By Shawn Macomber on 12.29.03 @ 12:05AM
A reverend lashes out at Howie and friends. Plus: No more clowning around. All this and more in the first of daily reports by our man in the Granite State.
NEW HAMPSHIRE -- A few weeks ago, I was picking up my
fiancée's parents at the Baltimore Washington International
Airport, when who should saunter off their flight from Manchester,
New Hampshire, but former Ambassador to New Zealand and current
Democratic presidential hopeful Carol Moseley Braun.
Abandoning my future in-laws I gave chase, shouting, "Carol
Moseley Braun! Carol Moseley Braun!" She seemed shocked at this
display of public recognition, never a great sign for a
presidential campaign. I had met Braun before while writing for the
Associated Press, and, ever courteous, she was willing to chat for
a couple minutes. (The last time I had seen her was the day she
explained to reporters that she couldn't remember her college
major, but it was "probably political science.") In the interest of
full disclosure, I explained to her that I was now writing for
The American Spectator. "That's nice," she said.
But the peace and love vibe didn't last long. I got her ire up a
bit when I asked if she was going to leave New Hampshire and head
South where she is expected to do better. I thought it was a
reasonable question, considering I have yet to see a New Hampshire
poll showing her even in the single digit. "I'm sticking around New
Hampshire, and I'm going to surprise a lot of people," she said
slowly. "Including you." Big smile. I thanked her for her time, and
walked away wondering if she could really believe what she had just
told me.
Back in the great state of New Hampshire, I'm having to eat my
words. Well, not really. But Braun did just get a much-publicized
endorsement from the pastor at New Hope Baptist Church in
Portsmouth. He endorsed her, he told his congregation, not as their
pastor but as a "Democrat who understands how they gave us the vote
and then found ways to deny us that right."
But what made the news wasn't the Rev. Dr. Arthur J. Hilson's
endorsement of Braun, although that in itself was much more fire
and brimstone than one would expect. What really lit the fuse on
the powder keg was that he took the opportunity to insinuate that
most other candidates -- and especially Howard Dean -- were
"pimping" his church for photo-ops.
According to Hilson, Howard Dean's visit was an attempt to lure
Southern black votes without actually going South. Gephardt
offended Hilson by asking to have his photo taken outside the
church and not sticking around for services. Sen. Joe Lieberman's
sin was telling the Reverend he wanted to come to the church to
speak with Baptists. "You know the truth," Hilson announced. "He
didn't come here because there were Baptists here. He was here
because there were black votes here." It seems politicians never
stuck around long enough for Hilson's services or honestly
addressed the needs of his "people."
Well, of course they didn't! These are politicians. The good
Reverend has just described every primary event in New Hampshire.
Last week Dean has his picture taken with some union guys. Is he
"pimping" them as well? Was Lieberman "pimping" Jews when he
stopped in at Hanukkah services throughout the state last week?
Perhaps the most extraordinary thing about the candidates'
visits to the New Hope Baptist Church is that they are courting the
New Hampshire black vote at all. According to the latest census,
blacks make up just 0.7 percent of the state's population. When one
considers the actual percentage of black votes in New Hampshire,
the Democrats' efforts seem downright heroic.
Nevertheless, papers throughout the state praised Hilson for
"telling it like it is" and "speaking truth to power." There were
no condemnations for a community role model suggesting to his
predominantly black congregation that most politicians were looking
to find ways to take away their right to vote. Apparently, the
first sign of disenfranchisement is politicians tripping over
themselves to meet with you. Isn't spreading this ideology of
victimhood more damaging than the idea that politicians are
interested in photo ops?
After two days of newspaper headlines with the word "pimp" in
bold print, the good Reverend was able to admit he was wrong in at
least one respect.
"Certainly, it's a kind of lingo that would not be understood
outside the African-American community," Hilson told the
Portsmouth Herald.
Hilson obviously has a high opinion of himself. But with that
kind of retraction, one is left to wonder what kind of opinion he
has of his "people."
In Other News
Braun wasn't the only fringe candidate to get a highly coveted
endorsement in New Hampshire this week. Patch Adams, the medical
doctor turned clown, came to an experimental community theater in
New Hampshire to announce his endorsement of Ohio Congressman
Dennis Kucinich on Saturday.
Adams, played by comedian Robin Williams in the 1998 film based
on his life, said he was supporting Kucinich because he was "the
love candidate." Adams described Kucinich's election to the
nation's highest office as "probable." He said this with a straight
face, without honking his nose or doing a funny little
I-was-just-joking dance.
What really seemed improbable was 40 people gathering to take
political advice from an old man with blue hair in a clown outfit.
But it happened. Welcome to the New Hampshire primary.
topics:
Law, Africa