Neglecting the  Base  
By _BOB HERBERT_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/bobherbert/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 
Published: September 20, 2010

 
Maybe it was just a coincidence, but it was striking, nevertheless. 
 
The mayor of Washington, Adrian Fenty, one of the so-called postracial 
black  leaders, suffered a humiliating defeat in his bid for re-election last 
week when  African-American voters deserted him in droves. The very same week 
President  Obama, the most prominent of the so-called postracial types, was 
moving  aggressively to shore up his support among black voters.  
Mr. Obama, who usually goes out of his way to avoid overtly racial comments 
 and appeals, made an impassioned plea during a fiery speech Saturday night 
at a  black-tie event sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus. “I need 
everybody  here,” he said, “to go back to your neighborhoods, to go back 
your workplaces,  to go to the churches and go to the barbershops and go to 
the beauty shops. And  tell them we’ve got more work to do.”  
It’s no secret that the president is in trouble politically, and that  
Democrats in Congress are fighting desperately to hold on to their majorities.  
But much less attention has been given to the level of disenchantment among  
black voters, who have been hammered disproportionately by the recession 
and  largely taken for granted by the Democratic Party. That disenchantment is 
likely  to translate into lower turnout among blacks this fall.  
The idea that we had moved into some kind of postracial era was always a  
ridiculous notion. Attitudes have undoubtedly changed for the better over the 
 past half-century, and young people as a whole are less hung up on race 
than  their elders. But race is still a very big deal in the United States, 
which is  precisely why black leaders like Mr. Fenty and Mr. Obama try so hard 
to behave  as though they are governing in some sort of pristine civic 
environment in which  the very idea of race has been erased.  
These allegedly postracial politicians can end up being so worried about  
losing the support of whites that they distance themselves from their own  
African-American base. This is a no-win situation — for the politicians and 
for  the blacks who put their hopes and faith in them.  
Mr. Fenty was cheered by whites for bringing in the cold-blooded Michelle  
Rhee as schools chancellor. She attacked D.C.’s admittedly failing school 
system  with an unseemly ferocity and seemed to take great delight in doing 
it. Hundreds  of teachers were fired and concerns raised by parents about Ms. 
Rhee’s  take-no-prisoners approach were ignored. It was disrespectful.  
Blacks responded last week by voting overwhelmingly for Mr. Fenty’s 
opponent,  Vincent Gray, who is also black. This blowback undermined whatever 
Ms. 
Rhee and  Mr. Fenty had hoped to achieve. Thanks to their ham-handed approach 
to governing  and disregard of the sensibilities of their constituents, 
both of them will soon  be gone. But the children they claimed to care so much 
about will still be  locked in a lousy school system.  
Black voters across the country are not nearly as discontented with Mr. 
Obama  as blacks in Washington were with Mr. Fenty. But neither do they have 
the same  enthusiasm that they had in the historic 2008 election.  
Mr. Obama has seldom addressed black concerns directly, although many of 
his  initiatives have benefited blacks. What has taken a toll is the 
perception that  the president has consistently seemed more concerned about the 
needs 
and  interests of those who are already well off, who are hostile to 
policies that  would help working people and ethnic minorities, and who in many 
cases would  like nothing better than to see Mr. Obama fail.  
Most blacks are reluctant to publicly express their concerns about the  
president because they are so outraged by the blatantly unfair and often racist 
 attacks against him from the political right. But many blacks are unhappy 
that  Mr. Obama hasn’t been more forceful in the fight to create jobs. And 
there is  disappointment over the dearth of black faces in high-profile posts 
in the  administration.  
The Shirley Sherrod fiasco fed the belief that the Obama administration was 
 excessively concerned about the racial sensibilities of whites. The 
secretary of  agriculture fired Ms. Sherrod without even giving her a hearing 
after an excerpt  from a video appeared to show that she had discriminated 
against a white farmer.  She had done no such thing, and she would later 
decline 
an offer to rejoin the  administration.  
There is real danger here for black people. In many cases, because of an  
excess of caution, policies that would help people in need are never even  
seriously considered, much less implemented. Forces that are hostile to blacks 
 are not aggressively confronted, which, of course, empowers them. Perhaps 
more  important, when you have to tiptoe around absolutely anything that has 
to do  with blacks, it can leave the insidious impression that there is, in 
fact,  something wrong with being black, something to be ashamed of.  
We need to be careful not to corrode the joy and pride felt by blacks in 
the  triumphs of African-American leaders. 

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