*An NAACP notable, that is a local NAACP branch notable in Texas, praised GOP Presidential candidate Ron Paul to the skies after the barrage of attacks on Paul for the racist, homophobic and anti-Semitic digs in his Ron Paul Survival Report newsletter. Herman Cain endorsed Paul rival Newt Gingrich.
And despite the slap at Gingrich for racial pandering, Gingrich has never shirked from being in the company of African-American leaders including for a brief moment the Reverend Al Sharpton. His rival Rick Santorum has also gotten support from some black evangelicals including loopy Florida African-American minister O’Neal Dozier. Santorum stopped in at O’Neal’s Worldwide Christian Center in Pompano Beach, during the Florida primary and got a rousing nod from Dozier. Santorum even got the even more controversial, and far out Michael the Black Man (his self-description nee Maurice Woodside) to endorse him at a Coral Spring, Florida campaign rally.
The question and mystery is if the three most unabashed conservatives of the four GOP presidential candidates scrounge up some African-Americans to co-sign their campaigns why can’t the fourth candidate, Mitt Romney find even one African-American to endorse him? South Carolina congressman Tim Scott, who declined to endorse anyone in the South Carolina primary didn’t endorse him. Florida congressman Allen West chose a Gingrich dinner to shout to “lefties” to get the hell out of America.
Romney’s goose egg in getting endorsements from black GOP officials, elected officials, any black Republican to endorse or even a few token black faces to stand behind him for stump photo-ops has been plainly apparent at his campaign rallies, stage appearance and events. They have been a staple in the background at GOP candidates and elected officials staged public functions. GOP presidential candidates for four decades have followed the lead of then GOP presidential candidate Richard Nixon in 1968 with his well orchestrated, and well-placed, photo-ops with assorted moderate black leaders, and even getting occasional endorsements from a black celebrity such as Sammy Davis Jr. and Wilt Chamberlain. Former President George W. Bush went much further and managed to blunt the hard criticism that a GOP White House is almost always a virtually an exclusive white, rich, male, clubby preserve with his arguably breakthrough appointments of Coin Powell, Secretary of State, and Condoleezza Rice, National Security Advisor and Secretary of State, and Alberto Gonzalez, Attorney General.
So then how to explain the Romney campaign’s solid whiteness. The issue of Romney’s blind spot on out-reach to African-Americans was glaringly apparent during his stint at Bain Capital. Not one of the dozens of Managing Directors at Bain was African-American. More than half of Bain’s directors had BAs or MBA degrees from Harvard.
That’s important to note for two reasons. Harvard had made a major effort over the years to ramp up the number of African-Americans and minorities in their business programs. So there was certainly no shortage of black candidates Bain and Romney could have recruited to the company and elevated to Managing Director. Even that failure might have passed under the radar scope, except that Romney boasted during his Massachusetts Senatorial bid in 1994 that public companies should be required to report how many women and minorities they had in order to “breakthrough” the glass ceiling.
Romney boasted even louder during his tenure as Massachusetts governor that he had a sterling record when it came to appointing minorities and women to state posts. But that came after Romney was pushed and prodded by civil rights and women’s groups for his near exclusive white male state house. Romney partly in response to the public pounding, and partly with an eye on a presidential run where he knew his state record on diversity would be closely scrutinized made a slew of appointments of minorities and women to the state bench in his last year in office.
Romney’s lily white retinue of aides, campaign staffers, advisors, and bankrollers, not to mention endorsers has been so noticeable that even black conservative and former Oklahoma GOP congressman J.C. Watts lambasted Romney for it. Watts challenged Romney for having a virtually lily white campaign staff. A nonplussed Romney shrugged it off and blithely said that he hires the best persons that he could find. Evidently that didn’t include Watts, and it wouldn’t. Watts has endorsed Gingrich.
The scorecard then reads like this: Gingrich, Santorum, and Paul, all have asked for and gotten endorsements and support from African-Americans. There is no record or evidence that the supposed more moderate Romney has asked for or gotten any black support or even taken a photo-op with some dutiful blacks. The question that will loom even larger as Romney closes in on the GOP nomination is. Where are Romney’s blacks?
Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on American Urban Radio Network. He is the author of How Obama Governed: The Year of Crisis and Challenge. He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is host of the weekly Hutchinson Report Newsmaker Hour heard weekly on the nationally network broadcast Hutchinson Newsmaker Network.
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Who wants to be linked to a man that’s in a cult? The General Election will be as plain as Black and white. In the words of Snipes, “always bet on Black.
Last of the Frozen Chosin
I guess this begs the question, are there any Black Mormons out there or is this cult limited to white folk?
There original teaching was that Black people had no soul and were not allowed into the cult. That changed in the late 1960s because of the danger of having their tax exempt status revoked. It wasn’t until around the late 70s they said a Black man could be a minister (priest). Former Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver lost his mind and became a member of the Mormon cult. They adhere to the book of Mormon and not the Holy Bible.
I guess all the more reasons why Obama should be breathing a sigh of relief and looking forward to the coming election. If Romney wins the nomination, he won’t have to worry about defections from his solid black base. Especially how he treated them, having no black agenda and telling them that the best they can expect from him is a rising tide lifts all boat assurance. Nothing like the promise from Ron Paul to end the racist war on drugs.
Come on Bro. Earl:
“WHO CARES?”. Seriously,
Mittens is like Palin…they’re so hard-nosed they don’t care about ‘appearances’ particularly when it comes to Blacks. Heard Palin once said something along the lines of ‘no I don’t have any Blacks in my administration and not trying to hire any either’. People like these fall back on rhetoric such as ‘I’m more interested in qualifications etc etc and skin color doesn’t matter’ which is BULL! Mittens is a wolf in sheep’s clothing, and they are followers of religious teachings that are unquestioned by the flock. He won’t get many Black or gay votes if he clinches the nomination. Lots of folks get that queasy feeling that Mittens cannot be trusted and will show a cold, stone, unfeeling and robotic face if ever elected.