17 September 2009
British Eye on America 3A virulent campaign by the so-called "Birthers" is being
waged, in which it is alleged that Mr Obama was really born in Kenya rather than
Hawaii and is therefore not qualified to be commander-in-chief.
A white Congressman from the Deep South shouts, "You lie!" at the first black
president and refuses to apologise to fellow members of the House of
Representatives. Democrats and their media allies mutter darkly that Congressman
Joe Wilson really meant "You boy!"
This is not a fringe accusation. Even former President Jimmy Carter, himself a
son of the segregated South, stated baldly that Mr Wilson's intemperate outburst
was "based on racism" and ran "deeper" than mere policy opposition. "There is an
inherent feeling among many in this country that an African-American should not
be president," he said.
But wait a minute. Mr Obama convincingly prevailed over John McCain in last
November's election, an event that many American liberals argued could never
happen in "racist" America. He has, moreover, not been shot by a redneck, giving
the lie to an almost routine pre-election assertion in Europe that a black man
could never be elected President, and if he was, he would be assassinated.
The election was a little over 10 months ago. Has America really turned around
and stumbled back into the sulphurous swamps of racial hatred?
The short answer is no. Mr Obama is becoming a much less popular figure than he
was when he entered office, partly because of the usual laws of political
gravity, but also because of the unrealistic expectations he encouraged and the
number of mistakes he has made.
To dismiss race as a factor in either last November's election or current
political debate would be foolish. It was, of course, ludicrous to expect that
the US would become a post-racial country overnight. History – and racial
tension – did not stop with the election of Mr Obama.
In the 2008 vote, 96 per cent of blacks voted for the then Illinois senator.
Since then, the demographic that is most disappointed by him is whites.
According to a recent Pew Research poll, white support for Mr Obama has plunged
by 11 points since April.
Part of the reason for this is Mr Obama's own extraordinary life story and the
part it played in his election. As the son of a black Kenyan father and a white
mother from Kansas who was an infant at the height of the civil rights era, Mr
Obama was a candidate who stood outside the mainstream African-American
experience.
He had grown up in multi-racial Hawaii and been raised by a white mother and
white grandparents. His Harvard Law School pedigree, ease in any kind of racial
setting and palpable comfort in his own skin gave him extraordinary appeal among
whites. He made white Americans feel better about themselves.
Mr Obama was as different as it was possible to be from the likes of the Rev
Jesse Jackson and the Rev Al Sharpton, black politicians who had built their
careers on exploiting racial grievances. He was not the Rev Reginald Bacon, the
Harlem racial agitator in Tom Wolfe's The Bonfire of the Vanities, the 1987
blockbuster novel that centred on racial tensions in the Big Apple; instead, he
was Bishop Warren Bottomley.
The churchman, Wolfe wrote, was "one of those well-educated, urbane black people
who immediately create the Halo Effect in the eyes of white people…He was
handsome, slender, about forty-five, athletic in build. He had a ready smile, a
glittering eye, a firm handshake…"
It was a remarkably prescient description of Mr Obama. As now Vice President Joe
Biden put it in a characteristic stream of consciousness that condemned him to
the ranks of also-ran presidential candidates: "I mean, you got the first
mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a
nice-looking guy. I mean, that's a storybook, man."
Layered on to this were Mr Obama's own assiduous efforts to make himself
acceptable in the eyes of black voters. A key element of this was rooting
himself in his wife Michelle's home city of Chicago, where he joined the Trinity
United Church of Christ. The pastor there was the Rev Jeremiah Wright, a
character who, with his ranting sermons about the "US of KKK" and "God Damn
America", even Tom Wolfe might have blushed at creating.
Once he had established his African-American credentials, Mr Obama's church
attendance dropped off. After staging a very public show of looking for a church
in Washington this year, Mr Obama quietly elected to make his place of worship
the chapel at the presidential retreat at Camp David. His Christianity – much
vaunted during the campaign, not least to inoculate him against his Muslim
background – seems to be of the Easter-and-Christmas variety.
Mr Obama's rhetorical brilliance saved his campaign from imploding when the
furore over his association with Wright broke, just as he was overcoming Hillary
Clinton in the Democratic primaries. One of the impressions that was left,
however, was that he was prepared to use the issue of race when it suited him.
Strategically, he knew that to be painted as "the black candidate" would be a
political death sentence, but tactically he was prepared to work the racial
angles.
Similarly, Mr Obama has been anxious to avoid being boxed into the category of
"first black president". But he foolishly waded into a controversy over the
arrest of a black Harvard professor by a white policeman, trying to score an
easy political point by criticising the seemingly blameless officer.
More seriously, Mr Obama is the leader of a Democratic party that is now coming
dangerously close to proclaiming that any fervent opposition to him must spring
from a racist impulse.
In targeting Mr Wilson, they appear to have the wrong man. A previously
anonymous congressman, all of whose four sons have served in the US military –
two in Iraq – he comes across more as an ordinary American who let his mouth run
away with him than as a venomous racist.
His shout, moreover, reflected a manifestation of genuine anger felt by many
ordinary Americans about the wholesale state intervention of the Obama
administration that amounts to an ambitious and radical transformation of the
country. Crying racism can be a cheap way of shutting down debate.
By attempting to marginalise Mr Wilson as a racist, Democrats are playing a
dangerous game because, as Armstrong Williams, a black conservative, lamented in
his Washington Times column yesterday, "preventing people from discussing
diverse ideas only stimulates hatred".
Some of the opposition to Mr Obama is unquestionably racially motivated. Rusty
LePass, a South Carolina Republican, was rightly vilified after commenting on
his Facebook page about a report of a gorilla escape from a zoo: "I'm sure it's
just one of Michelle's ancestors - probably harmless." And a number of the signs
at Saturday's Obama rally were, to put it mildly, unfortunate. One depicted a
lion with the words: "The Zoo has an African [lion] and the White House has a
Lyin' African."
Mr Obama's election was a moment of triumph for the US and a major step towards
erasing the awful stain of slavery. The president himself has a nuanced,
sophisticated approach to racial matters.
He is in danger, however, of allowing race to be the principal political weapon
used by Democrats against Republicans. A failure to show presidential leadership
by calling a halt to this folly could fuel opposition to the Obama agenda – and
unpick the scab of racism just as the old wounds were beginning to heal.
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