT), running for re-election in Montana, wins the prize for Republican race-baiting this week. He has recently managed to offend multiple ethnic groups in recent statements. Check out this video which shows him warning more than once that Americans are threatened by a faceless enemy who drives taxis by day and kills at night. Then take the poll -- who's a bigger threat to the U.S.: taxi drivers, 7/11 workers, macacas in general, or idiot Senators?

He has also described his personal enforcement of tighter immigration controls in asking his house painter for his green card calling him a "nice little Guatemalan man." In 1999, let's not forget he apologized for calling  Arabs "ragheads" in discussing oil prices.

* The Washington Times, D.C.'s conservative leaning newspaper, ran a front page article attempting to give cover to pro-corporate, conservative-friendly Black Democrats like Al Wynn and Bobby Rush under attack from progressive candidates.

"My general view is that the Democratic Party used to be the big tent party where everyone is allowed to express their views; now it is being taken over by these bloggers and purists who can only see one way of thinking," Mr. Wynn said.
FireDogLake and MyDD received a special mention for supporting Donna Edwards's campaign, who got a Washington Post endorsement this week. Evidently, supporting non-corrupt, solid candidates like Edwards is a racist attempt to destroy the Democratic party. Uh oh, the Washington Post had better watch their step!

The GOP's love affair with racism this week continues after the jump.

* Beyond Macaca - Running for the Senate in Virginia, George Allen's links to the racist Council of Conservative Citizens are revealed. CCC is the successor organization to the segregationist White Citizens Council and ranked with the KKK as one of America's largest and most venerable white supremacist groups. He's shown gripping and grinning in a photo with their leaders.

* Congressman Bob Beauprez (R-CO) and pro-life Senate candidate claims that 70% of African-American pregnancies or more end in abortion. Disturbing news, if true, but the number is closer to 33%.

* Pat Buchanan is promoting his recent book State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and Conquest of America and sharing his racist beliefs with audiences around the nation. In his book, Buchanan writes:

Those who believe it doesn't matter from where they come will turn America into something she cannot survive, becoming a multicultural, multiethnic, multilingual Tower of Babel.

BlackProf provides the transcript of his appearance on CNN's Situation Room where he defends that statement and adds that even legal immigration from non-white countries, especially Mexico, is dangerous. ThinkProgress has the video where Buchanan describes on Hannity and Colmes the urgency needed to keep America white.
What I would like is -- I'd like the country I grew up in. It was a good country. I lived in Washington, D.C., 400,000 black folks, 400,000 white folks, in a country 89 or 90 percent white. I like that country.
Buchanan's factoid sounds wildly inaccurate to me, by the way. Perhaps MyDD readers can set Buchanan straight.

* Today is the anniversary of President Bush's arrival on the Gulf Coast after five days of lies and inaction after Hurricane Katrina. ThinkProgress has a full timeline that shows clearly that Bush administration officials continued to go shoe-shopping, enjoy long vacations and watch baseball games as hurricane victims waited in vain for food, water and rescue. The face of human suffering on TV was most often black and poor, people Barbara Bush implied with an ironic chuckle that the hospitality of the Houston Astrodome was "working very well for them".

Tags: African-American, Al Wynn, Bob Beauprez, Conrad Burns, Donna Edwards, George Allen, katrina, pat buchanan, race (all tags)

Comments

11 Comments

Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

I think the GOP realizes that their racist base is all they have left, so they are playing to that crowd.  It's amazing how many Republicans have said blatantly racist things in recent weeks, only to issue a transparently phony "retraction" a couple days laters.

by global yokel 2006-09-02 11:49AM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

Don't kid yourself, a WaPo endorsement is huge!

I can still remember when Connie Morella ran in her first Congressional campaign, the paper's endorsement is what bolted her over her Democratic opponent.

I lived in her district at the time, and yep, I voted for Morella.

by notime4lies 2006-09-02 11:51AM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

The WaPo endorsement was huge for Edwards. Her campaign will be taken more seriously from now on. Hopefully more funds will pour in and the endorsement will put her over the top.

by Jill Tubman 2006-09-02 05:25PM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

As a cab driver, I admit to engaging in subversive activities on a nightly basis, but it involves explosive music and combustible lyrics.

by crackpot 2006-09-02 12:29PM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

Clearly you, sir, are a danger to all Americans. At least those Americans who like to dance!

by Jill Tubman 2006-09-02 05:23PM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup
I tried to give a good catch-up on Republican racism in this diary. Thanks for doing this! peace, JW
by faithfull 2006-09-02 12:33PM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

This is an excellent summary and contains some info I hadn't heard much about such as Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC). She sounds like bad news. Thanks for the link.

by Jill Tubman 2006-09-02 05:29PM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

i wanna give to donna edwards' campaign.  when is the primary?  and does anyone have a link to her campaign site?  tia

by jgarcia 2006-09-02 12:54PM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

The primary is September 12th.

Her campaign site is here.

She's currently at ~$12k of a $20k drive for TV ads.

by pragmatic adjustable hed 2006-09-02 01:58PM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics This Week -- A Roundup

the things you have been reading and seeing are desperate acts of a party starting to  lose grip of a revolution they began 30 years ago. I am starting to realize that we are seeing their end- and they know it. keep your eyes on the prize and dont let these distractions get in the way other than to continue to use these distractions to support a larger narrative. rather than feeling like you must react to every instance- point out- at least this is my view- that this is what the Republicans are. I no longer feel the need to site every instance- I am just learning how to use their tricks against them- at least in my conversations with conservatives who have racial issues.

by bruh21 2006-09-02 12:56PM | 0 recs
Re: Racial Politics -- a mininal morph

You say,

"George Allen's links to the racist
Council of Conservative Citizens
are revealed. CCC is the successor
organization to the segregationist
White Citizens Council ..."

Oh, I see it now:
it used to be the
White Citizens Council
then it sort of morphed
Council of White Citizens (unseen mid-stage)
and finally emerged as the
Council of Conservative Citizens.

Sorry to see 'white' made into
a synonym for 'conservative'
because I was born white, but
I'll be damned if I'm a conservative!

Their little name change reminds me of
the story about the cheap real estate
billionaire who bought the New York
Central building, with its name
spelled out in gold-plated lettering
attached to the facade. He had to
change the name, and chose to call it
the New York General building, so
he only had to pay for two new
gold-plated letters!

The White Conservative Citizens Council
was equally frugal with their name change.
And as with that piece of NYC real estate,
nothing changed except the name on the
outside, and that wasn't much.

by Woody 2006-09-03 08:54AM | 0 recs

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