Originally published in the Los Angeles Times February 20, 2005
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times
A Year-Round Party for Blacks;
The GOP is their hero. Just look at the calendar.
By: Al Franken,
Cynics
like to say that February was chosen as Black History Month because
it's the shortest month. But actually, it was because February is the
most depressing month, coming, as it does, long into winter, with
seemingly no end in sight.
Either way, we
shouldn't let it pass unnoticed. Black History Month is about more than
reminding ourselves of myriad indignities that African Americans
have had to suffer since they arrived on these shores in shackles. It's
also about celebrating the triumphs that have been made in the march
toward racial equality and racial harmony.
I
guess that's why the Republican Party has chosen to move past the
race-based voter suppression of yesteryear -- by which I mean last year
-- and honor the spirit of Black History Month by unveiling its "2005
Republican Freedom Calendar: Celebrating a Century and a Half of Civil
Rights Achievement by the Party of Lincoln." Seriously. See it for
yourself at
policy.house.gov/ 2005_calendar/.
This
calendar was unrolled with a great deal of flourish, apparently the
centerpiece of the GOP's strategy to make inroads among black voters in
the 21st century. To that end, every day of the year is notated with a
Republican civil rights achievement.
Now,
it is true that Republicans have been involved in civil rights issues
for a century and a half. For the first 100 or so years, they were the
party that was "for" civil rights.
Then they switched sides with the Democrats, and for half a century they've been more involved on the "against" side.
That's
why most of the Republican civil rights calendar's entries mark
achievements before the advent of the modern flush toilet. For
instance, the entry for April 17 reads: "1823 -- Birth of Arkansas
Republican Mifflin Gibbs, elected in 1873 as first African-American
judge; later appointed by President William McKinley as Consul to
Madagascar."
Definitely an achievement. But not necessarily one that would convince
a suspicious African American voter 130 years later that today's
Republican Party is in his corner.
It's
harder to find real achievements in the years since the Dixiecrats
jumped the aisle, fleeing the old Democratic Party of Eastland, Stennis
and Russell to their sunny home in the new Republican Party of
Goldwater, Helms and Trent "We-Wouldn't-Have-Had-All-These-Problems"
Lott. Most entries from recent years are of the April 28 variety:
"1971. Rear Admiral Samuel Lee Gravely becomes first African American
to achieve Flag Rank in U.S. Navy, promoted by President Richard
Nixon." Whether Nixon knew who Rear Adm. Gravely was or whether he was
aware that Gravely was black is not mentioned. Nixon, whose Southern
Strategy wiped the stain of Lincoln's legacy from the Southern GOP once
and for all, is an unlikely poster boy for Republican civil rights
achievement.
As lame as the calendar might
at first appear (and as lame as it may remain under close examination),
you can't blame the Republicans for trying. They have to do something
with their left-over money. Why not do a calendar?
Besides, Karl Rove knows the Republican Party has not just a racism
problem, but a race problem. Bush still lost the black vote 88% to 11%.
Republicans
might have responded to the election with some soul-searching. Bush
took a promising first step by noting the gap in life expectancy
between black and white men. But instead of raising the issue as a
prelude to offering a solution, he used it as one of a litany of
dishonest arguments for Social Security privatization.
This is typical Republican race-baiting: the cynical use of race to push an agenda.
Take
the confirmation battles over Condoleezza Rice and Alberto Gonzales.
When Democrats held up the confirmations for reasons (lies, torture)
clearly having nothing to do with their race or ethnicity (black,
Latino), Republican officeholders and commentators accused Democrats of
racism. But they didn't mention the Democrat-backed "minority
confirmations" such as those of Rod Paige, Colin Powell or Mel Martinez
-- or the fact that Democrats had voted to confirm 37 of Bush's black
and Latino judicial nominees, while Republicans blocked 13 of Clinton's.
Anyone
looking at Bush's 2006 budget must wonder about the depth of the
president's commitment to black Americans, who will be
disproportionately affected by the proposed cuts in food stamps,
housing and community development grants, Medicaid and student loans.
Black male
unemployment in many American cities, including New York, is now above
50%. If Republicans are serious about reaching these voters, they might
want to start by addressing this crisis. Instead, they've got a
calendar.
But who knows? Maybe they're
right. Most people aren't aware that March 25 marks the 141st
anniversary of the death of Congressman Owen Lovejoy (R-Ill.), an
abolitionist and co-founder of the Illinois Republican Party.
A calendar that points that out could be just the silver bullet that Karl Rove is seeking.