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Black Political Power Vanishes Across the South sfdsdf

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Title: 
Black Political Power Vanishes Across the South
Authors: 
Jonathan Tilove
Publication Date: 
July 24, 2012
Body: 

When President Barack Obama arrives in New Orleans on Wednesday to speak before the National Urban League annual conference, he will touch down in a state where his party, less than a month before the qualifying deadline, has yet to find a congressional candidate for any district outside the black-majority seat held by Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-New Orleans.

For Sen. Karen Carter Peterson, D-New Orleans, who seized control of the party from Buddy Leach in April, it is a year for "grassroots rebuilding." But so too was last year, when the party failed to field a single major candidate for any statewide office, including governor.

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"Black voters and elected officials have less influence now than at any time since the civil rights era," David Bositis, an analyst at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in Washington, wrote in a stark analysis late last year. It is the culmination of nearly a half-century process that began with the dismantling of Jim Crow, the empowerment of black voters and an explosion in black representation, but that now finds its ironic coda in a once-dominating Democrat Party transformed into a largely African-American enterprise that is only occasionally able to scrounge enough white votes to compete effectively outside black districts. The result has been the loss of legislative control in every Southern state save Arkansas.

 

Read more at the Times-Picayune.

Relationships
Institutes: 
Civic Engagement & Governance
Topics: 
Voting
Presidential Election
Civic Engagement
Civic Participation
Black Elected Officials
Political Participation
Politics
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Content Type: 
News