By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 5.1.08 @ 12:08AM
How is it that Barack Obama of all people has become a racially divisive candidate?
WASHINGTON -- The heavy seas that the Obama campaign is now
encountering should trouble us all. It is utterly appropriate for a
one-term United States senator to be questioned about the extent of
his experience or about his grasp of policy. It is, however,
profoundly troubling that all these years after the triumph of the
civil rights movement and after the integration of millions of
blacks into American life, Senator Barack Obama's race has become
an issue. Perhaps I am naive, but I thought race was passe in
America.
I thought racial differences in America were now about where
ethnic differences were four decades ago. In the 1950s and 1960s,
when I was growing up in ethnically and religiously diverse
neighborhoods in the Chicago area, I saw ethnic and religious
rivalries mellow to the point that each of us admired and felt
enriched by the distinctive ethnic traditions of our friends
whether they be Italians or Poles or Germans or White Anglo Saxons
Protestants or whatever. All these groups spiced up the melting pot
and made America what it is, a diverse nation of peoples from all
lands, adhering to timeless principles laid down by the Founding
Fathers long ago.
This same agglutination of white Americans and black Americans
has, for a certitude, been going on for at least three decades. It
explains the popularity of such figures as Oprah Winfrey and Colin
Powell and of sports stars and of sports dominated by great black
athletes. Of course, it also explains the growing popularity of
Senator Obama through the early primaries and caucuses -- often in
states where blacks compose a small minority, but where racial
bigotry has evanesced.
Unfortunately the politicians who would lead America from the
White House, the Senate and the House of Representatives have not
been able to keep the false issue of race out of this presidential
nominating process. In fact, I do not think they even tried to keep
it out of the campaign. If they had spoken as stentorianly against
making race an issue as they have spoken on other matters --
usually matters of fleeting importance -- Obama would not have
become the racially divisive candidate that he is today. As things
stand right now I see him as the Al Smith of our time, the
candidate from a minority background (in Smith's case Irish
Catholic) whose defeat will make it impossible for a candidate of
his background to run successfully for the presidency for years to
come.
Worse, many blacks are going to be embittered, and racial
rivalry will be a fixture of the American scene for a generation.
Precisely whose fault this is I cannot say with complete
confidence. Certainly our leading national politicians could still
come together and denounce any playing of the race card. Yet they
will not. You can be sure of it. For one thing, Democrats have kept
their liberal and black base together by claiming that their policy
differences with Republicans over entitlements and other domestic
matters are the consequence of the alleged racism of white
Republicans. It is a false charge but it has helped the Democrats
at the polls, even as it has made many blacks unnecessarily
sensitive about their minority status.
There is another reason political leaders, mainly Democratic
political leaders, will not in unison demand an end to the racial
maneuvering of this campaign. There is apparently serious racial
discord in the Democratic Party among the embittered, chip-on-the
shoulder lower class voters, and it has helped the Clintons. That
is why Bill Clinton so brazenly tried to make Obama the black
candidate. Before Clinton's comparison of Obama to Jesse Jackson,
race was not an issue in his campaign. After that, Clinton's
repeated references to the controversy he started and the addition
of the Reverend Wright have now made racial background an
issue.
How it will all end remains unknown, but one thing is for sure.
Racial relations have been badly damaged, and the politicians are
responsible for the damage.
topics:
Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Entitlements, Sports, NATO