Bad News about Voters for Senator Obama — and for the US

      Recently, the Southern Political Report reported on a March 19, 2008 InsiderAdvantage/Majority Opinion poll of 807 Americans out of 1,051 who had heard of the Dr. Wright situation and Obama’s speech on racial matters (18 percent had not heard yet!).


First we should note that they were fairly careful in not asking loaded questiions:

We never mentioned the words ‘race’ or ‘controversy,’ or explained what all the fuss was about. Our first question was simply, ‘Are you aware of the situation regarding Sen. Barack Obama’s church pastor and the past public remarks he has made?’

Screening out those who had not heard of the Wright situation and Obama’s speech, they then asked, “Taking all this into account, are you more or less likely to support Obama for president? Less likely (52%) More likely (19%) About the same (27%) No opinion (2%).” The less-likely figure for white voters was 51 percent.


They also report that the negative percentage was especially significant for independent voters who were asked about their reaction to Obama’s speech:

By 56% to 13%, they said they’re less likely to vote for him because of the speech.

Like other recent polls we have cited previously, this poll also suggests a significant questioning of Senator Obama as a candidate, and a likely move away from him as a choice by some/many voters. His campaign has counted heavily on those independent voters. Once again, the effects of the racialized attacks on him are evident, and such attacks are now just in their first stages. What happens as new attacks emerge? These voter data also suggest his speech may not have helped him with some of the voter groups as much as he had hoped.


The Report’s interpretation and commentary also suggests how out of touch most white analysts of these and other racial matters are in the contemporary United States:

The charismatic Democratic presidential frontrunner likely has created a genuine problem for himself: In order to fizzle the flame that Rev. Wright ignited with his passionate, public racism, Obama had to forfeit the promise implicit in this campaign to date; that of moving beyond and above racialist rhetoric in American politics. On Tuesday, he changed course and said essentially the opposite: That we all need to face our unpleasant history. . . . In a year of great unease over foreign wars and a wilting economy, kicking the (lightly) sleeping dog of race in America may have been a mistake, unavoidable though it may have been.

So, now it is a tell-it-like-it-is, well-credentialed, well-informed U.S. intellectual and minister who is engaging in “public racism,” when of course it is whites who created the U.S. system of racial oppression that the pastor is critiquing. A great many whites, and their still racist views and discriminatory habits, and their unwillingness to provide remedies and redress for four long centuries of racial oppression, actually constitute the “problem.”


Researching or critiquing white racism from viable data is not “racism.” Racism is a systemic reality first created in the North American case in the 1600s by whites (who created 246 years of slavery followed by nearly 100 of the near slavery of legal segregation) and is still maintained by whites today. Clearly, the extensive racial discrimination (covert, subtle, and blatant) and huge racial inequalities in income, wealth, housing, and education still reported by African Americans and many researchers of all backgrounds is not worth noting well or dealing with publicly by most major media analysts and numerous other reporters and commentators–on the right, the left, or in the center–in the United States. I suggest that these dissembling commentators might start, for a change, paying attention to the extensive research on systemic racism, everyday discrimination, and whites’ negative racial views available in the contemporary social science literature.


The media and other pundit analysis of the Obama campaign, the attacks on it and on his speech, tell us far more about how much work is left to do in dismantling US racism than about the immediate reality of the Obama campaign. One cannot “move beyond racialist rhetoric” until the foundational reality of white-imposed racism is eliminated.

Comments

  1. Seattle in Texas

    Okay—I just read an article on McCain’s minister and church (out of Houston—it can be found online right now)…the article was a contrast to Obama’s church (McCain’s church perhaps does not video tape their sermons, and even make them available to the general public as Obama’s church does—Obama’s church was not trying to hide anything for that matter…). The former is presented in this article as peaceful and while anti-abortion, etc. still loves sinners, whereas the latter is bitter and angry…. *sigh* Of course people are going to be content when they are at the top and enjoy the ultimate comfort, freedoms, and protections this nation promises all people…and frame others who are uneasy and even hurt and angry for legitimate and good reasons, as irrational, misfits, etc. That’s okay though…people are still continuing to register to vote in states that have already completed their primaries, and more are registering in the states that are preparing for their primaries…the voices will be heard and will count. I noticed in Texas over 3 million people voted democratic (almost 50/50 for each candidate—Clinton with a slight lead thanks to the commercial and emails circulated that day) to approximately 1.5 million Republican (a little more). The numbers of people actually voting for each party compared to the past elections should be tended to also…it’s really pretty amazing! Despite all the discouragement and hurdles and barriers to overcome, I am still remaining optimistic.

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