Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Baseball did right thing even if it had no choice

- Gene Collier

Didn’t want baseball’s All-Star Game argument to float off into its regularly scheduled lassitude without a few Sunday observatio­ns, submitted with typically dubious respect to all parties.

The yanking of the 2021 Atlanta show case is the best thing to happen tothe major league All-Star Game since2020, when it was canceled altogether, which was the best thing to happen to it since 2016, when the Lords of the Game decided it would nolonger determine which league got home-field advantage for the World Series, a historical brain cramp that somehow lasted 16 years.

From the standpoint of entertainm­ent, the only downside is that they’re going to play it anyway. From beauteous Coors Field in

Denver, home of the always reliable Rockies Horror Pitching Show, baseball will dutifully fill that Tuesday night in July for an ever-dwindling national audience.

Thereal horror show is the new Georgia law that forced baseball’ s hand once corporate heavy weights( real and potential sponsors) began objecting to what looks suspicious ly like a multi-front assault on—what’ s it called ?— American Democracy.

We’re in a seemingly endless news cycle of political gibble-gabble debating the real impacto f the new law, but there’s no getting around the fact that it makes it harder to get absentee ballots, that it eliminates most drop boxes for ballots, that it makes it harder for working people to vote, that it virtually guarantees longer and slower lines at the polls, and that it makes it a crime for anyone to hand you awater bottle or a snack while you’re waiting.

Regardless of which party designed and installed such a system, MLB would have had little choice but to take its show elsewhere. Baseball’s reaction has precedent. In the early 1990s, when NFL commission­er Paul Tagliabue didn’t like the smell of Arizona’ s reluctance for a Martin Luther King holiday, he pulled the Super Bowl out of Phoenix with a blunt understand­ing that Arizona could callback when they fixed that. As recently as 2017, the NBA pulled its All-Star Game out of North Carolina, which had justpassed the so-called Bathroom Bill, banning city government­s from passing ordinances to protect its LGBTQ citizens. Georgia’s moveto restrict voting is broader and more fundamenta­l than either of those.

“Major League Baseball fundamenta­lly supports voting rights for all Americans and opposes restrictio­ns to the ballot box,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement. “I have decided thatthe best way to demonstrat­e our values as a sport is by relocating this year’s All-Star Game and MLB Draft.”

Manfred surely knows that 30%of Georgia and more than half of Atlanta is Black, so I’ll take the commish at his word, but baseball needn’t strain itself with a lot of backpattin­g over this, either. It wasthe fourth of the four major American sports to formally address the George Floyd matter and the resultant global protests, and no one needs to be reminded that the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on was some 84 years old before it emancipate­d anyone into Major League Baseball. Cynics have pointed out that Manfred’s only acting here forthe benefit of the owners, who stood to lose sponsorshi­p money if corporatio­ns had another three months to think the Georgia thing over.

Predictabl­y, the party that benefits when fewer Blacks vote screeched in horror at baseball’s move, with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell( not a serious person ), yelping about corporatio­ns becoming vehicles for “far-left mobs.”

Baseball, owned and essentiall­y run by Republican billionair­es, is not exactly anyone’s version of a far-left mob. Corporatio­ns lining up against their traditiona­l Republican allies is something that ought to give the minority party pause instead of appearing to care more about far-left mobs than about real mobs, like the one that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Forthe moment, there are five active lawsuits against the new Georgia law, a transparen­t attempt to allow the people running elections to get the result they want. Whetherit’s through The New Georgia Project v (Ga. Secretaryo­f State) Raffensper­ger, Ga. NAACP v. Raf fens per ger ,6 th District of the AME Church v. (Ga. Governor) Kemp, Advancing Justice-Atlanta v. Raffensper­ger, or Vote America v. Raf fens per ger, that law isn’t likely to stand in anything approachin­g its current form.

Sport and its multi-cultural athletes must continue to take difficult position son such matters, and it’s not always easy. Baseball’s postseason includes the looming question ofwhat happens if the Braves area participan­t, or the Rangers, as Texas works assiduousl­y on legal measures similar to Georgia’s? Or, as Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times wondered via Twitter this week, “If baseball’s All-Star Game shouldn’t be played in Georgia because of that state’s voter suppressio­n law, should the Olympics beheld (in China) in the shadowof what many describe as genocide?”

Gonna guess that’s a big no, but that’s another column for another Sunday.

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