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GOP and black voters: How wide the divide?

For Republicans, progress in relations has been slow but steady

President Bush greets Marc Morial at an Urban League event in Detroit
President Bush shakes hands July 23 with Marc Morial of the Urban League at the league's annual conference in Detroit. After mounting efforts to embrace black voters, some Republican leaders and spokesmen are upbeat about how the GOP has advanced its relationship with African Americans.
Jason Reed / Reuters
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By Michael E. Ross
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Michael E. Ross
Reporter

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Oct. 24, 2004 - “The Republican Party has to realize that it cannot be lily-white any longer,” Armstrong Williams, the black conservative commentator, said in January 2003. “Change must come about, and it must start within our house.”

Williams made that statement after a meeting with Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, then-Republican National Committee Chairman Marc Racicot and several black conservatives. The mission: to increase outreach to black voters and to challenge the longstanding perception that black Americans are a lock to vote Democratic.

Numerous challenges
Republicans point to their party's historic relationship with blacks, and policies of the Bush administration, as proof of progress in making the GOP the “big tent.”

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But the party's pledges have sometimes had to confront administration policies that have alienated black voters, and policy statements that blacks have interpreted as both antagonistic to their aspirations and insensitive to the legacy of civil rights — no doubt among the reasons why black Americans overwhelmingly support Democrats.

This apparent disconnect between blacks’ perception of the GOP and the GOP’s perception of itself is especially nettlesome for the Republicans on the eve of what’s thought to be a close presidential election.

‘Significant progress’
Republicans have tried to position themselves as an alternative to the Democrats, painting the Democrats as a party that, by coincidence or design, takes black voters for granted. In recent interviews and public appearances, Republican leaders have pointed to ways their party has moved the ball on its relationship with black Americans. In most of their comments, the operative word is “progress.”

BUSH
Lawrence Jackson / AP file
President Bush makes remarks Jan. 15 at the Union Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church in New Orleans. Bush sought more support among black voters for his plan to let religious charities in on more federal spending.

In the Oct. 5 debate, Vice President Dick Cheney said the administration's No Child Left Behind law, which sets stricter accountability for academic results and more options for parents to find schools that work, had narrowed differences in scholastic scores between black and white students.

“We're making significant progress,” Cheney said. “We're closing the achievement gap. The results coming in from a number of studies show without question that on math and reading that, in fact, our Hispanic and African American students are doing better."

Cheney said the administration also had made progress in addressing AIDS infection rates among black Americans, citing “a combination of education and public awareness, as well as the development ... of research of drugs that allow people to live longer lives. ... Obviously we need to do more of that.”

Cabinet's complexion
In an interview with MSNBC.com, Racicot pointed to the Bush Cabinet itself as clear evidence of change.

“Have we made progress? We’ve made significant progress. This president has the most diverse Cabinet in the history of America and has relied on the competence of a talented group of African Americans in that Cabinet from [Secretary of State] Colin Powell to [HUD secretary] Alphonso Jackson to [National Security Adviser] Condoleezza Rice and others.”

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Actor Joseph Phillips talks about why black voters should support President Bush and the Republican Party.

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Racicot, who was tapped by President Bush in June 2003 to direct his re-election campaign, outlined a series of policies Racicot said were geared to aid African-American entrepreneurship, from efforts to increase home ownership to plans to assist historically black colleges, to tax incentives to encourage reinvestment in urban neighborhoods.

“Those are the kinds of demonstrations that mean something to people in the African-American community," he said. “It doesn’t mean we’ve accomplished everything. It won't be complete by this election, but we're making steady progress in proving our case.”

Williams, the commentator, listed a series of GOP measures on behalf of blacks, some more symbolic than substantive:

Williams pointed to the increase in internships for black youths on Capitol Hill, the rise in the number of black delegates at the Republican National Convention, and efforts by House Speaker Dennis Hastert and other Republican leaders to gain funding from Congress to complete renovation of the Washington, D.C., home of Frederick Douglass, the  abolitionist and orator.

Lock for Democrats? Not necessarily
Williams, a former aide to the late Sen. Strom Thurmond, said the longtime reflex of expecting blacks to vote for Democrats was subject to change.

Some black conservatives, he said, “feel the NAACP has lost its moral authority — that it's become the left wing of the Democratic Party. Polling data shows that more blacks are willing to vote for Republicans. Young blacks are more open to giving the Republican Party a chance.”

‘[Black conservatives] still remember President Bush repudiating Trent Lott. They know Bush is not a racist, that he’s not wearing a hood.’

— ARMSTRONG WILLIAMS
conservative columnist
Williams said black conservatives — a range of independent organizations and privately funded think tanks, contrarian business executives, commentators like Alan Keyes, columnists such as Glenn Loury and Shelby Steele, and academic figures like Ward Connerly — “don't see [NAACP president and CEO Kweisi] Mfume and [NAACP Chairman Julian] Bond speaking for them. They don't feel the NAACP has any real issues to rally around.

“They still remember President Bush repudiating Trent Lott. They know Bush is not a racist, that he's not wearing a hood. They understand what is inherently wrong with affirmative action. They believe affirmative action should be tweaked. They care about home ownership, about tax cuts and capital gains, they care about jobs. They don't have the baggage about racism and bigotry; it's different for them.”


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