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Is Obama the End of Black Politics? Is a new generation entering the political mainstream?

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DeepModem Mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-06-08 12:22 PM
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Is Obama the End of Black Politics? Is a new generation entering the political mainstream?
NYT Magazine: Is Obama the End of Black Politics?
By MATT BAI
Published: August 6, 2008

....The generational transition that is reordering black politics didn’t start this year. It has been happening, gradually and quietly, for at least a decade, as younger African-Americans, Barack Obama among them, have challenged their elders in traditionally black districts. What this year’s Democratic nomination fight did was to accelerate that transition and thrust it into the open as never before, exposing and intensifying friction that was already there. For a lot of younger African-Americans, the resistance of the civil rights generation to Obama’s candidacy signified the failure of their parents to come to terms, at the dusk of their lives, with the success of their own struggle — to embrace the idea that black politics might now be disappearing into American politics in the same way that the Irish and Italian machines long ago joined the political mainstream....

***

The latest evidence of tension between Obama and some older black leaders burst onto cable television last month, after an open microphone on Fox News picked up the Rev. Jesse Jackson crudely making the point that he wouldn’t mind personally castrating his party’s nominee. The reverend was angry because Obama, in a Father’s Day speech on Chicago’s South Side, chastised black fathers for shirking their responsibilities. To Jackson, this must have sounded a lot like a presidential candidate polishing his bona fides with white Americans at the expense of black ones — something he himself steadfastly refused to do even during his second presidential run in 1988, when he captured more votes than anyone thought possible.

Most of the coverage of this minor flap dwelled on the possible animus between Jackson and Obama, despite the fact that Obama himself, who is not easily distracted, seemed genuinely unperturbed by it. But more interesting, perhaps, was the public reaction of Jesse Jackson Jr., the reverend’s 43-year-old son, who is a congressman from Illinois and the national co-chairman of Obama’s campaign. The younger Jackson released a blistering statement in which he said he was “deeply outraged and disappointed” by the man he referred to, a little icily, as “Reverend Jackson.” Invoking his father’s most famous words, Jesse Jr. concluded, “He should keep hope alive and any personal attacks and insults to himself.”

This exchange between the two Jacksons hinted at a basic generational divide on the question of what black leadership actually means. Black leaders who rose to political power in the years after the civil rights marches came almost entirely from the pulpit and the movement, and they have always defined leadership, in broad terms, as speaking for black Americans. They saw their job, principally, as confronting an inherently racist white establishment, which in terms of sheer career advancement was their only real option anyway. For almost every one of the talented black politicians who came of age in the postwar years, like James Clyburn and Charles Rangel, the pinnacle of power, if you did everything right, lay in one of two offices: City Hall or the House of Representatives. That was as far as you could travel in politics with a mostly black constituency. Until the 1990s, even black politicians with wide support among white voters failed in their attempts to win statewide, with only one exception (Edward Brooke, who was elected to the U.S. Senate from Massachusetts in 1966). On a national level, only Jesse Jackson was able to garner a respectable number of white votes, muscling open the door through which Obama, 20 years later, would breezily pass.

This newly emerging class of black politicians, however, men (and a few women) closer in age to Obama and Jesse Jr., seek a broader political brief. Comfortable inside the establishment, bred at universities rather than seminaries, they are just as likely to see themselves as ambassadors to the black community as they are to see themselves as spokesmen for it, which often means extolling middle-class values in urban neighborhoods, as Obama did on Father’s Day. Their ambitions range well beyond safely black seats....

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/10/magazine/10politics-t.html?hp=&pagewanted=all
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Jackpine Radical Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-06-08 12:39 PM
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1. Obama doesn't belong to black America.
He belongs to America. It is time, and it is happening in spite of our nastiest old cultural baggage.

From what I have seen of younger Americans, the under-30 generation in particular, race is receding in importance as an important attribute by which people define themselves. The younger people--the ones for whom the Internet has "always been there--" are a far different breed than we dinosaurs can know or imagine. I, a psychologist, watch my 4 year-old granddaughter interact with a Mac, and I realize that I have no conception of the nature of the cognitive structures being formed in that little brain.
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DeepModem Mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-06-08 12:44 PM
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2. A very interesting point -- this change is reflected in our youngest generation...
among whites as well as blacks, among all ethnicities. One article I read described Gen Y as "color blind." This is an encouraging sign for the future.
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BlooInBloo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-06-08 12:49 PM
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3. Yah - those damn racist black folks and their racist politics...
:rofl:
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Writer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-06-08 12:51 PM
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4. Wow. An entire article on a new generation of black leadership...
and not ONE mention of "Generation X" for any of the people listed.

Wow.
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DeepModem Mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-06-08 12:56 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Good point. nt
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