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GOP Rep.: Republicans Struggling To Find "Great White Hope" To Lead Them Back To Power

JOHN HANNA   08/27/09 07:04 PM ET   AP

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OTTAWA, Kan. — A freshman Kansas congresswoman said Thursday that her remark about fellow Republicans seeking a "great white hope" was not a reference to someone who could challenge President Barack Obama or his political agenda.

Rep. Lynn Jenkins said she was instead making a comment about GOP leaders in the House and was trying to reassure Republicans that the party has bright leaders there. She used the phrase during an Aug. 19 forum in Hiawatha and someone in the crowd recorded it and gave the video to the Kansas Democratic Party.

Both she and an aide apologized Thursday if the comment offended anyone. But when she was asked about the remark after a town hall meeting in Ottawa, Jenkins also suggested it had been taken out of context.

"Let's remember the context of this situation," she said. "I don't know how the president got injected into this debate."

Patrick Leopold, Jenkins' chief of staff, said her office in Pittsburg received a death threat Thursday, but he didn't know whether it was connected to any specific issue. He said the matter was being turned over to police.

The phrase "great white hope" often is associated with pre-civil rights-era racism and is widely believed to have entered usage in the U.S. when boxer Jack Johnson, who was black, captured the heavyweight title in the early 20th century. Many whites reacted to Johnson's achievement by trying to find white fighters – or a "great white hope" – who could beat him. The boxer's story inspired a play, then a movie, with that title, both starring James Earl Jones.

The Democratic National Committee in Washington declined to comment on Jenkins' remarks. Officials at the Washington offices of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People did not respond to a request for comment.

"I saw that report," White House spokesman Bill Burton said at a briefing on Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts, where Obama is vacationing. "I also saw that her spokesperson backpeddaled and said that was a poor choice of words. We obviously give congressman Jenkins the benefit of the doubt."

Jenkins said she wasn't aware that the phrase had a negative connotation. She noted that she used it when answering a question from an audience member who began by noting the GOP's success in taking control of Congress in 1994 after drafting a "Contract with America."

"I got a question one day from someone regarding the future House leadership. I made a reference to him not giving up hope, that we had some great bright leaders in our future," she said. "I apologize if anyone misunderstood my intent."

At the Hiawatha event, Jenkins mentioned three House colleagues as future party leaders: Eric Cantor of Virginia, Kevin McCarthy of California and Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. All are white, as is Jenkins; Obama is the nation's first black president.

"Republicans are struggling right now to find the great white hope," Jenkins said last week. "I suggest to any of you who are concerned about that, who are Republican, there are some great young Republican minds in Washington."

Paul Lindsay, a spokesman for the National Republican Campaign Committee, said Jenkins was touching on an issue of concern to many Americans – that there's a "void" in leadership in the GOP, which Lindsay said is being filled by officials like Jenkins.

"Any interpretation of her comments as otherwise is a distraction to the work congresswoman Jenkins is doing to help Kansans through this recession, control our nation's debt and slow the rapid expansion of the federal government," he said in an e-mail.

Tyler Longpine, a spokesman for the Kansas Democratic Party, called Jenkins' comment "a poor choice of words" but said he doesn't think it was anything more than that.

He said a Democratic Party supporter shot the video at the Hiawatha forum and shared it with the state party.

"The thing that kind of strikes me was the partisan tone of it all," Longpine said. "If she'd stick to talking about policy rather than politics, she could have kept her foot out of her mouth."

Jenkins, 46, won the 2nd Congressional District seat last year by ousting Democratic incumbent Nancy Boyda. She previously served two terms as state treasurer and four years in the Kansas Legislature.

___

Associated Press writers Bill Draper in Kansas City, Mo., and Glen Johnson in Oak Bluffs, Mass., contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Lynn Jenkins' office: http://lynnjenkins.house.gov/

Kansas Democratic Party: http://www.ksdp.org

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OTTAWA, Kan. — A freshman Kansas congresswoman said Thursday that her remark about fellow Republicans seeking a "great white hope" was not a reference to someone who could challenge President Ba...
OTTAWA, Kan. — A freshman Kansas congresswoman said Thursday that her remark about fellow Republicans seeking a "great white hope" was not a reference to someone who could challenge President Ba...
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01:29 AM on 08/31/2009
The saddest part of this whole incident is that Jenkins is just saying publicly what a whole lot of Republican­s have been saying behind closed doors for a year.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
MJHammonds
Optimistic Cynic
11:06 AM on 08/29/2009
George Allen (R) was the incumbent Virginia senator who was not only expected to sail through the senate race of 2006, but was also an aspiring presidenti­al candidate. If anyone here has any questions about what damage "misspeaki­ng" can do, just observe how he effectivel­y killed his political career in a red state by using one racial slur during a campaign stump speech...

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=r90z0PMnK­wI

http://www­.washingto­npost.com/­wp-dyn/con­tent/artic­le/2006/08­/14/AR2006­081400589.­html

Thanks George Allen- you helped make Virginia a blue state!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
peacegurl48
12:20 AM on 08/29/2009
It's not that it was a particular­ly racist comment but more that it was indicative of who the GOP really is; the party of the closed tent and the status quo. These voices are showing the world the ugly underbelly of America with its fear of diversity and progress..­.this is very sad.
08:07 PM on 08/28/2009
EquesLigni­te

"I am a person of ethnic minority (East Asian) but I don't find this offensive or racist at all. Just a mistaken use of a historical phrase. Nothing more."

The fact that you didn't find a phrase that is historical­ly offensive to black people is, with all due respect, not more relevant than a black person not taking personal offense to slur directed at East Asians.

Additional­ly, you are wrong about her "mistaken use of a historical phrase. Nothing more."

She knew exactly what she was saying:

"However, the freshman lawmaker supported a resolution that included that exact phrase last month when the House approved by unanimous consent a measure urging President Obama to pardon black U.S. boxer Jack Johnson.

snip

Within the resolution passed by the House July 29 was a passage that read, “Whereas the victory by Jack Johnson over Tommy Burns prompted a search for a White boxer who could beat Jack Johnson, a recruitmen­t effort that was dubbed the search for the ‘great white hope.’”

http://www­.ottawaher­ald.com/st­ory/082809­jenkinsvot­e
12:17 PM on 09/01/2009
On the contrary, Ms Jenkins claimed that she didn't know what the phrase meant. Whether she knew or not is irrelevant quite frankly. In today's political environmen­t it's a very dumb thing to say.
07:56 PM on 08/28/2009
I live in Jenkins district, and you can be sure the Congresswo­men knew the generalize­d meaning of "Great White Hope". Her downfall was that she was just too idiotic to realize that there might be a few Democrates with camara phones in little Hiawatha. Too be sure, Jenkins would NEVER have uttered such awfulness in Lawrence or Topeka! The twit knows her audience, but she just didn't appreciate the immediacy of the Internet and technology­.

And quite frankly, I find her apology as contrived as her sham marriage. For months, her constituen­ts saw her piling in and out of the family van, doing the family thing and being a good mother and wife. What a hoot to find she and her husband divorced within 48 hours of her winning the election. What a two-faced &%*$^&*! And a RACIST besides!
07:09 PM on 08/28/2009
Maybe Rep. Lynn Jenkins R-Kans , Great White Hope , Is Michael Steele ! LoL
Chairman Of The Republican Party.
06:22 PM on 08/28/2009
I know this cow saw the movie.
05:45 PM on 08/28/2009
Obama's mother was white, his grandmothe­r who raised him was white, but Obama is a racist (says Beck) who hates white people? Now this ignorant GOPer comes along looking for a "great white hope" to defeat him and his policies and that's not racist?

Obama grew up in Hawaii where cacausians are in the minority. I lived there for 17 years, including part of the time when Obama lived there. He went to Harvard. The idea that he hates white people is just paranoid nonsense. The GOP is the party of Southern white unreconstr­ucted racists. How someone like Michael Steele winds up in charge is just strange. Sure you can be black and be conservati­ve, but how can you look in the mirror and not know that there are plenty of people in your own party who despise you because of your skin color? Steele is like the blind black KKK guy in the Dave Chappelle skit. Steele doesn't have that excuse.
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IsyFleur
Om, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti. ॐ
04:06 PM on 08/28/2009
Come on, it's like, so unfair to interpret "white" as meaning "white"...
tqcobb
Free your mind and the rest will follow
03:13 PM on 08/28/2009
Hellooo people....­.if race wasn't an issue in her comment why did use "white" couldn't she have just said "great hope". "future star", or something like that? Wake up please
05:34 PM on 08/28/2009
A mistaken use of an historical phrase?...­....you must be kidding.
02:25 PM on 08/28/2009
I am a person of ethnic minority (East Asian) but I don't find this offensive or racist at all. Just a mistaken use of a historical phrase. Nothing more
tqcobb
Free your mind and the rest will follow
03:05 PM on 08/28/2009
I'm sorry with all due respect, you don't know what you're talking about
05:36 PM on 08/28/2009
A mistaken use of an historical phrase....­..you must be kidding.
02:10 PM on 08/28/2009
look, we don't need to take stuff out of context to prove the right has a racist problem. i don't believe this lady was seriously referring to "white hope" in terms of skin color. that is a more or less a common expression that has nothing to do with race. now, the other story of people comparing obama to hitler, claiming racism there is not taking things out of context. it's pretty obvious.
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isleptwithjoeyramone
Blue girl in a red state of denial
12:38 PM on 08/28/2009
People like Lynn Jenkins, 'Rev.' Fred Phelps, the dumbo that killed Dr. Tiller, former Attorney General Phil Kline and other half-wits I'm desperatel­y trying to forget make it hard to live in Kansas.
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IsyFleur
Om, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti. ॐ
04:03 PM on 08/28/2009
I feel the same about living in AZ ;) But remember, you have Kathleen Sebelius and I have Gabrielle Giffords, so that gives us hope!
12:37 PM on 08/28/2009
Finding Their 'Great White Hope,' GOP Resurrects Dead Boxer to Challenge Obama
http://sat­iricalpoli­tical.com/­?p=8543
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ReedYoung
global mean land-ocean temperature 1880 to present
09:49 AM on 08/28/2009
I believe she planned to *jump the shark* using the phrase "great white" just so that she could get on late night teevee and start to get free advertisin­g for her presumptuo­us 2012 campaign. No, I did not mean "presumpti­ve" I chose exactly the word I meant.

GOP: the historical allegory will hold. You are as defeated by the Democratic Party in politics as whites are in boxing by Jack Johnson, Muhammad Ali, Mike Tyson, etc. You're finished. Have your managers (corporate sponsors -- voters are Democrats and we've defeated you) throw in the towel, retire with what's left of your dignity, and go enjoy your golden years outside of government employment­. Stop trying to impose your false, revisionis­t idea of the past and get out of the way. Your children and grand children have fully proven now that we know better than you do what's good for us and our country. Your "ideas" about finance, culture, religion and "defense" have consistent­ly had just one effect, to wreck the country. Quit, you're punch drunk.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KidMohair
10:52 AM on 08/28/2009
Powerful, poetic, and eloquent..­.Reed.

This incident, while hardly a watershed.­..is a macaca moment that the public and the media does'nt forget...I­t's the sort of thiong that puts Lynn Jenkins political carreer in the toilet, and Republican hopes in 2010 in the dumpster.

And tr0//s, if you don't believe me, remember what "macaca" did for George Allen....

and the 2006 midterms.
12:15 PM on 08/28/2009
Keep things in perspectiv­e: 47% of the electorate voted for someone other than Barack Obama. That is a pretty slim numerical majority, whatever the Electoral College turned up.

More to the point: thinking that the pendulum will never swing back the other way is the same fatal error Bush & Co. committed. The GOP is more a wounded elephant than a punch-drun­k boxer: wounded, but still dangerous; and deadly if he can get back on his feet. Do not fall into the trap of overconfid­ence.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ReedYoung
global mean land-ocean temperature 1880 to present
05:49 PM on 08/28/2009
And over 50% of the electorate voted against George Walker Bush in 2000 (and 2004?). So I do not believe that Barack Obama's victory is *merely* backlash. Much of it is due to a long term trend that will, thankfully­, be the end of the accursed GOP.