Beyond the pulpit
By AMANDA RIPLEY
As the candidates eye the South Carolina primary, they are reinventing the way they court the African-American vote
The Buffalo Soldiers are invading the diners and barbershops of South Carolina. The political soldiers, named after a 19th century black Army regiment, once stormed black neighborhoods to get out the vote for Bill Clinton.
This year they are canvassing for Wesley Clark, but the battle isn't so simple this time. Last Thursday, as Buffalo Soldiers in black cavalry hats and boots gathered around Rhonda Court, 40, an apartment-complex manager eating lunch at LJ's Soul Food Cafe in Charleston, she wasn't satisfied with the cowboy pitch.
"What's Clark all about on Medicaid and getting lower-income families better access to health coverage?" she wanted to know.
Bill Clinton is gone, and so is Jesse Jackson. This time there is no easy or natural choice for black voters. Next week will be the candidates' first real test among this constituency in the "Southern gateway" primary in South Carolina, in which African Americans will probably make up as much as 50% of voting Democrats.
This year the candidates are finding they must do more if they are going to capture the imagination and the votes of the demographic that is critical not only to a victory in the primaries but also to giving a Democrat a chance against George Bush.
"Just saying the name Martin Luther King a couple of times is not enough," says Joy-Ann Lomena Reid, who writes on black issues for the Miami Herald.
One thing that would help is if we didn't have two whitebread states like Iowa and New Hampshire to open the primary season and get all the time, attention, and money. It would be interesting to see what would happen if South Carolina was first in the nation.
Posted by Al-Muhajabah at January 28, 2004 03:56 PM