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George Bush defeated
John Kerry in the popular vote for President on November 2, 2004, 51%
to 48%. In spite of Bush’s win,
56% of Americans think the country is headed in the wrong direction,
51% think the Iraq war wasn’t worth fighting and 52% don’t
approve of the job that Bush is doing. The Daily Mirror in the United
Kingdom titled its cover story, “How can 59,054,087 people be so
DUMB?” But, Americans have spoken, which is arguably why this country
considers itself great.
President Bush increased his support among African Americans from 9%
to 11%. The fact that Bush had articulate Blacks in prominent positions
in his cabinet such as Secretary of State Colin Powell, National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice, Education Secretary Rod Paige, and Housing
and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson, certainly didn’t
hurt.
Bush and the Republican Party also made historic gains with other minority
voters, which included 42% of the Hispanic vote. Bush’s support
came from 88% of white voters. Bottom line…what do the election
results mean to African Americans and other minorities?
In addition to a significant increase of unemployment and poverty among
African Americans in Bush’s first term he also declared war on
affirmative action by opposing the University of Michigan Law School’s
affirmative action case before the Supreme Court. I am still furious
with him for inaccurately stating that Michigan’s admission policies “amount
to a QUOTA system that unfairly rewards or penalizes prospective students
based solely on their race.” The admission policy was clearly not
a “quota system” and Bush knew that. The New York Times reported
that Bush chose the racially charged word, “quota,” because
of the negative reaction the word elicits in polls.” .Expect more
of the same.
Also, in his first term, Bush used recess judicial appointments to get
civil rights opponents past the Senate. He appointed Charles Pickering,
who is known to have worked closely with southern segregationist leaders
and intervened from the bench to reduce the sentence of a convicted cross-burner.
William Pryor has been known to question voting rights, raising the ire
of civil rights leaders; Bush gave him a recess appointment to the 11th
Circuit Court of Appeals. ……Expect the more of the same position.
The “saving grace” is that the Republicans will not have
a filibuster-proof 60 seat majority in the Senate and Bush will not be
able to stack the courts with right-wing conservatives (“…if
the Democrats do their job,” says Michael Moore). Other good news
is that five more African Americans were elected as members of Congress,
including Obama Barack, Senator from Illinois and the return of Congresswoman
Cynthia McKinney of Georgia. Personally, I know that McKinney has long
been in the struggle, fighting for Black business and African American
issues.
However, Bill Cosby’s wife, Camille Cosby, reminds African Americans
in her open letter on racism that the African American right to vote
will expire in the year 2007. The Voters Rights Act signed in 1965 by
President Lyndon Johnson was just an ACT, not a LAW. So, in 2007, Congress
will once again convene to give African Americans the “right” to
vote and the extension must be approved by 38 states. To those Black
folks who do not exercise their right to vote, it may be academic if
the extension fails. Can you believe it? “White” Americans
have spoken!
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