Chattanooga Times Free Press

Clinton team hopes ‘ birther’ flap will help spur black voters

- BY THOMAS BEAUMONT

DES MOINES, Iowa — Democrats wasted no time looking for political opportunit­y after Donald Trump falsely accused Hillary Clinton of starting the rumor that President Barack Obama was not born in the U.S.

Just hours later, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York was on Philadelph­ia R&B station, WDAS, critiquing Trump’s behavior. Days later Clinton’s North Carolina state organizers met in Raleigh, in part to chart how to use negative reaction to Trump’s statement to motivate the state’s disproport­ionately high black voting bloc to turn out. And Clinton’s team welcomed Georgia Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights activist, to a Philadelph­ia voter registrati­on event where he railed against Trump’s claim.

Polls suggest Clinton can count on an overwhelmi­ng percentage of support from African-Americans. But she can’t necessaril­y count on them to vote.

“If they feel like they have the African-American community locked up, they should be very, very careful about making that assumption,” Sara Lomax Reese, president of Philadelph­ia’s independen­t black radio station WURD, said of Clinton and her team.

One of the biggest questions of the 2016 election is whether African-American voters will turn out for Clinton as they did for the first black president. They voted at a historic level in 2008 and an unexpected­ly high rate in 2012.

Also to be seen is how political consequenc­es play out over tensions between majority- white police department­s and black communitie­s, stirred by police shootings of African- Americans and ensuing unrest. Saturday marked the fifth day of rallies in Charlotte, N.C., since a black man was shot by police earlier in the week. Violence peaked Wednesday before the National Guard was called in the next day to maintain order.

Trump this month put to rest the myth he had peddled for years that Obama might have been born outside the U.S. But in the same breath, he said Clinton started it. In fact, she steered clear of the conspiracy theory.

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