African American
Related: About this forumThe Other Glass Ceiling
from Jamelle Bouie at The Prospect: http://prospect.org/article/other-glass-ceiling
March 14, 2012
Even in the Age of Obama, serious impediments remain for the most ambitious black politicians.
A divide that existed between the political fortunes of black and white Americans has just been erased, and I guess its been erased for all time. That was the assessment of Julian Bond, the legendary civil-rights leader and former NAACP chair, after Barack Obama won the presidency. It was echoed by prominent African American figures of all generations, who were hopeful that Obamas victory would usher in a new age of successful black politicians. In the twenty-first century, wrote journalist Gwen Ifill in The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama, the breakthrough generation of black politicians is aiming to capture much bigger territory. Obamas relentless and disciplined giant-slaying campaign is by no means the only story.
But since the momentous 2008 election, there has been no great flowering of black political life, no renaissance in black political leadership. In a year when the first black president is running for re-election, the only African American bidding for a top statewide office is Maryland state Senator C. Anthony Muse, who is challenging Ben Cardina well-liked incumbentin a hopeless race for the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination. At most, by the end of 2012, two of the nations 150 governors and senators will be African American.
Yes, David Patterson became governor of New York after the resignation of Eliot Spitzer, but he bowed out of running for a full term after struggling with low approval ratings and accusations of corruption. Obamas replacement in the U.S. Senate, former Illinois lawmaker Roland Burris, operated under a cloud of scandal and didnt even attempt to win the seat in his own right. In 2010, a historically bad year for Democrats, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick was the only African American to win statewide office.
If the number of officeholders was in line with African Americans share of the population12.2 percentthere would be at least 12 African American senators and six governors. By contrast, the percentage of African Americans in the House of Representatives is nearly consistent with their share of the population42 members, or almost 10 percent.
. . . The House of Representatives has long been a springboard for political advancement; nearly half the members in the current Senate49served in the House. By contrast, of the dozens of African Americans who have held House seats, not one has moved to the Senate, and only four have tried . . .
read more: http://prospect.org/article/other-glass-ceiling
Number23
(24,544 posts)I am torn here. Is it worse to have no blacks in Congress or to have a few blacks there but who are all black Republicans? I honestly cannot answer this.
nofurylike
(8,775 posts)i can not express any more on it. it all speaks for itself ...
shamefully.
thank you for posting that, bigtree.