Black Congressman That Went Right In Alabama Gov. Primary Looses To Liberal

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If it's a choice between a genuine Republican, and a Republican in Democratic clothing, the people will choose the genuine article, every time...

Harry Truman 1952



source: Huffington Post

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Artur Davis Faces Off Against Ron Sparks In Alabama Democratic Primary

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — A congressman seeking to become Alabama's first black governor lost Tuesday to a white Democratic primary opponent who had garnered support from the state's four major black political groups.
Primaries were also held in Mississippi and New Mexico, where Susana Martinez, a prosecutor from southern New Mexico, won the GOP nomination for governor and will face Democrat Diane Denish in a general election race deciding who becomes New Mexico's first woman governor.
With 58 percent of the precincts reporting, Agriculture Commissioner Ron Sparks won the Democratic primary for Alabama governor with 65 percent of the vote to U.S. Rep. Artur Davis's 35 percent.
The state's traditional civil rights organizations backed Sparks after Davis voted against Obama's federal health care overhaul. But Davis, a Harvard lawyer who led President Barack Obama's campaign here in 2008, had endorsements from Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., a civil rights pioneer from Alabama, and Mobile's first black mayor, Sam Jones.
Voter Ben Ray picked Sparks, who has taken positions popular with Democrats, calling for an expansion of gambling, including a lottery, and supporting the federal health care plan.
"I just like his position on the education lottery," Ray said. "I think we need that here.
The chairman of the black Alabama Democratic Conference, Joe Reed, said Davis was hurt by refusing to seek the endorsements of African-American groups and by voting against the federal health care plan.
Sparks said he went after every vote, and his call for an education lottery proved popular with primary voters. Davis conceded in Birmingham, where he said he would support Sparks in the general election.
Seven GOP candidates for governor were competing in their party's primary Tuesday, and the top vote-getters were expected to go to a runoff on July 13.

The health care overhaul was also an issue in Alabama's other big race, where GOP voters in the 5th Congressional district were deciding the fate of U.S. Rep. Parker Griffith, a former Democrat who switched to the Republican Party in December.
Griffith, a first-term congressman, lagged in early returns behind Madison County Commissioner Mo Brooks, who had the backing of local GOP leaders still bitter over losing to Griffith in 2008, when he was still a Democrat.
The north Alabama district traditionally has been Democratic, but has leaned Republican in recent years. Four Democrats were competing for their party's nomination for the seat.
Meanwhile, four-term Alabama Republican U.S. Sen. Richard Shelby easily beat his primary challenger, tea party activist N.C. "Clint" Moser.
Shelby was drawing more than 80 percent of the votes in the unofficial count Tuesday evening. Shelby, 76, is favored to beat Democratic nominee Bill Barnes, a Birmingham lawyer.
Turnout across Alabama was light to moderate.
In New Mexico, the state's governor's race will be the third woman against woman gubernatorial general election matchup in U.S. history.
Martinez, the Dona Ana County district attorney, beat her four GOP opponents with 51 percent of the vote in unofficial returns and nearly half of precincts reporting. Former state GOP chairman Allen Weh had 29 percent.
The primary produced a political first for New Mexico because neither Democrats nor Republicans had ever selected a woman as their gubernatorial nominee. Denish didn't have a primary opponent.
The Republicans are hoping to win the governorship after eight years of Democratic control under Gov. Bill Richardson, who is term-limited and cannot seek re-election. Denish was Richardson's running mate in 2002 and 2006.
In Mississippi, no incumbents faced primary challenges.
Alan Nunnelee won the Republican nomination for a north Mississippi congressional seat. Unofficial results from the three-person GOP primary in the 1st District showed Nunnelee, a state senator from Tupelo, defeated former Eupora Mayor Henry Ross and Fox News analyst Angela McGlowan of Oxford.
 
He was a liberal. He lost the free give away game.:hmm:

Those who are not true conservatives cannot beat liberals at the give away sweepstakes. You guys own that title.
 
There were/are some other dynamics at play here. I hope to add some clarity, soon.

QueEx
 
So much for the right wing nut talking point argument that Black folk will vote for any Black liberal Democrat!

source: Huffington Post

Artur Davis 'Arrogant As Hell' For Ducking Black Media: Roland Martin

Rep. Artur Davis' stunningly lopsided loss in the Alabama gubernatorial primary has been attributed, in large part, to his unwillingness to court the Democratic base and, in particular, black voters, who seemed completely un-enthused by the notion of electing the state's first African-American governor.

The strains between Davis and the black community, indeed, ran far deeper than conventional wisdom ever held. So much so that Roland Martin, a prominent CNN analyst, syndicated columnist and television talk show host felt compelled to email the Huffington Post a withering critique of the Alabama Democrat for ducking African-American media.

Davis lost, Martin said, because "he was arrogant as hell."
Davis pointedly refused to do black media. He turned my TV One show down six times; he didn't do Tom Joyner's show, with 8 million listeners - TJ is a Tuskegee native; he turned down dozens of requests from Joe Madison of Sirius/XM; and he didn't do many others. He assumed because of his skin blacks would flock to his campaign. Sparks outhustled him and worked black voters in a major way.

Any smart politician knows to shore up their base. He was advised by top Democratic strategists, from the White House on down, to solidify his base. He never did that.

National media types were perplexed and shocked because they coronated him as a rising black star. Those of us who follow black politics closely were not shocked.

I hope national media outlets would stop lifting up black politicians as future stars. They have to earn it. Going to an Ivy League school doesn't guarantee success. Black voters are like anyone else: you must speak to them, work with them and not take them for granted.

He did. And lost. Badly. He deserved to lose for running a tone deaf campaign that ostracized and minimalized black voters.


Martin's is a remarkably pointed and filter-free critique, made all the more acidic by Davis' drubbing in Tuesday's primary election.

The extent to which the black community went sour on Davis is, indeed, remarkable. And, as Martin notes, it's an indictment of the (predominantly national) press corps for not recognizing this development before the election took place.

 

Artur Davis switches parties



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p o l i t i c o
May 30, 2012


Former Alabama Rep. Artur Davis announced Tuesday that he’s cutting ties with the Democratic Party, and said that he’s considering a future bid for Congress as a Republican.

Davis, who for a time had been considered a rising star in the Democratic Party, wrote a message on his website confirming that he is switching parties.

Davis, who for a time had been considered a rising star in the Democratic Party, wrote a message on his website confirming that he is switching parties.

f I were to leave the sidelines, it would be as a member of the Republican Party that is fighting the drift in this country in a way that comes closest to my way of thinking: wearing a Democratic label no longer matches what I know about my country and its possibilities,” Davis wrote.

The former congressman said he was thinking about waging a comeback bid in Virginia, where he currently lives. Since leaving office in 2011, Davis has been working at a Washington law firm.

The announcement marks a dramatic turnabout for Davis, a Harvard-educated lawyer who had once been mentioned as a potential attorney general after Democrats won the White House in 2008. The ambitious Davis, who is black, routinely drew comparisons to Barack Obama.

But after Davis suffered a stinging defeat in the Democratic primary for Alabama governor in 2010, he turned sharply against his party. Much to the chagrin of party leaders, Davis refused to endorse the candidate who defeated him, Ron Sparks, and openly criticized his foe.

After leaving office, Davis accelerated his break from the Democratic Party. He donated to several Republican gubernatorial candidates and criticized Obama’s policies.


Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0512/76846.html#ixzz1wNW3Zgae


 
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