>From a.belt...@ymail.com

 

The Black President and the Brown Vote     

 

by Bruce A. Dixon, BAR managing editor  

Black Agenda Report: May 11, 2011

 

Can Barack Obama be re-elected without the overwhelming majorities he
received in Latino communities across the country? 

 

The short answer is probably not. Detentions, deportations, raids, profiling
and mass roundups of immigrants are at an all time high. 

 

The border wall that Obama originally campaigned against has been built with
his endorsement, and generous federal contracts to jail detained immigrants
have rescued the private prison industry. 

 

What happened, Latino activists are asking, to the president's commitments
to fairness, human rights and a path to citizenship? 

 

And what will happen to the Latino vote in 2012?  

 

In 2008, President Obama got a full two-thirds of the Latino vote, a greater
slice than of any ethnic group apart from African Americans. 

 

The brown vote for Obama was decisive in Florida, Nevada, New Mexico and
Colorado and topped 70% in California, Illinois and New Jersey. 

 

Can the president count on that kind of overwhelming support in 2012? 

 

With deportations and family separations at an all time high, and no end in
sight, some Latino activists think not.   

 

"We can't hide from it, even if we wanted to," Roberto Lovato, writer and
co-founder of Presente.Org, the nation's premiere on-line Latino advocacy
group told Black Agenda Report. "Just about every Latino family contains
undocumented people, along with citizens and adults registered to vote. They
know. They can see that deportations are at an all time high. The number of
these brutal family separations where children and old people are left
behind has never been greater. They see this in their own families and the
families of friends and neighbors. The level of actual fear people live in,
in their homes, on the street or at the job has never been more intense than
it is right now."  

 

In the generation since the Freedom Movement ended, black politicians and
the black church have appropriated its mantle and symbols to market black
candidates in black constituencies for every office from city council to
president as the heirs and fulillers of Dr. King's Dream. 

 

Hence candidate Obama didn't even have to make black America any promises. 

 

Black voters bit the marketing, made up the promises in their own heads, and
flocked to the polls in record numbers. 

 

But along with the slick marketing and the slippery language of
"comprehensive immigration reform" Barack Obama did make a handful of
specific commitments to Latinos. He promised a road to citizenship for the
millions of undocumented, along with a more just and fair immigration
regime. He hasn't delivered.  

 

"The fact is that on immigration issues," Lovato continued, "Barack Obama
has been the worst US president of modern times. Supporting him again, for
many Latinos is a proposition that flies in the face of our own dignity and
self-respect."  

 

Without overwhelming majorities in brown constituencies, re-electing Barack
Obama will be difficult indeed. 

 

White support for the president is dropping, and even African American
support is softening. 

 

Latino support for the president, according to an authoritative February
2011 survey by Latino Decisions and impreMe, is around 70%. 

 

But that number, they caution, "...does not translate into automatic votes
for 2012..." The second part of that poll reveals that while Republicans are
gaining no ground in Latino communities, only 43% of Latino voters are
certain they will support Barack Obama next year.   

 

The White House knows it's in deep trouble.  

 

"My sources in DC tell me that when the Congressional Hispanic Caucus called
for the President Obama to use his executive authority to suspend or alter
the so-called "Secure Communities" program under which hundreds of workplace
raids and countless incidents of profiling, indiscriminate roundups,
detentions and deportations have occurred, the White House responded by
working the phones, calling up key House Democrats and cautioning them to
keep their distance from the caucus on this.  

 

"The president is running around the country, showing up at town hall
meetings claiming that federal policies are only deporting criminals, but
everybody knows it's not true. At one meeting a young woman, a college
student stood up and pulled out her own deportation order to show the
president. The president is convening panels of Latino celebrities, asking
them to spread the word about the good work he's doing for our people. But
it's not working, not as well as he needs it to. 

 

There is a solid and growing base of people and organizations in our
communities who just aren't buying it.  

 

"There are moves to silence critics of the administration on this, to deny
them access to publication and broadcast, to cut funding and such. But I
think those efforts will fail. The number of imprisoned, brutally separated
and terrorized families and communities is just so great that Latinos even
in unions, in community groups and such that normally constitute the
informal infrastructure of the Democratic party can't ignore them.   

 

"At some point the White House will either have to try to divide us, or step
to the table and negotiate. When that happens, the two minimum demands,
neither of which Obama needs Republican support to meet, will be to stop the
deportations of DREAM Act students, and to cut off funding for the "Secure
Communities Act. Maybe we'll even get to remove the many punitive elements
of so-called "comprehensive immigration reform" as well. We just have to
stand against this White House, and Latinos are showing some backbone, I'm
an optimist, I think we can."  

 

We think Lovato has a point. President Obama, in his El Paso speech earlier
this week dishonestly laid the blame for the wave of deportations and terror
exclusively on Republicans. He talked about undocumented workers "jumping to
the front of the line." The president might have taken a moment to explain
to the "what do you not understand about illegal" chorus of white America
that the federal government, in the 19th and early 20th centuries removed
all barriers to and actively solicited European immigration, with the
oft-stated goal of making this a white republic. The famed American "melting
pot" was intended, in those days, to exclude everybody who wasn't white. So
much for the "our ancestors came here legally" nonsense. Time to get over
all that. But in the color-blind America of the 21st century, this remains
forgotten and forbidden history.  

 

Lovato adds that many Latinos have carefully studied the struggle of African
Americans, both before and since the Freedom Movement of a generation ago.
Let's hope they don't make some of the mistakes black America is making
today, like unconditionally supporting an administration that does virtually
nothing for them. They have little to lose. When that happens, black people
will have a lesson to learn from Latinos.  

 

Bruce A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report, and based in
Marietta GA, where he is also a state committee member of the GA Green
Party. He can be reached at bruce.di...@blackagendareport.com

 

_______________________________________________

Rad-Green mailing list

rad-gr...@greenhouse.economics.utah.edu

 

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