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Earl Ofari Hutchinson

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Does Cain's Florida Win Prove the GOP Isn't Racist?

Posted: 09/26/2011 5:37 pm

GOP presidential candidate Herman Cain's wipeout of the GOP presidential field in the Florida straw poll got much attention partly because he was so far behind presumptive GOP presidential front runners Mitt Romney and Rick Perry. But it also got attention because it seemed to refute the relentless charge that the GOP is racist. Cain is black, grew up poor, and did not shy away from talking about black issues during his stint as a radio broadcaster. Despite his unabashed, spout of ultra conservative views, he doesn't shirk away from his blackness. His win in Florida, not a Northern state, among virtually a lily-white slate of voters does seem to make a case that the knock of racism against the GOP is overblown.

It doesn't. True, at times, straw polls provide some gauge of the support a presidential contender has among the general party electorate. Reagan in 1979, George H.W. Bush in 1987 and Bob Dole in 1995 won the Florida straw poll and went on to win the GOP presidential nomination. But they were seasoned, name recognizable, GOP stalwarts, and the clear front runners for the nomination. Cain could hardly be considered any of those things. And the slightly more than 2,500 voters that bothered to cast a ballot in the straw poll could hardly be considered a representative sample of the GOP electorate.

In any case straw poll votes are pure symbolism. More times than not the front running, that is electable, candidates, either spend little time, energy and resources bothering to court those likely to participate in a straw tally. Romney spent minimal time in the state, and Perry took it seriously only because as the new kid on the presidential block, and with dismal showings so far in the GOP presidential debates and mounting questions about his conservatism, Florida was his chance to get momentum going again in his campaign. That's why Cain sneaked to the top. It was more a message to Perry that there are a lot of conservatives who have serious doubts about him and his candidacy. Cain was the perfect foil to register that doubt. The real name of the game is the primaries where GOP voters will turn out en masse and determine who will be their standard bearer.

Cain's candidacy, race and win in Florida meant little because likely he will not be around for the long gruel of the primaries or if he is, will be a minor footnote on the ballot when the serious business of courting voters, state officials, and party leaders begins in Florida and the other key primary states. But let's say that he's still a viable candidate during the primary run, and has a real shot at being the GOP presidential choice, the evidence is strong that Cain wouldn't get very far and the issue then would be his race.

In a 2006 study in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, a Yale political economist found that white Republicans were 25 percentage points more likely to cross over and vote for a Democratic senatorial candidate against a black Republican foe. The study also found that in the near twenty-year stretch from 1982 to 2000, when the GOP candidate was black, the greater majority of white independent voters backed the white candidate. In the November 2010 mid-term elections more than 30 black GOP candidates ran in congressional primaries. The majority of voters or a significant percent of the voters in these districts were white. The black GOP candidates all went down to crushing defeat with two exceptions.

The exceptions were congressional candidates Allen West in Florida and Tim Scott in South Carolina. Both got a majority of white votes and easily beat their Democratic opponents. But West and Scott won in lockdown GOP districts, and against weak, underfunded Democratic opponents. Their wins were regional wins with absolutely no national implications.

Former three-term New Hampshire Governor John Sununu, one-time chief of staff to President George H.W. Bush and previously chair of New Hampshire's GOP, has his finger firmly on the inner pulse of the GOP conservative and mainstream. In an interview after hearing the candidate's views in appearances earlier this year in the state told what Cain's likely fate would be among conservatives if he ever managed to get out the GOP presidential contender box, he said he was willing to listen to Cain but said that his pick for the GOP 2012 presidential contender would have to be the second coming of Ronald Reagan as well as a politician with experience.

There's much hyperbole in the Reagan analogy. None of the current crop of GOP contenders will ever be mistaken for Reagan in style, charisma, appeal, and virtual party deification. But there's truth to the Reagan analogy when it's remembered that a big part of Reagan's appeal was his racially coded pandering on states' rights and his veiled anti-civil rights appeals. A black GOP candidate no matter how rabidly conservative would be unable to totally overcome let alone allay the racial antipathies and fears that always lurk among a large segment of conservative white voters, when the White House is at stake.

No matter how many meaningless straw polls Cain wins, he won't be the GOP candidate to change that.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on American Urban Radio Network. He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is host of the weekly Hutchinson Report Newsmaker Hour on KTYM Radio Los Angeles streamed on ktym.com podcast on blogtalkradio.com and internet TV broadcast on thehutchinsonreportnews.com
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11:30 AM on 09/27/2011
Whichever side you are on... You can't tell me that a Herman Cain/Allan West Republican ticket VS an Obama/Biden Dem ticket wouldn't be a more exciting contest since i can't remember when? I'm not saying Obama wouldn't win easily... he probably would.... but just imagine the excitement we'd go thru leading up to the election. vs another boring Obama vs Romney election. Adding Allen West to the Cain ticket is the the key tho. Both sides heads would explode.
Cain/West vs Obama/Biden, not likely to happen... but just imagine.
12:54 AM on 09/27/2011
I relish the idea of America choosing between two strong Black men. I hope Cain picks a Jew for his running mate. Could the Tea Party really handle the platform?

On another note, I wonder how Mr Cain will speak to his African American constituents. Mr Obama has been shellacked for "stop complaining." As a Tea Partisan, how strident will he be?
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Jawbey
09:15 PM on 09/26/2011
ARE YOU KIDDING ME? ???????
08:48 PM on 09/26/2011
No, it just proves the republicans are equal opportunity ignoramuses.
07:21 PM on 09/26/2011
No, Cain's Florida win does not prove the GOP isn't racist. However, I think this article only explains part of the story. On several occasions, Cain has said, "I won't stay on the Democrat plantation"." He loves to mention that he is not like "most blacks." The conservative crowd eats this stuff up like red velvet cake. In their minds, all blacks are on welfare (plantation) and that's why most support Democrats in elections. So, when good ole boy Cain says "I left the plantation a long time ago" they can't help but love him...he's "not like the others."
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
jamaicalover
Team Obama
07:03 PM on 09/26/2011
No. It proves he's the least scariest on Social Security.
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jb2000000
Don't tread on my thread!
06:49 PM on 09/26/2011
Cain's win only proves that "None of the Above" is more popular.
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
06:36 PM on 09/26/2011
Does any "expert" on Republican politics think that Cain will be the nominee?
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GDWhiteman
Christian mystic iconoclast
07:13 PM on 09/26/2011
I polled my Republican friend - he says he'll vote for him in the Texas primary. Disclaimer: not a scientific poll - I only have 1 Republican friend who will talk about politics with me.
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avacat
06:33 PM on 09/26/2011
Cain is well educated, has a solid and inspiring work history, is a veteran, and a minister. Too bad about the Republican part.
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Skiwee
Just taking my time...
06:32 PM on 09/26/2011
Cain vs Obama in 2012! Wouldn't that get some heads spinning. They'd be weeping and gnashing of teeth.

America would explode!!!!!!!!!!
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windy33
10:20 PM on 09/26/2011
no only the gop and the t-party people would explode. they hate black people so much that is why they are takeing this country to the brink of disaster because they want to make sure obama is a one term president.
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M Grey
07 Saluting our armed forces
03:32 AM on 09/28/2011
Maybe just maybe they want Obama out because of Obama's policies? Nah - that would make too much sense. If the TP and GOP hate African Americans, how could Cain win the poll? You did read see the news didn't you? Or read the article?
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windy33
06:44 PM on 09/28/2011
wait and see what they do to him if he goes any furthur
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GDWhiteman
Christian mystic iconoclast
06:05 PM on 09/26/2011
Definitely a message to Rick Perry - it goes like this: "If you can't get your act together any better than this, the black guy is going to win the election." We all know which black guy they're really worried about winning.
06:02 PM on 09/26/2011
I would like to point out as a South Carolinian that, while Tim Scott won a GOP district, he easily beat several well-known GOP white guys in the primary. One of them was Strom Thurmond's son. Scott won with heavy Tea Party support because of his record in the state Legislature.

I don't know anything about West's situation, so I can't comment.
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Wonderwheel
05:55 PM on 09/26/2011
LOL! The Faux News report doesn't list the number of people voting. The straw polls in Florida and Iowa are meaniongless except for the media attention that is given to them in order to sell advertising. To comment on the meaning of the poll is wasted media space.
05:54 PM on 09/26/2011
In a word, NO!
06:31 PM on 09/26/2011
LOL! Right word too Kipper!