Some Black Republicans Torn About Voting for Obama or McCain
The historic nature of Obama's candidacy has some African-American Republicans conflicted
When Michael Varner attended historically black Howard University, he tried his best to rejuvenate Howard's chapter of the College Republicans, but he was a party of one. He debated politics with his mostly African-American and Democratic classmates, candidly discussing his views on personal responsibility and limited government as reasons for aligning himself politically with the GOP.

By the time he graduated this May, Varner was still the sole member of the College Republicans, having learned that it's "almost taboo" in the black community to be a Republican. "There's almost a stigma attached to the name," he says. "It was very frustrating for me."
Even after his hard work at Howard promoting the GOP, Varner finds himself undecided in the race between Republican John McCain and the first African-American presumptive nominee from a major party, Democrat Barack Obama. Varner wants to see the two men debate. He wants to better understand what kind of change Obama can bring. And then, he says, he'll decide. "I think they both have their strong points, and they both have their points where I can wait and see," says Varner.
This recent college grad isn't alone. More well-known black Republicans have also said they are at least considering Obama, including conservative talk show host Armstrong Williams and former Secretary of State Colin Powell. Former Republican Rep. J. C. Watts received attention when he told reporters he was contemplating an Obama vote. "I'm a free agent," says Watts, who is one of the only two black Republicans to serve in the House of Representatives since the 1930s. "I wouldn't just vote for a Republican candidate just because they are Republican, no more than I would vote for a black candidate just because they're black." For Watts it's not the historical nature of the race that leaves him undecided, it's frustration toward his own party. "African-American Republicans in the faith community are the most forgotten demographic in the Republican Party," Watts says. And he hopes the GOP will allot more resources toward attracting black voters.
Watts and others argue that the GOP hasn't done a good job bringing African Americans into the ranks of the party. "It's an astonishing record of deliberate failure, which has been carried over by John McCain this season," says Lee A. Daniels, author of a new book, Last Chance: The Political Threat to Black America. "None of the primary candidates had anything to say with issues of any concern to blacks as a group."
This perceived failure has been reflected at the polls. In 2004, George W. Bush attracted 11 percent of the black vote, up from the 9 percent he garnered in 2000. In 1996, Bob Dole, running against the nation's so-called "first black president," Bill Clinton, received 12 percent. And now with Obama in the picture, more conservative blacks may feel compelled to join the heftier group of black voters who support the Democrat.
"They're practical if nothing else, and they want to see a black president," Ronald Walters, a professor of government and politics at the University of Maryland, says of black Republican voters. "The historical factor is going to overrun some of the other considerations." In a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll, 7 percent of the surveyed African-American adults supported McCain, while 90 percent supported Obama.
Despite the high support for Obama, there are some who are encouraging members of the black community to consider the GOP. One is Frances Rice, chairman of the National Black Republican Association. She paints a very different historical picture than most African-Americans, pointing to what she says is the Democrats' racist past. She brings up Democrats who fought to keep blacks enslaved and those who were members of the Ku Klux Klan. "The Republican Party has been the champion of freedom and civil rights for blacks," she says. And the Democrats? "Their goal is to keep blacks in poverty and the Republicans out of power," Rice says.
However, Daniels says that after Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Democrats have been the ones who have talked about the issues, such as poverty, that are important to African-Americans. "In terms of black people, people say the conventional wisdom is that the Democrats have taken blacks for granted, but it's the Republican Party that takes blacks for granted," Daniels says.
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Reader Comments
Help Please?
am interested to find out the rankings of all the american universities to enable me to make an informed choice.This is so because globaly, tertiary education has been greatly commercialised resulting in low quality education particulary in the developed world.This trend is manifested in both public and private universities all over the world where acquisition of wealth seems to have taken the center stage at the expense of knowlwdge.Education is for sale in the highest institutions of learning ( universities ).In some developing countries the students who fail to meet the minimum cut-off points set by the government for admission to public universities find it easier to obtain a degree than their counter parts who scored highly and joined public universities.why is this?
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Black Republicans
After the 2008 election, I am considering changing my political party from Democrat to Republican or Independent. There are a few political talking points that the Republican Party have that I find hard to swollow. Their views on abortions, on business being the central theme to the solution in solving the high employment rate with no regulation and to embrass deregulation("trickle down economics"), and on a honest oversite o the Republican agenda. Does it help or harm the majority of the black race or the minorities?
It is one thing as Blacks to join the Republican Party, but to take up all their talking points as thought we as Blacks do not a slightly different view of the issue of our own. For example on abortion, I believe if abortion is stopped we must feed the on slot of unwanted births that will come with this decision. If stopping abortions is a matter of religious belief, as it is stated in Proverbs, you must not cause anyone to stubble. They may be hanging on by a thread.
Does the trickle down economics really work for blacks. When applying for jobs are there equality in hiring? I think how hiring really works for Blacks are most representative in the polictical parties. A clear measurement of Black politicans in the legislative branches is how hiring is done just enough to be borderline fair. Do an analysis of what jobs are available to Blacks making less than 50,000 a year. Why? How are Blacks used in the work place making 60,000 and above? You will be surprise as to what you will find.
The Black Democratic and Republican parties should do annual do a study or analysis of how this policies will help or harm miniorities, and come up with an alternative to either parties policies.
It is time Americans especially Black Americans to stop participating in lock step agendas, and spearhead counterproductive agendas that will defeat lopesided results.
A final thought is that Americans seem to look at political parties as they would look at their favor sports team right or wrong, win or lose I'm for my party. I appeal to all Americans unlike sports policies has a forever impact on our lives.
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