*GOP's Steele Rejects Obama 'Coat Tailing' Theory; Sets Out to 'Engage'
Black Community *
By: Hazel Trice Edney
*NNPA Editor-in-Chief*
Originally posted 2/25/2009

WASHINGTON (NNPA)– New Republican Party Chairman Michael Steele, the first
African-American to hold the seat, rejects the notion that his Jan. 30 win
was largely due to political “coat tailing” of the celebrated Barack Obama,
America’s first Black president.

“I firmly believe that if Hilary Clinton had been the [Democratic] nominee
and had won or Joe Biden or any of them, I think that it was a moment in
time just as it was for Barack in which various things came together to
create this moment,” Steele said in an interview with the NNPA News Service.
“Now we will see what we do with it. Now we’ll see what we’ll both do with
it.”

A widely-held belief is that the Republican strategy is now to glean from
the Obama euphoria in order to win back defected Republicans and
African-American votes in four years.

“While I congratulate Steele, I am also aware that it probably would never
have happened if Barack Obama had not won the presidency,” wrote NNPA
columnist Ron Walters. “So now that he is chair, the biggest question he
confronts is how to turn around the strong perception that Republicans are
actively opposed to Black interests.

Steele himself said just after the recent election while campaigning for the
office that Republican Party officials ‘just don’t give a damn’.” Steele
concedes that galvanizing the Republican vote enough to take back the White
House in four years will be nearly impossible.

“It will be like climbing Mount Rushmore in a pair of shorts and a T-Shirt.
It’s going to be very, very, very tough,” he said. “You’re fully exposed.
And it’s a very difficult thing to do. You’re laid bare in many respects as
a party because you’re trying to say, ‘Look, this is what we’ve done wrong
in the past’.” But, he actually believes it’s doable. “They didn’t have
Michael Steele,” he said.

Known for his outspokenness, Steele said, “We did a lot of things that led
the people to distrust our leadership.” By that, he not only meant violating
Republican principles of frugality and fiscal conservatism, but outrightly
demonstrating the insensitivity toward Black concerns for which the
Republican Party has gained a reputation.

“I got in trouble in 2006 when I ran for the Senate because I called out the
failure of a Republican administration to appropriately and affectively deal
with [Hurricane] Katrina,” Steele says. He lost that election despite his
earlier win as Maryland’s first Black lieutenant governor.

Now, he says, he will use his outspokenness to start an energetic
conversation within the largely southern White male party that he believes
will attract others to the table.

Most Blacks were registered Republicans until Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “New
Deal” from 1933-1938. As late as the early 1960s, it was not unusual for
Republican candidates to get 30 percent of the Black vote, particularly
moderate Republicans such as New York City Mayor John V. Lindsay and
Connecticut Sen. Lowell Weicker.

A major turning point for the party and its relationship with
African-Americans came when Republicans chose Sen. Barry Goldwater, an
archconservative from Arizona, as its presidential candidate in 1964, smack
in the middle of the civil rights movement. Goldwater ran on a states’ right
platform, an overt attempt to court Southern segregationists. Only 6 percent
of Blacks voted for Goldwater.

By contrast, 94 percent of African-Americans supported incumbent Democratic
President Lyndon B. Johnson, who was elected in a landslide. Since that
time, Republicans have never received more than 15 percent of the Black
vote. In 2000, George W. Bush received only 8 percent of the
African-American vote, the weakest support a GOP nominee had received since
Goldwater until the Obama election when the Republicans got about 2 percent
of the Black vote. The more the GOP has shifted to the right, the less
support it receives from African-Americans. Steele is determined to cause
another shift.

“I’ve got to be the leader that will call the party to its great sense of
self and its greater since of responsibility to all communities,” he says,
describing it as the “Courage of [my] convictions…You can do it if you
believe it and you think it needs to be done.”

The key over the next four years, he says, will be the Republican Party’s
ability to confess, “We’ve spent too much money, we’ve behaved irresponsibly
once in leadership and then to look the voter in the eye and say we’ve
learned from that.” Steele will have help.

David Avella, executive director of the 30-year-old GOPAC, formerly chaired
by Steele for two years, says the organization is gearing up to galvanize a
“new generation of Republican leaders,” he describes.

“We have to, as a party, do a good job at training our candidates on how to
connect with voters, how to make sure their message is getting to voters
across their districts or across their states,” says Avella, “We’ve got to
do a good job on training them how to run winning campaigns, how to do the
fundamentals, how to raise the money, how to put together door to door
campaigns…We don’t have to just do that with Black Republicans. We have to
do that with all Republicans.”

Avella adds, “I will do whatever Chairman Steele desires me to do to help
make him successful and to help grow the Republican Party.”
Steele says he will need help not only engaging the Party, but the Black
community.

“I think that we failed when we stopped engaging, when we took an attitude
that, ‘Well they won’t vote for us so why bother?’ I think Black people have
been largely dissed by both parties. Not just over the last eight years, but
over the last 40 years.”

Despite the overwhelming popularity of President Obama, Steele says he will
not back down from addressing Blacks from a Republican standpoint on the
issues that concern them most: “Talk to them, talk to them, engage them, be
challenged by them, have them express their frustration and anger directly
to us; have us to express why our solutions affect the Black community:
Poverty, poor education, joblessness, incarceration, drug addiction, HIV
AIDS Infection,” he listed.

Obama has said he desires bi-partisanship. But, so far, he hasn’t been able
to draw that level of support from Republican lawmakers with both houses of
Congress dominated by Democrats.

Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, Democratic National Committee Chairman, released a
congratulatory note when Steele won, saying, “I look forward to working with
Chairman Steele as we set out to put partisanship and the politics of the
past aside to get our economy working again. The American people have sent a
clear message that the challenges we face are too great for us to get bogged
down by outmoded ideological divides.”

Hearing of the release, Steele’s response indicated what will likely be the
tone over the next four years:
“I have a lot in common with Kaine.

He’s pro-life, pro-Second Amendment, and pro-business,” he said. “I applaud
the fact that he is now chairman of the Democratic Party. But I am not duped
into believing that the Democratic Party is now suddenly going to be
pro-life, pro-gun, and pro-business…Bi-partisanship is easy when you
outnumber your opponent two to one.”

-- 
"I'm selfish, impatient, and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of
control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can't handle me at my
worst, then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best." ~Marilyn Monroe

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