After the Civil War, the Republican Party benefited from blacks’
adoration of the Great Emancipator, Abraham Lincoln, to reap votes. Franklin
Roosevelt was beloved for his New Deal, but many African Americans continued to
vote Republican until 1948, when Democrat Harry Truman, who had integrated the
armed forces, pushed for a civil rights bill.
Truman
raised the ire of Southern Democrats, who formed their own party dedicated to
states’ rights — the most important right being the subjugation of African
Americans. They were called the Dixiecrats, and are worth a history lesson now
because their legacy is a factor in the racially polarized politics we have
now.
The
Dixiecrats’ descendants have mostly joined the GOP. They will say they didn’t
leave the Democratic Party; the party left them. And to a large degree, they’re
right. As the Democratic Party became more inclined to take liberal positions
favored by African Americans on issues such as school integration and
affirmative action, the Republican Party became more conservative.
That
division has benefitted both parties. Republicans devised the so-called
Southern strategy, which lavished most of its attention on white voters. The
strategy has been given credit by some political analysts for electing the last
four GOP presidents who ran for that office. (Gerald Ford didn’t run.)
On the other
side of the coin, Democratic presidential candidates have been able to count on
most African Americans’ voting for them. Given that reality, President Obama
would likely be polling nicely among black voters even if he were white. But as
an African American Democrat, polls show him supported by up to 92 percent of
black voters.
Such blanket
support has Republicans like former White House chief of staff John Sununu
saying it’s all about skin color. He later retracted his allegation that Colin
Powell had endorsed Obama just because he’s black. Sununu should know that if
race alone determined whom blacks support, black Republicans would benefit,
too. Most don’t, because they’re wrong on the issues.
Another
demographic offers additional evidence of that fact. A recent Wall Street
Journal-NBC News poll shows Obama getting 70 percent of the Hispanic vote. The
president isn’t Latino; he’s garnering that level of support because, even
though he’s cracked down on illegal aliens, he offers a better chance for
immigration reform than Mitt Romney.
Race still
matters in American politics, but the issues matter more. While Obama stands to
gain the most minority votes, polls show him with only about 36 percent of the
white vote — seven points less than what he received in 2008. Among white
voters, no doubt some would never vote for a black candidate for president or
anything else. But especially among those who voted for Obama four years ago,
most simply disagree with him on the issues.
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