No Bona Fide Effort
I think President Bush's refusal to attend the NAACP Convention was a clear sign that if you criticize or disagree with him, he has no use for you. But is that the message you want to send while trying to build a new base of potential voters? Even Black Republicans are now questioning Bush's commitment to inclusion.
"I’m not sure they’re going to even try," says Arthur Fletcher, Jr., former assistant secretary of labor in the Nixon administration. "Nixon won the White House without a Black vote two times, Reagan won the White House without a Black vote two times. Bush won the White House without a Black vote one time. Bush junior has won it without a Black vote. When they look at their dollars and realize that the Hispanics are chomping at the bits to get aboard, I’m not sure they’re going to make a bona fide effort to attract Blacks."
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The Republican Party has a mixed history with African-Americans. Until Franklin D. Roosevelt’s "New Deal," most Blacks were registered Republicans. But once African-Americans started voting Democratic, they never went back. Today, African-Americans generally favor the Democratic candidate in presidential elections by a 9 to 1 margin.
It was not unusual for Republican candidates to get 30 of the Black vote until the party picked Sen. Barry Goldwater, an archconservative from Arizona, as its presidential candidate in 1964. With strong Black support, President Lyndon Baines Johnson was re-elected in a landslide.
"It wasn’t until after Goldwater got up and refused to deal with the civil rights legislation, that began to break it. That’s where the break came," says Milton Bins, a longtime Black Republican activist.




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