No
Requiem for a Black Conservative
By
Earl Ofari Hutchinson / NNPA columnist
 |
| Montgomery
County (MD) Police arrested Claude
Allen, former domestic policy adviser
to President Bush on March 9. Allen
allegedly swindled department stores
out of more than $5,000 in refunds.
Through his lawyer, Allen denied the
charges, saying that there was a mix-up
concerning his credit card. |
In
a tear jerk moment toward the end of Claude
Allen's abortive Senate confirmation hearing
in 2003, Utah Senator Orin Hatch tossed
a softball question at him. He asked what
his grandfather who was the first in his
family born out slavery would say to him
about his pending judgeship. Allen, visibly
moved by the question, said that he would
tell him to give back to those that he
received from. Allen's answer told much
about the GOP's two decade long court
and tout of Black conservatives. And that
hasn't changed even when some of them
embarrass the party with their shoot from
the lip gaffes or fall from grace in a
swirl of corruption and scandal.
Allen
has fit the bill on both counts. In 1982,he
embarrassed the GOP with his slurs against
gays and feminists, and two decades later
during his confirmation hearing he didn't
back away from them. He oddly claimed
that the dictionary defined them as ''odd
or unusual'' and he saw no reason to retract
his slur. And now there's the allegation
that he is a two-bit thief. But Allen
is only the latest in a string of Black
conservative poster boys that have been
dogged by scandal.
In
the 1980s, Reagan's HUD Secretary Samuel
Pierce was accused of corruption and influence
peddling, and Clarence Pendleton, Reagan's
appointee to head the U.S. Civil Rights
Commission, was hit with allegations of
illicit business dealings. Then there's
the sexual scandal that embroiled George
H.W. Bush's affirmative action Supreme
Court nominee, Clarence Thomas, in 1991.
Last year, Black Republican pitchman Armstrong
Williams was reviled for grabbing nearly
a quarter of a million dollars from the
White House to pump Bush's education policies,
all the while masquerading as a neutral
media commentator.
In
each case, the disgraced Black Republican
administration appointees, and boosters
did not tumble as far from grace as might
be expected. Pierce and Pendleton served
no jail time, and resumed their business
careers. Thomas is the much-prized conservative
high court polemicist. Though Williams
was bounced from his spot as a commentator
on a few media outlets, he is still a
frequent guest on talk shows, defending
conservative policies. Their names quickly
disappear from the scandal sheets. They
are simply too valuable to be summarily
tossed to the wolves.
Conservatives
desperately need Blacks such as Allen
to maintain the public illusion that Black
conservatives have real clout and a popular
following in Black communities. Their
great value is that they promote the myth
that a big segment of Blacks support political
conservative principles. In the last presidential
election, Bush, Republican National Committee
head Ken Mehlman and strategist Karl Rove
spent millions on outreach efforts to
attract African-American voters.
Mehlman
has since barnstormed the country in tow
with conservative Blacks to primp the
GOP's message to Black groups. Allen and
a handful of other Blacks have relentlessly
pumped Bush's policies on TV and radio
talk shows, in op-ed columns, and in debates
with civil rights leaders and liberal
Democrats. The young Black conservative
political activists such as Allen spin,
prime, and defend administration policies
on affirmative action, welfare, laizzez-faire
capitalism, and anti-government regulations
with the best of White conservatives.
Bush's controversial federal court appeals
nominee, Black California Supreme Court
Justice Janice Rogers Brown, once brashly
claimed that she was ''one of the few
conservatives left in America.''
Allen
did not make the same bold, and brash
claim as Brown, but he is every bit the
conservative ideologue as Brown. None
of their efforts touting GOP policies
have helped much. Bush still got only
a marginal bump up overall in the Black
vote in 2004, and with his Katrina bumble
his poll ratings are stuck even deeper
in the tank with Blacks.
Still,
Republicans have done everything possible
to ease the way up the political ladder
for their bevy of Black conservatives.
Allen's career is a textbook example of
that. He was barely out of the University
of North Carolina when he became the spokesmen
for Senator Jesse Helm's reelection campaign
in 1982. He moved from there to work for
Republicans on the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. He then bagged a prize clerkship
on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit. Next, he was appointed counsel
for Virginia's Attorney General, and then
he became Virginia's deputy attorney general
and later secretary of health and human
services.
When
his nomination for appeals court judge
didn't pan out, Bush made him his top
domestic policy advisor. In years past,
scandal plagued Black Republican boosters
and appointees pretty much skated away
with little more than a spate of bad publicity
and a hand slap. Allen may not be as lucky.
He may eventually be prosecuted. But as
long as Republicans find men like him
useful in their drive to make the party
appear to be an authentic voice in Black
America, they'll do whatever they can
to keep them as far out of legal harm's
way as possible.
Earl
Ofari Hutchinson is a columnist, activist
and political analyst
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