Just in case you missed it -- and no doubt many did -- the best debate
of this campaign season occurred during the summer and featured
President Bush and Al Sharpton. (Sorry, Senator Kerry.) It was not a
head-to-head contest, and the only time the two men were even in the
same room was during Bush's opening salvo. "Is it a good thing for the
African American community to be represented mainly by one political
party?" Bush asked a predominantly black audience at the National Urban
League convention in July. "How is it possible to gain political
leverage if the party is never forced to compete?" Those were trick
questions, of course. The issue was not whether Democrats took blacks
for granted but why Bush, after promising a more compassionate social
agenda, reneged on that promise. He went so far as to appropriate a
slogan from the Children's Defense Fund, "Leave No Child Behind," then
proceeded to abandon children by the millions. You had to wait almost a
month for Sharpton's rebuttal, which hit hard at what he saw as an
attempt by desperate Republicans to sway black votes in the absence of
any policy that might win them over. "Mr. President, you said would we
have more leverage if both parties got our votes, but we didn't come
this far playing political games," Sharpton said in a speech delivered
in prime time at the Democratic National Convention. "It was those who
earned our vote that got our vote. . . . Our vote was soaked in the
blood of martyrs, soaked in the blood of Goodman, Chaney and Schwerner,
soaked in the blood of four little girls in Birmingham. This vote is
sacred. This vote can't be bargained away. This vote can't be given
away. Mr. President, in all due respect, Mr.
President, read my lips: Our vote is not for sale." [more]
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