Blacks Debate Civil Rights Risk in Obama's Rise
New York Times, August 25, 2008 By RACHEL L. SWARNS
WASHINGTON - On the night that Senator Barack Obama accepts the Democratic
nomination for president, Roderick J. Harrison plans to pop open a
bottle of Champagne and sit riveted before the television with his
wife and 12-year-old son.
Mr. Harrison, a demographer who is black, says he expects to feel
chills when Mr. Obama becomes the first black presidential candidate
to lead a major party ticket. But as the Democratic convention gets
under way, Mr. Harrison's anticipation is tempered by uneasiness as
he wonders: Will Mr. Obama's success further the notion that the
long struggle for racial equality has finally been won?
Mr. Obama has received overwhelming support from black voters, many of
whom believe he will help bridge the nation's racial divide. But
even as they cheer him on, some black scholars, bloggers and others
who closely follow the race worry that Mr. Obama's historic
achievements might make it harder to rally support for policies
intended to combat racial discrimination, racial inequities and urban
poverty.
They fear that growing numbers of white voters and policy makers will
decide that eradicating racial discrimination and ensuring equal
opportunity have largely been done.
"I worry that there is a segment of the population that might be
harder to reach, average citizens who will say: 'Come on. We might
have a black president, so we must be over it,' " said Mr.
Harrison, 59, a sociologist at Howard University and a consultant for
the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies here.
"That is the danger, that we declare victory," said Mr. Harrison,
who fears that poor blacks will increasingly be blamed for their
troubles. "Historic as this moment is, it does not signify a major
victory in the ongoing, daily battle."
Such concerns have been percolating in black intellectual circles for
months, on talk radio and blogs, in dinner conversations, academic
meetings and flurries of e-mail messages crisscrossing the
country.
It can be an awkward discussion for Obama supporters who argue that
the success of the candidate - the man who might become America's
first black president - might make it somewhat more difficult to
advance an ambitious public policy agenda that helps blacks. Some of
Mr. Obama's black supporters say that Mr. Obama himself, by rarely
focusing on racial discrimination and urban poverty while campaigning,
has often fueled the notion that the nation has transcended race.
Other supporters dismiss the idea that Mr. Obama's success might
undermine support for race-based policies. They say black voters
should focus not on speculative debates but instead on helping him win
the presidency, because his emphasis on solutions to problems like
failing schools, unemployment and inadequate health insurance would
benefit blacks.
Last month, the debate bubbled up when The Root, a Web journal of
black politics and culture, published a provocative essay titled
"President Obama: Monumental Success or Secret Setback?"
"If Obama becomes the president, every remaining, powerfully felt
black grievance and every still deeply etched injustice will be cast
out of the realm of polite discourse," wrote Lawrence Bobo, a black
sociologist at
Harvard University, who supports Mr. Obama and was outlining in the
essay the concerns of some friends and colleagues. "White folks will
just stop listening."
Bev Smith, a black talk radio host whose program is based in
Pittsburgh and syndicated nationally, said some of her listeners
echoed those worries.
"There's an assumption now that we've made it," Ms. Smith
said. "Our concern is that we'll get lost in the shuffle."
The concerns have been driven in part by opponents of affirmative
action who argue that race-based preferences in education and the
workplace are increasingly irrelevant given the accomplishments of Mr.
Obama and the growing black middle class.
Others, like
Abigail Thernstrom, the vice chairwoman of the United States Commission
on Civil Rights, say the creation of minority voting districts should
be reconsidered, too, given Mr. Obama's success at wooing white
voters in states like Iowa, Nebraska and Wyoming.
Ms. Thernstrom, who is white, said black and white academics who
worried about the impact of Mr. Obama's achievement were engaging in
"habits of pessimism."
"People feel that there's something callous, something racially
indifferent in saying, 'Wait a minute; we've come a long
way,' " said Ms. Thernstrom, a longtime critic of affirmative
action who is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a
conservative research group.
"But whether he wins or loses, for a black man to become a
standard-bearer for one of the two major parties, it does say
something," she said. "It says that the road we started down in
1965 with the Voting Rights Act has come to an end. We don't need to
talk about disfranchisement in the same way anymore."
The fortunes of black Americans have certainly improved since the
civil rights struggle of the 1960s. The number of educated,
professional blacks has grown as poverty rates have declined. About 17
percent of blacks held bachelor's degrees in 2004, compared with 5
percent in 1970, census data shows. (About 30 percent of whites held
bachelor's degrees that year.) In 2005, college-educated black women
who worked full time earned more than their white female counterparts,
census data shows.
But significant gaps between blacks and whites remain. About a quarter
of blacks lived below the poverty line in 2006, compared with 8
percent of whites, census data shows. The median income of blacks,
$30,200, is less than two-thirds that of whites, $48,800. And studies
suggest that employers often favor white job seekers over black
applicants, even when their educational backgrounds and work
experiences are nearly identical.
Such disparities might explain the differences in opinion that remain
between blacks and whites.
In a New York Times/CBS News poll released last month, 53 percent of
whites said that blacks and whites had about an equal chance of
getting ahead in society. Only 30 percent of blacks agreed.
Blacks and whites were similarly divided over the state of race
relations. Fifty-five percent of whites said race relations were
generally good, compared with 29 percent of blacks. Nearly 60 percent
of blacks said race relations were generally bad.
"A few of my white friends have asked me, 'With Barack achieving
all of this, will we be in a position where we can put race
aside?' " said Representative Elijah E. Cummings, Democrat of
Maryland, who is a co-chairman of Mr. Obama's campaign in that
state.
Mr. Cummings said he points them to statistics on lingering racial
disparities in education, health and income. "I hope that
progressive-minded people will not make a blanket conclusion that if
Barack has made it, everybody can make it," he said.
Mr. Obama has occasionally made that point himself, noting that his
candidacy alone will not resolve the nation's lingering racial
inequities.
"I have never been so naïve as to believe that we can get beyond
our racial divisions in a single election cycle, or with a single
candidacy, particularly a candidacy as imperfect as my own," Mr.
Obama said in his speech on race in March.
As part of his urban policy plan, Mr. Obama promises to increase the
minimum wage, expand affordable housing, provide full financing for
community block grants and create a White House office of urban
affairs. Some of his black supporters argue that it would be foolhardy
for Mr. Obama to focus more on racial issues, particularly given that
he needs to appeal to white voters who can be alienated by such
talk.
"He's running for president of the United States, not president of
the Urban League," said Jabari Asim, editor of The Crisis,
the
N.A.A.C.P.
magazine, reiterating comments made by a fellow writer and editor.
"I think most people understand that he can't go out and push this
overtly African-American agenda."
Mr. Harrison, the Howard University sociologist, worries that such
political imperatives might make it less likely that an Obama
administration would be inclined to confront entrenched racial
divisions.
But he still plans to savor Mr. Obama's historic moment. He hopes
that the nomination will lead to a national conversation about race
relations and that the shifting political landscape might give rise to
new strategies to address the legacies of America's color line.
"It will certainly shift the conversation," Mr. Harrison said.
"It might end up being another vehicle for people to press the same
points. But it might also open a new chapter of the debate."
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2008 The New York Times Company
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