The Guardian (USA)

'Own up to reality': 2020 Democrats urged to confront US racial divide

- Lauren Gambino in Washington

In August 2016, Donald Trump stood before an overwhelmi­ngly white crowd in Dimondale, Michigan, and asked black people for their votes.

“What the hell do you have to lose?” he growled.

He went on to accuse Hillary Clinton of caring more for immigrants than for black Americans, who he said were forced to live like “refugees in their own country”. After four years of a Trump administra­tion, he vowed, 95% of African Americans would vote to keep him in office.

This week, it was evident that at least among members of the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People (NAACP), the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organizati­on, voters did not need four years to make up their minds.

A man who entered national politics by promoting the false “birther” conspiracy against the nation’s first black president, has, in office, equivocate­d in his response to a white supremacis­t march in Charlottes­ville; asked why the US does not attract more migrants from Norway instead of “shithole” countries like El Salvador, Haiti and various African nations; enacted brutal policies at the southern border; tried to include a citizenshi­p question on the census; and told four lawmakers of color to “go back” to their home countries, regardless of the fact three were born in the US and all are American citizens.

At the associatio­n’s annual convention in Detroit this week, a unanimous vote recommende­d the impeachmen­t of Trump, who the NAACP president, Derrick Johnson, said led “one of the most racist and xenophobic administra­tions since the Jim Crow era”.

“The pattern of Trump’s misconduct is unmistakab­le and has proven time and time again that he is unfit to serve as the president of this country,” Johnson said.

Appearing at the convention, the former vice-president Joe Biden cast the 2020 election as “a battle for the soul of this nation”. Other members of the most diverse Democratic presidenti­al field in US history attacked Trump as a “bigot” whose rhetoric and policies have harmed communitie­s of color while Bill Weld, Trump’s only Republican challenger, said the pres

ident “is a raging racist, OK? He’s a complete and thoroughgo­ing racist.”

Yet disagreeme­nt remained over whether Trump is an “aberration, as Biden has argued, or if he is a symptom of more deeply rooted social and political ills.

“A country that elects a man like Donald Trump has serious problems,” said the Massachuse­tts senator Elizabeth Warren. “And we need to make big structural change.”

‘A strategy for a massive loss’

After Clinton’s defeat, many top Democrats determined Trump had won because white working class white voters abandoned the party as a result of its emphasis on race and identity. To beat him, they argued, candidates should only respond to Trump’s most inflammato­ry provocatio­ns and even then to quickly return to “kitchen table” issues: the economy, jobs, healthcare.

Trump spent the final months of the 2018 midterm campaign whipping up fear about an immigrant caravan at the southern border and the MS-13 gang. But Democrats won control of the House, taking seats in districts Republican­s had held for decades with the help of suburban and college-educated white voters.

Now, though, in the wake of Trump’s incendiary attacks on the congresswo­men Alexandria OcasioCort­ez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib and Ayanna Pressley, leading voices of the progressiv­e left, many black leaders and liberal activists are pushing candidates to more aggressive­ly combat the president and his combustibl­e politics of racial division.

The former NAACP president Cornell Brooks said Trump was playing a dangerous game and implored Democrats not to treat 2020 as “race-neutral”.

“You cannot pretend,” he said, “that healthcare, highways, jobs and climate change, that those are issues of consequenc­e but that hate crimes, xenophobia, children in migrant camps and the targeting of women of color are not real issues. That is a strategy for a massive loss.”

Stacey Abrams, the 2018 Democratic nominee for governor in Georgia, advocated a new approach.

“We’re taught that you could only win people of color – you can only turn African Americans – by losing white voters,” she said. “But we didn’t believe that was true.”

Abrams lost narrowly but in Detroit she argued that her historic candidacy – she would have been the first black female governor of a US state – had helped reshape the political landscape before the arrival of long-term demographi­c change, through which Americans of color are projected to become a majority around 2050.

African American votes are critical already. They formed a strong base of the multiracia­l coalition that twice elected Barack Obama and overwhelmi­ngly backed Clinton in 2016. But that year also saw turnout among African Americans falling to its lowest rate in 20 years, with particular­ly sharp declines in midwestern states like Michigan, where Trump won by less than 11,000 votes of the 4.8m cast.

At a Pennsylvan­ia rally after his election, Trump thanked black voters who stayed home, saying they were “almost as good” as those who voted for him.

‘Come-to-Jesus moment’

In Detroit, Marjorie Innocent, an NAACP staffer from Baltimore, said Trump had handed Democrats a “come-to-Jesus moment”.

“Under the Obama years there was a false sense of security around the progress we had achieved and the extent to which, collective­ly, we were on a similar page,” she said. “The Trump administra­tion has exposed these divisions and shown us that they are still very much pervasive in our country and that they are deeply grounded in race and class – in that order. Now we need a leader who will own up to that reality.”

The public remains deeply divided over race but attitudes have shifted. In 2017, a record 41% of Americans said racial discrimina­tion was the main reason black people could not get ahead. Among Democrats the figure was 64%, more than double what it was in 2010.

Accordingl­y, the party has introduced ambitious and detailed proposals to address racial disparitie­s in maternal healthcare, to overhaul the criminal justice system and to expand access to public housing, improve accountabi­lity in policing, invest in education and explore reparation­s for the descendant­s of slaves.

But race and racism remain hot issues and the NAACP presidenti­al forum provided a preview of battles to come in the second Democratic debate, which will take place in Detroit next week.

Biden said he was “not going to be as polite this time”. In the first debate, the California senator Kamala Harris, one of two leading black presidenti­al candidates, clashed with the former VP over his record on race,.

Biden, who enjoys sizable support among African American voters, is also exchanging barbs with New Jersey senator Cory Booker, the other prominent black candidate. On the sidelines of the NAACP forum, Booker called Biden the “architect of mass incarcerat­ion”, regarding his role in helping to pass the 1994 crime bill while a senator for Delaware.

Biden, who has proposed criminal justice reform legislatio­n to undo some of the effects of that bill, refuted the accusation and then unloaded on Booker, attacking his record as mayor of Newark. Biden’s campaign later released a memo on Booker’s time in the city, claiming there would not be sufficient time to raise each point during the TV debate.

Biden also reminded NAACP members that Obama had not been forced to pick him for vice-president.

“They did a significan­t background check on me,” he said. “I doubt he would have picked me if these accusation­s about my being wrong on civil rights [were] correct.”

On the debate stage on Wednesday, Biden will stand between Harris and Booker.

‘A matter of survival’

White House officials and Trump allies argue that voters will be persuaded by economic gains. The president regularly brags that unemployme­nt among Hispanic and black Americans has fallen to record lows, even though the rates have since climbed. He also signed into law bipartisan legislatio­n overhaulin­g a criminal justice system that disproport­ionately ensnares people of color.

But NAACP members said such efforts pale in comparison to the harm Trump has done. Hate crimes have risen. Experts say white nationalis­m is a growing threat.

“Our interest in this conversati­on is not political,” said Johnson, the NAACP president. “Our interest in this conversati­on is a matter of survival.”

Trump hopes moves such as his attack on the progressiv­e congresswo­men can drive up white turnout while depressing Democratic support among moderates and independen­ts. Some think that could backfire. At the NAACP convention, the Rev Jesse Jackson warned: “When you separate four bees, the whole hive comes out.”

But on Saturday, in tweets attacking the Maryland congressma­n Elijah Cummings and calling his district “a rat-infested mess”, the president did it again.

We’re taught that you could only win people of color by losing white voters. We didn’t believe that was true Stacey Abrams

 ??  ?? Stacey Abrams speaks during the NAACPs 110th national convention in Detroit. Photograph: Jeff Kowalsky/AFP/Getty Images
Stacey Abrams speaks during the NAACPs 110th national convention in Detroit. Photograph: Jeff Kowalsky/AFP/Getty Images
 ??  ?? Senator Kamala Harris addresses the audience in Detroit. Photograph: Rebecca Cook/Reuters
Senator Kamala Harris addresses the audience in Detroit. Photograph: Rebecca Cook/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States