Confiscating the
African American Vote? How the Clinton Media Machine Blocked Sanders Civil
Rights Play
Global Research, March
04, 2016
Region: USA
Theme: Police State & Civil Rights
Inside the Takedown
of Bernie Sanders’s Civil Rights Record
When the history of
the 2016 presidential race is written — if it is written well — it will note
the remarkable role played by the African American vote.
It will also note the
role of the establishment, including well-placed allies and a significant
portion of the media, in keeping the African American vote in a pre-ordained
slot: Hillary Clinton’s camp.
Hillary Clinton had a
fact, an opportunity, and a problem. Bernie Sanders was surging in national
polls, but she was managing to hang on to a huge majority of the black vote,
which plays a large and increasingly important role in the Democratic primaries
and caucuses.
Young Bernie Sanders
speaks to students on the first day of a sit-in at the University of Chicago in
1962. Photo credit: Photographer Danny Lyon’s official blog: BLEAK BEAUTY /
Bernie Sanders / YouTube
If she could retain the
black vote in overwhelming numbers, she could hold back Sanders’s surge.
But there were a few big
problems. Bernie Sanders’s issues go to the heart of what ails much of Black
America. The Bill-and-Hillary record on a number of critical matters, from the
incarceration of black youth to the best way to aid struggling black families,
youths, single mothers and the unemployed, was at best mixed.
In contrast to Sanders,
she is saddled with her closeness to the financial community that has wreaked
havoc with the lives of African Americans who are struggling economically. This
coziness with representatives of the One Percent goes well beyond delivering
well-paid speeches to Goldman Sachs.
Clinton also has been a
pumped-up, eager hawk on military action — a position generally unpopular with
African Americans, for whom military service has often been a job opportunity
of last resort, with the obvious consequences to life and limb. Many other
reasons for African Americans not to identify closely with Clinton can be
found. She knows this: that’s why she worked so hard to publicly associate
herself with President Barack Obama and his policies — though in reality she
and the president differed on a number of key points, including her avidity for
foreign intervention.
The clincher, though, was
surely the revelation that, at the same time the young Hillary Clinton was a
proud Goldwater Republican in the early-mid sixties, the young Bernie Sanders
was getting arrested as a supporter of civil rights.
The contrast between the
candidates’ history on this issue posed a potential disaster for Clinton: if
she could not hold onto the African American vote, according to almost all
calculations, it was hard to see how she could win the nomination.
And so the Clinton PR
apparatus, as formidable as any, went to work.
***
The media keeps saying
that “Black folks just love Hillary.” And the Super Tuesday
returns from certain southern states seemed to bear this out. Yet these
victories in states that Clinton is unlikely to carry in the general election
may not necessarily carry over to potential battleground states such as
Virginia, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio, where African Americans
are a sizable part of the Democratic electorate .
If a big turnout of African
American voters did not materialize for Clinton in those states, her candidacy
would be in deep trouble indeed.
So instead of just
repeating the blacks-love-Hillary mantra, the media should look deeper into the
question of what each of these candidates offers to African American voters.
And such an examination might begin with their respective relationships to the
civil rights movement of the early 1960s
The record shows that
young Bernie Sanders was a dedicated civil rights activist. He gave speeches in
the freezing Chicago winters, he demonstrated for desegregated schools, he
participated in Martin Luther King’s march on Washington. And, in 1963, he was
arrested while protesting segregated housing at the University of Chicago.
The Perfect Iconic
Moment
Let’s focus for a moment
on that arrest — which happened at a time when Hillary Clinton was a
Republican, and would soon be supporting Barry Goldwater for president.
Here’s the background to
Sanders’s arrest, as summarized by Kartemquin Films, a Chicago-based maker of
socially conscious documentaries:
Education protests in
Chicago have been making national headlines for the past few years, but the
roots of these protests can be traced back to the early 1960’s and the citywide
school boycott that emptied half of Chicago’s schools. It was one of the
largest Civil Rights demonstrations in the north. Despite the mandate of Brown
vs. the Board of Education, Chicago Public Schools remained segregated and
inadequately resourced. Overcrowded black schools sat blocks away from white
schools with empty classrooms. To deal with the overflow but avoid integration,
CPS Superintendent Benjamin Willis ordered the installment of mobile unit
classrooms on the playgrounds and parking lots of these schools. Dubbed “Willis
Wagons,” they outraged the community, leading to a massive boycott by 250,000
students. Other cities soon planned similar demonstrations.
It’s not hard to imagine
the impact that news of Sanders’s front-line presence in the great civil-rights
confrontations of the 1960s might have on African American voters who, until
now, have had no reason to think of him as involved in that arena. Nor is it
hard to imagine how important it would be to Clinton backers to neutralize that
impact.
Here is a blow by blow
account of the dispute over Sanders’s civil rights credentials:
June, 2015: The Sanders
campaign puts out a
video with an image
of the young Sanders leading a sit-in at the University of Chicago to protest
segregated housing for students (the campaign ad was premiered in June/July to
Iowans but published online July 25th).
November 12, 2015: Time publishes “Exclusive: College Alumni Raise
Doubts About Bernie Sanders Campaign Photo.”
February 11, 2016: Washington
Post columnist Jonathan Capehart writes a piece titled:
“Stop sending around this photo of
‘Bernie Sanders’” (with Sanders’s name in quotes to emphasize the idea that the
photo was not Sanders). That same day, Rep. John Lewis
(D-Ga.), a legendary civil-rights leader (and close to the Clintons), also questionswhether Sanders was involved with the civil rights
movement (see below).
February 11, 2016:
Clinton-supporter Lewis is asked about Sanders’s involvement in civil
rights. He replies, “Well, to be very frank… I never saw him, I
never met him… But I met Hillary Clinton. I met President Clinton.”
February 11, 2016: Mother
Jones publishes an
article with
photos of vintage news articles from The Maroon (University of
Chicago) and the Chicago Tribune, confirming Sanders’s arrest.
February 13, 2016: Time is
forced to reverse
itself (it couldn’t
have been very happy about that) — and publishes an article titled:
“Photographer Says 1962 Photo Really Does Show Bernie Sanders.” (Of course, in
such battles, the initial denial or claim that something is false often
resonates the loudest, and many people may have already tuned out.)
February 13, 2016:
The CBC (Congressional Black Caucus) PAC publishes a
reversal from Lewis: “The fact that I did not meet him in the movement does not
mean I doubted that Sen. Sanders participated in the Civil Rights Movement,
neither was I attempting to disparage his activism.”
February 21, 2016: Boston.com publishes “Newly found video shows Bernie
Sanders getting arrested in 1963.” You can view it here.
This reminds me of
something I covered in my book Family of Secrets: how the Bush
family reacted when backers of Vietnam War hero-turned-peacenik John Kerry
attacked George W. Bush, architect of the Iraq invasion, for having disappeared
when he was supposed to be doing his (safe, stateside) military service during
the Vietnam War.
The Bush campaign — with
brilliant dirty tricks performed at a safe distance for deniability — turned
around a difficult situation and buried an inconvenient fact about W. that
could have cost him key support in battleground states. Is the Clinton campaign
doing the same thing?
This little skirmish over
a 52-year-old photograph may seem inconsequential on its face. But it touches
on an issue that is central to the nomination fight. If Sanders did protest on
behalf of the interests of black people while Clinton was a young Republican
supporting the subtly racist campaign of Barry Goldwater, and if Sanders’s
lifelong crusade on behalf of the poor and the oppressed was fully communicated
to black and Latino voters, Hillary Clinton might find her base not so
dependable.
And, as reported by
the New York
Times, although African Americans are turning out for Clinton
in very high percentages in the primaries, high enough to damage Sanders, they
are not turning out in high numbers — heralding a crisis that
could devastate the Democrats in November.
Expect even greater
efforts by the Clinton camp to prevent Sanders from getting this story out as
the campaign reaches break-point. But will the media provide the analysis
voters deserve?
The original source of
this article is Global Research
Copyright © WhoWhatWhy Staff,
Global Research, 2016
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