Dems alienate Maryland Blacks, chase them to support GOP

I made a few comments in response to Pictoratus excellent article: The Democrats who cried wolf but the article that I'm including a few clips from -- in the Tuesday, October 31, 2006 edition of The Washington Times really meshes with some comments I made in my reply there, and bears expounding upon.

In an article headlined: Black Democrats support Steele, the Washington Times has a few great quotes about just how much alienating the Democratic party has accomplished towards Blacks in Maryland.

Remember, this is the party that has long counted on the NAACP to deliver hordes of votes for their candidates, and this is now the party that finds some of it's past elected leaders (who happen to be Black) out supporting a Republican who also happens to be Black. While some in the party, including an acquaintance that happens to also be Black, look at Michael Steele and decide that they are looking at someone that is whiter than the old white guy that the Democrats are running against him, there are others that are very, very, very disappointed in their party and having been taken for granted by the leadership in their party.

Would it have been pandering to have the Democratic party put their full support behind Kwesi Mfume, former head of the NAACP, and former Congress person himself, instead of the party choice of Ben Cardin, an old white guy who has been in congress for years and years himself? Maybe, but when you are the party of pandering, and the party that claims to be most in line with minorities such is normally the price you would pay.

Maryland is a strange state in some ways. Prince Georges county has a fairly large Black majority, while Montgomery County is largely white and affluent. Parts of counties around Baltimore have a large contigent of Blacks and other minorities, but most of Southern Maryland remains white. The Eastern shore and Western Maryland also continue to be primarily white. Especially Western Maryland, where many of the residents can trace back their history of involvement with the KKK fairly easily.

That Prince Georges county contingent was put up against Montgomery County, and much of the rest of the white dominated parts of the state during the Democratic primary, and Kwesi Mfume saw his chances at getting the Democratic nomation for U.S. Senate from Maryland dashed pretty handily. Mfume never got support from the party, and was basically ignored because the Democratic machine had already decided that Ben Cardin was the better candidate to run as an anti-Bush vote getter. (More on that anti-Bush sentiment in another article later).

Had Mfume received more support among the Democrat hierarchy, he very well could have captured the nomination and the coming Senate race would probably not even be close. Instead, Steele continues to close the gap in a state with a fairly heavy Democrat majority among registered voters.

In anycase, check out a few of the quotes I've clipped in the comments area. It's very interesting reading.

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Reply #1 Top

Here's a few choice words and comments from some of the individuals referenced in the headline article I linked above and am linking here: Black Democrats [ in Maryland ] support Steele:

Former Prince George's County Executive Wayne K. Curry and five fellow black Democrats on the county council excoriated their party yesterday and endorsed Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele, a Republican, for U.S. Senate.
    "The [Democratic] Party acts as though when they want our opinion, they'll give it to us. It's not going to be like that anymore," said Mr. Curry, who in 1994 became the county's first black executive and remains influential in the mostly black and heavily Democratic county.
    Mr. Curry and the lawmakers said Democratic leaders repeatedly have snubbed the black community and their county, noting the lack of party support for the Senate campaign of former National Association for the Advancement of Colored People chief Kweisi Mfume, who lost the Democratic primary to Rep. Benjamin L. Cardin.
    The Democratic ticket lacks black candidates, they said, and candidates from Prince George's County, which is home to more than 320,000 registered Democrats -- the most of any jurisdiction in Maryland.
    "We're not puppets. We're not gullible," Mr. Curry said during a press conference at the Infusion Tea Cafe in Largo. "This ain't the first time we've charged up a hill."

Reply #2 Top

MFume is just the latest in a long list of blacks the democrats have shafter.  Maynard Jackson, and McCall are 2 recent ones.

Look at it from the democrat perspective.  They have nothing to win by supporting blacks, and possibly something to lose.  Their feeling is they are going to get the black vote, whether they run Eldridge Cleaver or David Duke, so why alienate the racist white vote with a black candidate?

Reply #3 Top
Thanks for the link.

On a related note, Donna Brazile warned Democrats not to push Mr. Mfume out of the race lest the party be seen as taking African-American voters for granted. As you noted, they didn't listen and the results could cause a shift in the voting patterns of Black voters.