A Redneck Solicits
Why African Americans should join the Republican cause.
by Arnold Weiner
he Shelby County Republican Party has recently devoted a considerable
amount of effort into attracting more support from the black community.
For example, Rod DeBerry was heavily financed in two races for
Congress from the 9th District as the Republican nominee. Another
black Republican, Calvin Williams, was recently elected as Shelby
County Republican Vice Chairman for Minority Affairs.
In every presidential election since 1964, about 95 percent of
the black voters in Shelby County have voted for the Democratic
nominee. These statistics can be verified by a trip down to the
Shelby County Election Commission. The Republicans can do better
in the black community if they adopt the appropriate strategy.
Even though an overwhelming percentage of black Americans vote
for liberal Democrats, they actually take quite conservative positions
on social and cultural issues. For example, most blacks are pro-life,
for a moment of silence in the schools, pro-military, for English
Only, and against aid to illegal immigrants.
On social issues, the view of most blacks is closer to the conservative
wing of the Republican Party than it is to liberal Democrats of
the likes of state Senator Steve Cohen, U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein
and Barbara Boxer, or former congressperson Pat Schroeder.
The Republicans can do better in the black community if they emphasize
cultural conservatism and convince the black community that the
term conservative does not have racial connotations. In a lot
of ways, blacks are where white Southerners were 40 years ago;
theyre basically conservative but still voting for liberal Democrats.
The Republicans need to talk to the black community about the
cultural divide between them and the white liberals.
During the 1980 Democratic presidential primaries, at least half
of the black community voted for President Jimmy Carter instead
of Senator Ted Kennedy. If they were all that liberal, they would
have voted for Kennedy (most of the elitist liberals did). I dont
expect the Republicans to get anything approaching a majority
of the black vote, but I think that they ought to shoot for 15
percent; that was the goal that the late Republican National Committee
chairman Lee Atwater had set as a goal for the 1992 presidential
election. Obviously, that goal was not obtained.
The Republicans need to form tactical alliances with black Democratic
congressmen on social issues. For example, lets ask black Democratic
congressmen to vote to ban partial birth abortions and for an
English Only constitutional amendment. On cultural issues, black
Democratic congressmen will find that they are much more comfortable
with the conservative Republicans than they are with the white
liberals.
I consider myself to be right-wing, Republican, politically incorrect,
and redneck. They may not realize it, but most black Memphians
are a lot closer to me than they are to Cohen, Feinstein, Boxer,
or Schroeder.
The challenge for conservatives in approaching the black community
is to convince them that the term conservative does not have
racial connotations. In other words, its cool to be both black
and conservative. n
(Arnold Weiner is a Republican activist and a former member of
the Shelby County GOP steering committee. He is currently operating
a process-serving business.)
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