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JOINT CENTER News Room

Joint Center Points to Large Drop in Number of Black Delegates to GOP Convention

Think Tank Recognizes McCain’s Outreach to African Americans but Defines Challenge in Running against First Black Presidential Nominee

August 29, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 29, 2008

For more information contact:
Margaret Bolton
(202) 789-3511
mbolton@jointcenter.org

Joint Center Points to Large Drop in Number of Black Delegates to GOP Convention

Think Tank Recognizes McCain’s Outreach to African Americans but Defines Challenge in Running against First Black Presidential Nominee

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) – After seating a record number of African American delegates in 2004, next week’s Republican National Convention in Minneapolis/St. Paul will have the lowest black representation in 40 years, according to a convention guide that will be distributed next week to delegates at the Republican National Convention by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies (Joint Center).

Blacks and the 2008 Republican Convention, released today by the nonpartisan research institution that focuses on minority issues, notes that African Americans will comprise only 1.5 percent of the total number of GOP delegates, substantially below the record setting 6.7 percent in 2004.

The 36 black delegates in 2008 represent a 78.4 percent decline from the 167 black delegates at the 2004 GOP convention.

Based on extensive polling and analysis of African American voters nationwide, the Joint Center’s guide, while noting Senator John McCain’s efforts to reach out to black organizations such as the NAACP and the National Urban League, outlined the difficulties he will have running against the first African American to secure a major party nomination.

“John McCain is very likely to receive a historically low share of the black vote,” the guide says, adding that this is not attributable to any experiences Senator McCain has had representing black constituents, but rather it is “a reflection of Senator Obama's historic candidacy, the deep and genuine enthusiasm for him in the black community, and Senator McCain’s association with President Bush, an exceptionally unpopular figure among African Americans.”

The Joint Center has prepared similar volumes for both the Republican and Democratic conventions every four years since 1972. Written by the organization’s Senior Political Analyst, David A. Bositis, the guides are intended to help African American convention participants carry out their responsibilities and to inform political analysis and partisan activities, as well as to enhance the understanding of trends among black voters. The guide includes an insert, prepared by the Joint Center’s Health Policy Institute, comparing the health care reform plans of the two major party candidates and the implications for racial/ethnic minorities.

“This guide scientifically documents the historical shift of black voter allegiances over the past 50 years, and places black voter attitudes and preferences in the context of the pressing issues of our day,” said Ralph B. Everett, President and CEO of the Joint Center. “We hope that delegates to the Republican National Convention will find this information useful in understanding the concerns of black voters and how they will influence the upcoming election.”

The Joint Center released its companion volume for delegates to the 2008 Democratic National Convention last week on the eve of the event.

A copy of Blacks and the 2008 Republican Convention is available for download at the Joint Center’s Web site (www.jointcenter.org).

The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies is one of the nation’s premier research and public policy institutions and the only one whose work focuses exclusively on issues of particular concern to African Americans and other people of color. For more information, go to www.jointcenter.org

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Did You Know?

In 2006, blacks made up 22 percent of the U.S. Army overall, but comprised only 12.3 percent of the officer corps and between seven and eight percent of the combat arms officers. The combat arms branches represent the principal pipeline to the Army's senior ranks. In 1990, blacks were 29.1 percent of the Army, but only 11 percent of the officer corps.

Source: Lt. Colonel Anthony D. Reyes, Strategic Options for Managing Diversity in the U.S. Army, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, June 2006