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Black Voters Saved Thad Cochran & GOP Establishment. Here's What Republicans Owe Them In Return
The New Republic ^ | June 25, 2014 | Alec MacGillis

Posted on 06/25/2014 11:17:41 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Chris McDaniel, the arch-conservative state senator who unexpectedly lost his primary runoff election yesterday to unseat Mississippi Senator Thad Cochran, is dead right: The race was decided by non-Republicans. And not just that, but a certain type of non-Republicans taking advantage of the state's open-primary system: African-Americans, or, as McDaniel referred to them in his defiant non-concession speech, “liberal Democrats,” which appears to be the de-racialized code word of choice for some conservative Republicans when talking about black voters.

The evidence is in the maps and numbers. Turnout was up statewide compared with the June 3 primary in which McDaniel narrowly beat Cochran, but fell just shy of the 50 percent share necessary to avoid a runoff. But the spike in turnout tended to be the greatest in the state’s heavily black counties, as this graph by election-data guru Charles Franklin shows. As the New York Times's Nate Cohn notes, the county with the largest share of black voters in the entire country, tiny Jefferson County, saw its turnout jump 91 percent. In larger Hinds County, which Cochran won by fewer than 6,000 votes on June 3, turnout jumped so much that he won it by nearly 11,000 votes yesterday. As the NBC First Read crew put it, “In a race that Cochran won by 6,000 votes, that’s pretty much your ballgame there.”

It is hard to overstate the significance and historical ironies of black Mississippians crossing party lines to rescue a senior member of the state’s Republican establishment. Voting patterns are more divided by race in Mississippi than anywhere else in the country, to a degree that is reminiscent of ethnically-based parties in the developing world. The state’s black voters are as reliably Democratic as anywhere, but there are also more of them than in any other state—more than 37 percent of the population—making their monolithic voting tendencies all the more conspicuous. Meanwhile, white voters in Mississippi have become nearly as monolithically Republican in national elections. (And yes, there is a correlation between the size of southern states’ African-American population and the extent to which their white voters flock to the Republican Party.) In 2008, Barack Obama won a mere 11 percent of white voters in Mississippi; John Kerry did barely better than that four years earlier.

In such a racially divided landscape, it is plain which politician is representing which voters, and Thad Cochran has not gone out of his way to cater to the nearly 40 percent of his state that is African-American. The NAACP gives him an abysmal 4 percent rating on issues of importance to its members. Yet just enough black Mississippians came out for Cochran yesterday to spare him the indignity of ending his career at the hands of an upstart whose supporters broke into a nursing home to take pictures of Cochran’s ailing wife.

Beltway pundits are ascribing Cochran’s last-minute success at “expanding the electorate” to the genius of Mississippi power broker Haley Barbour, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, and other Cochran supporters who stumbled on the brilliant strategy of touting Cochran’s opposition to Obama in white neighborhoods while touting his support for historically black colleges in African-American neighborhoods. But let’s give credit where it’s due, to the voters themselves. They are not sheep, to be led about by the conniving directives coming from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Rather, some number of them decided that they would rather not be represented in the Senate by someone who is openly nostalgic for the state’s pre-Civil Rights Era past, who, while strolling through a mostly-white county fair flecked with Confederate flags, waxes about how the fair is a “peek back to a better time. I’m a Jeffersonian and a Reaganite, and I like to remember how good things once were.” Yes, in helping Cochran win, these voters greatly reduced the odds of Democrat Travis Childers winning in the fall, but as Southern expert Ed Kilgore notes, such is the defeatism of being a Democrat in the Deep South that those sorts of calculations seem unrealistic to entertain.

With McDaniel now threatening legal action over Cochran’s reliance on those “liberal Democrats,” Cochran’s team is already scrambling to downplay the role of African-American voters, telling reporters that the “expansion of the electorate” came primarily among Republicans who didn’t vote in the June 3 primary. Hogwash—that’s not what the maps and numbers show. There’s no way around it: Cochran was saved by African-American voters, and he and the rest of the GOP establishment terrified of a McDaniel win and the symbolism around it owe black Mississippians a massive debt.

In reaching out to black voters in recent days, Cochran touted his support for the farm bill, for federal education funding, for the food-stamp program. But the GOP establishment’s debt requires a grander statement of gratitude than that. There’s the John Conyers bill calling for a study of slavery reparations—what measure is more suitable than that to be linked to an election in the state that was the headquarters of King Cotton? But if that’s a bridge too far, here are two other possibilities. Mississippi has rejected the expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, thus leaving uncovered 300,000 of its residents, most of them African-American—a classic example of the ways in which the state’s large racial minority has suffered at the hands of the state’s monolithically white and Republican power structure. Might Cochran and, more importantly, Haley Barbour call on their allies in Jackson to rethink that rejection of gobs of federal funds just waiting to be deployed in their impoverished state?

Or this: There is a movement afoot in Washington to pass new protections for the voting rights of minorities in the wake of the Supreme Court’s overturning of key elements of the Voting Rights Act. Is there any more fitting way for Thad Cochran to express recognition of the role that African-American voters played in his survival—in the face of threats of voter intimidation from his Republican opponent—than to guarantee that black voters in Mississippi and elsewhere are unencumbered in their access to the polls? I don’t recall Cochran speaking up loudly in opposition when Mississippi passed a stringent voter ID law not long ago. Better late than never, Senator.


TOPICS: Mississippi; Issues; Parties; U.S. Senate
KEYWORDS: blacks; cochran; democrats; foodstamps; mcdaniel; mcdaniels; mississippi; msprimary; reparations; welfare
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I wonder if Alec knows that all that slavery era, KKK and Jim Crow racism was perpetrated by the Democratic Party, not the Republicans and that Thad was a Democrat for many, many years?
1 posted on 06/25/2014 11:17:41 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

This is why the repubs should never allow an “open” primary.

The dems are known for using those to get rid of the candidates they don’t want to win.

CA did it for the first time this year .. and I’m thinking about making a big stink about it.


2 posted on 06/25/2014 11:21:35 PM PDT by CyberAnt (True the Vote: MY AMERICA, "... I'm terrified it's slipping away.")
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

There is absolutely no reason for conservatives to vote for a candidate in November who is beholden to the other party


3 posted on 06/25/2014 11:24:58 PM PDT by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Defund the GOP


4 posted on 06/25/2014 11:26:14 PM PDT by Viennacon (Rebuke the Repuke!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Someone could go into these neighborhoods and innocently interview them on camera and ask why they voted and did they intend to vote for Thad again in the general.

Then use it as evidence.


5 posted on 06/25/2014 11:35:14 PM PDT by Suz in AZ
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To: Suz in AZ

They’d need a platoon of bodyguards.


6 posted on 06/25/2014 11:37:43 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out for himself.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The takeaway is obvious: Primaries should be closed, and runoffs should only be open to those who voted in the primary that caused the runoff.


7 posted on 06/25/2014 11:42:29 PM PDT by cynwoody
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
If the Democrat can get 25% of the white vote, or if a lot of Conservatives stay home, Thad Cochran could easily lose the general election.

Update:

US Congressman Travis Childers, a white guy, a Blue Dog Democrat, is Cochran's opponent.

He's pro-Life, pro-Gun.

In 2010, he was endorsed by the NRA and by National Right to Life.

Most recent polls are 3 months old.

He trailed Cochran by 17% in March.

I'll bet it's a whole lot closer today.

8 posted on 06/25/2014 11:43:29 PM PDT by zeestephen
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To: zeestephen

You have a couple of lobbyists who want a particular guy to walk into a temp situation...where Thad retires in eighteen months and the governor has to appoint someone...a basically unknown someone. So, the insiders all rigged up this win for Thad, and their future unknown guy.

Given a choice of a blue-dog democrat or a guy who will be retired in eighteen months who pretends to be a Republican...I’d say it’s safe to vote for the blue-dog democrat. At least twenty-five percent of the time...he’ll side on the Republican strategy.

So, yeah....help defeat Thad in November and send the blue-dog onto the Senate.


9 posted on 06/25/2014 11:53:16 PM PDT by pepsionice
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Good luck in the general, Cochran. Conservative will desert you like you did indecent things with farm animals....


10 posted on 06/26/2014 12:05:00 AM PDT by freebilly (How about this-- we stop trying to elect the unelectable)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Cochran is probably more of a racist than any tea party member. His actions today prove it. He goes out and asks for black votes, gets them then claims they didn’t help him win. I wish McDaniel would have countered with his own racist ads pointing out how Cochran was from the “old” republican party who has always hated blacks.


11 posted on 06/26/2014 12:34:01 AM PDT by VerySadAmerican (Liberals were raised by women or wimps.)
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To: pepsionice
You have a couple of lobbyists who want a particular guy to walk into a temp situation

Lobbyist are the main driving force behind corruption. The FF's never intended for the government to become a nation of the rich who can pay off and entertain them to be the sole ones with access to representation yet that is what has happened. I doubt any congresscritter themselves would contact Joe Citizen personally who is trying to petition them. Only a real high profile circumstance would get such attention. Joe Citizen will get an aide and likely an Intern at that. A written letter will get you a generic form letter reply sent by same or even a machine. However if a lobbyist calls they likely get a congresscritters personal returned call or appointment within an hour no more than 24 hours unless out of country.

Lobbying by professionals no matter the cause or organization needs to be stopped and our government representation restored to We The People. I have no qualms about anyone being allowed privately or publically themselves to petition congress in person or by phone etc. I don't care how much money they donate either. Let them do it directly. No limits needed on donations just open records of all donations over $1000.

The hired professional tyrants called lobbyist access needs to be ended though. They have turned our representative government into their own private political brothel retirement center.

12 posted on 06/26/2014 12:42:31 AM PDT by cva66snipe ((Two Choices left for U.S. One Nation Under GOD or One Nation Under Judgment? Which one say ye?))
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To: VerySadAmerican
He goes out and asks for black votes, gets them then claims they didn’t help him win.

Same game, this time he used liberal black Democrats instead of Conservatives.

See the pattern?

Now gitcher ass back under the bus!

13 posted on 06/26/2014 12:44:55 AM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: cynwoody

The reason Mississippi and other deep South States have a run-off is because the Democrats were trying to prevent blacks from winning a nomination. If 3 white Democrats and 1 black Democrat were running, the black would get the black vote and win the nomination with 35 percent of the vote. The Dixiecrats put in a run-off so that the white candidate would then win. Why Mississippi Republicans kept this racist system is anyone’s guess. In all Northern states and Florida, McDaniel would have won the nomination with a plurality of votes.


14 posted on 06/26/2014 1:03:47 AM PDT by JamesCooper
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Just what the Democrats have given them. Nothing.


15 posted on 06/26/2014 1:59:59 AM PDT by SoFloFreeper
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
The Repubican’s have outdone themselves on this one. They appear to be getting dumber and dumber. But all is not what it seems and this Repubican win is not the result of shooting themselves in the foot. Rather, this election is where they were forced to take off their sheepskin and reveal their true colors?
16 posted on 06/26/2014 2:50:35 AM PDT by iontheball
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To: iontheball

Why are people still calling “black” people “African-American”? If they were born here they are Black American’s, end of story. It’s time to get over the “victim of slavery” attitude.


17 posted on 06/26/2014 3:40:38 AM PDT by DaveA37
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To: GeronL
There is absolutely no reason for conservatives to vote for a candidate in November who is beholden to the other party

No, there is not, and I have a feeling Cochran is going down to defeat in November. I figure a small number conservatives might vote for the rat, but I think the majority might just sit it out.

18 posted on 06/26/2014 3:53:13 AM PDT by Mark17 (Rats and RINOs, who are destroying America, may an elephant caress you with his toes, or worse)
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To: GeronL
There is absolutely no reason for conservatives to vote for a candidate in November who is beholden to the other party

I agree. There's no way I'd be voting for the GOPe's candidate. The GOPe needs to learn a lesson. If their guy can't win a primary fair and square, then they need to step aside. If they understand that they can't win in the general if they pull this crap in the primary we'll see a lot less of it. Teach them a lesson.

19 posted on 06/26/2014 3:57:22 AM PDT by old and tired
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Another day, another code word.


20 posted on 06/26/2014 4:19:45 AM PDT by jimfree (In November 2016 my 13 y/o granddaughter will have more quality exec experience than Barack Obama)
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