Black caucus to press Obama on priorities

February 26, 2009 · Print This Article <javascript:window.print()>

President Barack Obama may be in familiar company when he sits down for his
first White House meeting with the Congressional Black Caucus, but it won’t
be a clubby reunion.

Members of the liberal, all-Democratic caucus that just last year counted
Obama as one of its own say they plan to press him on their priorities. The
session could rekindle lingering differences Obama has had with the group,
which hasn’t always embraced his approach to politics.

It hasn’t slipped some caucus members’ attention, for example, that Obama
first hosted congressional Republicans and the conservative Blue Dog
Democrats in his push toward the political middle. They say it’s their job
to ensure he remains true to certain priorities, such as fixing inner-city
poverty, that he once faced as a community organizer in Chicago.

“He knows these issues, but I think it’s very important that no group is
taken for granted,” said Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Fla. “It doesn’t matter who
is president … if you’re not in the room, your interests will be left on the
table.”

Without question, Brown and other African-American lawmakers say they are
thrilled to have Obama in the White House, not just because he is the first
black president but because his agenda aligns with theirs far more than
former President George W. Bush’s did.

In turn, Obama relies partly on the organization’s largely black
constituents, who were a big factor in his presidential win.

Any differences between Obama and the caucus are overblown, said the group’s
chairwoman, Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif. “His agenda is our agenda,” she said.

“We are working with the president, and we want to make sure his agenda is
supported,” she said.

Yet Obama maintained a distant relationship with the caucus when he was its
only Senate member from 2004-08. That dynamic was on display early in the
Democratic presidential primary, when many senior caucus members initially
backed Hillary Rodham Clinton even as Obama quickly became viable as a
candidate.

Those lawmakers eventually endorsed Obama, some realizing it could cost them
politically if they didn’t.

Lee and others declined to discuss specific policy items that may come up at
the meeting, which the caucus routinely holds with the president at the
start of a new Congress. The list is likely to include concerns about the
continued wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, diversity in administration jobs and
more help for homeowners facing foreclosure.

The caucus already has demonstrated it will challenge Obama if he strays
from its priorities.

Members were quick to question the wisdom of Obama’s failed appointment of
Republican Sen. Judd Gregg as commerce secretary. They were wary of the New
Hampshire conservative and whether he would ensure a full counting of
minorities in the 2010 census, which is conducted under the Commerce
Department’s jurisdiction. Those concerns in part led Obama to announce that
the census would be directed by the White House, not Commerce.

The Congressional Black Caucus also lent critical support to former Illinois
Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s appointment of Roland Burris, who is black, to fill
Obama’s vacant Senate seat, even as the new administration and other leading
Democrats resisted the move. In part, caucus members argued it was important
to have at least one black senator.

Earlier this week, when the president convened a summit on reducing
spending, Lee warned the White House about balancing the budget “on the
backs of the most vulnerable Americans.”

“We will continue to speak out for those who have been disenfranchised,” Lee
said in an interview. “That’s our job.”

It wasn’t clear if Burris — who is resisting calls to resign — would attend
the meeting.

BEN EVANS, AP

-- 
"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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