Posts Tagged ‘jesse jackson’

A Conservative Urban Agenda?

March 22nd, 2010 by John Feehery

The same weekend that the President won his biggest legislative victory, a group of black leaders, including Jesse Jackson and radio talk show host Tavis Smiley, convened a meeting in Chicago to criticize the President for not doing enough for their besieged community.

“It would be fascinating right now to see how Martin Luther King Jr. would navigate and negotiate a dance with Barack Obama, with this president who doesn’t want to focus on a black agenda,” Smiley, a frequent critic of Obama’s policies, told the Sun-Times recently.

I think Smiley has a point.

With unemployment rates for the black community averaging 15% nationally, with certain areas, like Detroit, having unemployment rates hitting 50%, and with the unemployment rates among black males aged 18 to 35 averaging about 35%, there is no doubt that the African-American community is facing a real crisis.

And the President, who is the nation’s first African-American President, hasn’t said much about the community’s plight.

I understand why.  The President wants to be the nation’s first post-racial President.  He doesn’t want to be put into a “black” box, so to speak, where he is seen only as a black President.  He and his advisors believe that this is bad politics and could hurt his chances at re-election.

Condemning the Old, Condemning the New

July 10th, 2008 by John Feehery

            First, Barack Obama is forced to distance himself from the comments of his spiritual father, the infamous Reverend Wright.

 

 

            And now, one of Obama’s top supporters, Jesse Jackson Jr. is forced to condemn the comments of his actual father, Rev. Jesse Jackson.

 

            In 1992, Bill Clinton attacked the comments of a rap singer named Sister Souljah, who famously said, “If black people kill black people every day, why not have a week and kill white people?”

 

            Clinton was able use his criticism of her to recast himself as a centrist.  Looking back on it now, it seems like a no-brainer.

 

            Today, Obama has been the attackee, not the attacker.

 

            Will he use these attacks to try to remake himself into a centrist?  Probably.  Will it work?  I doubt it.

 

            It worked for Clinton because he was white Southerner.  He made a plausible centrist. 

 

            Obama is neither perceived as white (although his mother was) nor from the south (unless you count the South Side of Chicago as south).