Black conservatives launch effort to scrap part of Voting Rights Act

thoughtone

Rising Star
Registered
source: The Raw Story

A group of prominent black conservatives is trying to help scrap a key part of the Voting Rights Act, the landmark civil rights-era legislation that enshrined the right of black Americans to have equal treatment at the ballot box.

The law was signed in 1965 by President Lyndon Johnson in the presence of civil rights leaders like Dr Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks, and it represented one of the milestone victories in ending the Jim Crow segregation of the deep south.

Now, however, a black conservative group called Project 21 has filed a legal brief before the US supreme court in support of a case aimed at overturning key provisions of the act. The bid, on which the supreme court is set to rule this summer, has been brought by the authorities in Shelby County in the southern state of Alabama.

Project 21′s argument focuses on the part of the Voting Rights Act called Section 5, which holds that certain areas of the country with a history of racial discrimination when it comes to voting rights need to get federal approval before changing any of their voting procedures.

Cherylyn Harley LeBon, a former senior counsel for the US Senate judiciary committee and a co-founder of Project 21, told the Guardian that her group – which represents numerous high-profile black conservatives – supports the scrapping of Section 5 because she believes America had changed so much since the law was signed.

“Now we are in 2013, and the Voting Rights Act was something that came from a historical context. We need to update the law and this part of it is no longer needed,” Harley LeBon said. She said her own father had hailed from the deep south and had left the region at times to get away from racial discrimination, but she insisted changing the act now was still the right thing to do. “Just because issues may be difficult to deal with does not mean they should not be dealt with,” she said.

However, the effort to scrap part of the Voting Rights Act has met stiff opposition with many civil rights groups, especially those seeking to represent black Americans. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) has come out strongly against the legal bid by Shelby County and its supporters.

Myrna Perez, a senior counsel at New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice, said that changes to the law would be potentially harmful in the wake of controversial attempts at changing voting laws in many parts of the United States in recent years. “(The act) is single-handedly responsible for much of the progress this country has achieved in terms of electoral equality. Changing it would have a tremendous impact. There would be no backstop against states or localities that wanted to conduct discriminatory practises in voting,” Perez said.

Last year the federal government used Section 5 to block a highly controversial redistricting plan in Texas which it had feared created extra congressional seats dominated by white voters, when in fact most of the growth of Texas’ voter rolls came from minority voters, especially Hispanics.

The League of Women Voters had called the Texas redistricting scheme an “extreme example of racial gerrymandering” aimed at reducing the influence of non-white voters. The plan was blocked by a federal court in August 2012. Myrna said such events showed that the Voting Rights Act was still needed. “That happened just a few months ago last year,” she said.

Harley LeBon disagreed, saying that Section 5 was an unfair intrusion by the federal government into the rights of local government to organise their own affairs and that she was happy for black conservatives at Project 21 to spark a debate on such a thorny racial issue. “This is what America is all about: having a discussion. There is a whole network of black conservatives. The Democrats do not have a lock on black support,” she said.

Project 21 is sponsored by the National Center for Public Policy Research, a Washington-based foundation that says it is dedicated to finding “free market solutions” to social problems. According to its website, the NCPPP opposes environmental regulation, the influence of the United Nations and wants to drastically cut government spending.
 

"A group of prominent black conservatives" :hmm: :hmm: :hmm:

Project 21 is a conservative public policy group. The organization refers to itself as "The National Leadership Network of Black Conservatives." Its executive director is David Almasi. :hmm:

almasi_sm.jpg

David Almasi

Other officers/personnel of National Center for Public Policy Research:

David Ridenour, President
ridenourd_sm.jpg

http://www.nationalcenter.org/bios/ridenourd.html



Justin Danhof, General Counsel & Director of the Free Enterprise Project
danhof_sm.jpg



Teresa Platt, Director of the Environment & Enterprise Institute
platt_sm.jpg




Jeff Stier, Senior Fellow & Risk Analysis Division Director
stier_sm.jpg



Horace Cooper, Adjunct Fellow & Co-Chair of Project 21
cooper_sm.jpg





Cherylyn Harley LeBon, Co-Chair of Project 21
lebon_sm.jpg



Bonner Cohen, Ph.D., Senior Fellow
cohen_sm.jpg




R.J. Smith, Senior Fellow
smith_sm.jpg



Duncan Clark, Development Director
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Judy Kent, Public Relations


Devon Carlin, Research Associate
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Occupy DC gets occupied: Conservative group stages counter-protest at Freedom Plaza



Jennifer Biddison, Internet Consultant
jennifer-biddison.jpg





you get the picture . . .







 
I was speechless just from the OP and then I saw who is in charge of a "Black" organization.:smh::smh:

Please
someone give a defense for this. Make the attempt.
 
"A group of prominent black conservatives" :hmm: :hmm: :hmm:



Horace Cooper, Adjunct Fellow & Co-Chair of Project 21
cooper_sm.jpg


source: TPM Muckraker


Voter Fraud ‘Study’ Authored By Republican Who Pleaded Guilty In Abramoff Scandal

</HGROUP>
Cooper-Horace-8-2-12-cropped-proto-custom_28.jpg



A new paper claiming that voter ID laws actually protect rather than disenfranchise minority voters is getting play in conservative circles. What isn’t being mentioned so much is the background of the paper’s author.

Horace Cooper, the author of the paper, told the Daily Caller this week that voter fraud “criminals — more often than not — are Democrats violating the rights of people who tend to be black or senior.”

Cooper may not have any expertise on voter fraud, but he does know a thing or two about falsifying documents. Cooper was indicted in 2009 on five public corruption charges, charged with exchanging political favors for gifts from Jack Abramoff. Cooper allegedly accepted bribes as a staffer to former Majority Leader Dick Armey, as chief of staff for Voice of America and when he worked for the Department of Labor. Cooper later pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of falsifying a disclosure report and was sentenced to 36 months of probation.

Cooper asked a judge to shorten his sentence earlier this year so he could travel to Central Fiji on a trip paid for by Qorvis Communications, writing in a court document that he was hopeful a “more permanent employment relationship may develop” after the trip. [Late update: Qorvis’ Seth Thomas Pietras tells TPM the filing “must be the result of a misunderstanding and no employment offer was ever made of him.”] A judge denied the motion. Currently, he is “self-employed as a writer and legal commentator, and operates a PR consulting service,” according to a court filing.

In an interview on Thursday, Cooper accused TPM of “playing gotcha games” when we inquired about whether he was still on probation and said there was “absolutely no relevance” to the issue at hand. He called the Justice Department’s original charges against him “unsubstantiated” and said he’s been interested in voter integrity for a long time.

“I worked on Capitol Hill for almost 17 years, I worked as general counsel in the majority leader’s office, I worked on issues involving voter integrity. I followed and closely studied issues involving this matter for quite some time. I did not wake up yesterday and discover an interest in the matter,” Cooper said.

Cooper authored the paper on behalf of the National Center for Public Policy Research. As TPM reported in April, the NCPPR — which described itself as a “conservative, free-market, non-profit think-tank” — formed a Voter Identification Task Force to continue ALEC’s “excellent work” in “promoting measures to enhance integrity in voting.”

While dubbed a “study” by Fox News and the Daily Caller, Cooper’s 1,898 word piece reads more like an article you’d read on TownHall.com, where Cooper wrote a regular column. His NCPPR piece cobbles together news reports about voter fraud allegations (including absentee ballot fraud, which wouldn’t be prevented by voter ID) and concludes that the voter fraud schemes “often target the same black voters once deprived under Jim Crow.”

Cooper called state data showing that individuals in heavily minority areas of Pennsylvania were less likely to have a state issued ID flawed, saying voter ID laws don’t create a barrier to the polls.

“There’s not been a study that says that if 18 percent of the people don’t have an ID, that 18 percent of the people wouldn’t vote. That’s a logical leap that actually can’t be made,” Cooper said.

“Merely because 18 percent do not have at present have the ID card it does not follow that lawfully, that is an impediment that meets the standard of a hurdle that would prevent a person from being able to vote,” Cooper added.

Late update: Justin Levitt fact checks Cooper’s paper here.

Here’s Fox News covering the “study” on Thursday morning (H/T Media Matters):


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"A group of prominent black conservatives" :hmm: :hmm: :hmm:



Cherylyn Harley LeBon, Co-Chair of Project 21
lebon_sm.jpg


Black Legal Experts Say Race Not a Factor in Holder Contempt Citation Debate

<IFRAME height=315 src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/YtvStkNxEi8" frameBorder=0 width=560 allowfullscreen></IFRAME>
 


Well, didn't take much to discredit the two most prominent "african or black Americans" in the group . . .



 
source: TPM Muckraker


Voter Fraud ‘Study’ Authored By Republican Who Pleaded Guilty In Abramoff Scandal

</HGROUP>
Cooper-Horace-8-2-12-cropped-proto-custom_28.jpg



A new paper claiming that voter ID laws actually protect rather than disenfranchise minority voters is getting play in conservative circles. What isn’t being mentioned so much is the background of the paper’s author.

Horace Cooper, the author of the paper, told the Daily Caller this week that voter fraud “criminals — more often than not — are Democrats violating the rights of people who tend to be black or senior.”

Cooper may not have any expertise on voter fraud, but he does know a thing or two about falsifying documents. Cooper was indicted in 2009 on five public corruption charges, charged with exchanging political favors for gifts from Jack Abramoff. Cooper allegedly accepted bribes as a staffer to former Majority Leader Dick Armey, as chief of staff for Voice of America and when he worked for the Department of Labor. Cooper later pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of falsifying a disclosure report and was sentenced to 36 months of probation.

Cooper asked a judge to shorten his sentence earlier this year so he could travel to Central Fiji on a trip paid for by Qorvis Communications, writing in a court document that he was hopeful a “more permanent employment relationship may develop” after the trip. [Late update: Qorvis’ Seth Thomas Pietras tells TPM the filing “must be the result of a misunderstanding and no employment offer was ever made of him.”] A judge denied the motion. Currently, he is “self-employed as a writer and legal commentator, and operates a PR consulting service,” according to a court filing.

In an interview on Thursday, Cooper accused TPM of “playing gotcha games” when we inquired about whether he was still on probation and said there was “absolutely no relevance” to the issue at hand. He called the Justice Department’s original charges against him “unsubstantiated” and said he’s been interested in voter integrity for a long time.

“I worked on Capitol Hill for almost 17 years, I worked as general counsel in the majority leader’s office, I worked on issues involving voter integrity. I followed and closely studied issues involving this matter for quite some time. I did not wake up yesterday and discover an interest in the matter,” Cooper said.

Cooper authored the paper on behalf of the National Center for Public Policy Research. As TPM reported in April, the NCPPR — which described itself as a “conservative, free-market, non-profit think-tank” — formed a Voter Identification Task Force to continue ALEC’s “excellent work” in “promoting measures to enhance integrity in voting.”

While dubbed a “study” by Fox News and the Daily Caller, Cooper’s 1,898 word piece reads more like an article you’d read on TownHall.com, where Cooper wrote a regular column. His NCPPR piece cobbles together news reports about voter fraud allegations (including absentee ballot fraud, which wouldn’t be prevented by voter ID) and concludes that the voter fraud schemes “often target the same black voters once deprived under Jim Crow.”

Cooper called state data showing that individuals in heavily minority areas of Pennsylvania were less likely to have a state issued ID flawed, saying voter ID laws don’t create a barrier to the polls.

“There’s not been a study that says that if 18 percent of the people don’t have an ID, that 18 percent of the people wouldn’t vote. That’s a logical leap that actually can’t be made,” Cooper said.

“Merely because 18 percent do not have at present have the ID card it does not follow that lawfully, that is an impediment that meets the standard of a hurdle that would prevent a person from being able to vote,” Cooper added.

Late update: Justin Levitt fact checks Cooper’s paper here.

Here’s Fox News covering the “study” on Thursday morning (H/T Media Matters):


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Black Legal Experts Say Race Not a Factor in Holder Contempt Citation Debate

<IFRAME height=315 src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/YtvStkNxEi8" frameBorder=0 width=560 allowfullscreen></IFRAME>

It is hard for me to believe people like these would sell out there own race!!!!

:smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh:
 
Right Wings Conservative Supreme Court Justices Want To Over Turn Voting Rights Act

source: TPM

Conservative Justices Hammer The Voting Rights Act

john-roberts-june-2010-cropped-proto-custom_28.jpg



The Voting Rights Act took a beating from conservative justices Wednesday during oral arguments at the Supreme Court.

At issue is the constitutionality of Section 5 of the 1965 law, which requires state and local governments with a history of voter disenfranchisement to pre-approve any changes that affect voting with the Justice Department or a federal court.

Oral arguments showed a sharp divide along ideological lines and suggested that the conservative majority is strongly inclined to overturn Section 5 of the half-century-old law.

A question posed by Chief Justice John Roberts to the Obama administration’s lawyer defending the Voting Rights Act captured the tenor of the proceedings.

“Is it the government’s submission that citizens in the South are more racist than citizens not in the South?” Roberts asked.

Justice Anthony Kennedy labeled the formula used for Section 5 “reverse engineering” that “obscures the real purpose.” He declared that “if Congress is going to single out states, it should do so by name.”

Kennedy said there no question Section 5 was “utterly necessary” in 1965 but its validity now is “not clear” to him. “The Marshall Plan was very good too,” he said. “But times change.”

Roberts and Kennedy led the questioning challenging the Voting Right Act. Justice Sonia Sotomayor led the questioning defending it.

Justice Antonin Scalia attributed the continued congressional reauthorization to the perpetuation of a “racial entitlement” and suggested that it will be renewed into “perpetuity” because members of Congress would never let it lapse for fear for political repercussions.

“I don’t think there is anything to gain by any senator by voting against this Act,” Scalia said. “This is not the kind of question you can leave to Congress. They’re going to lose votes if they vote against the Voting Rights Act. Even the name is wonderful.”

Justice Samuel Alito asked several hostile questions suggesting that Section 5 was unfair to the covered jurisdictions. “Why shouldn’t it apply everywhere in the country?” he asked.

Justice Clarence Thomas, who did not speak during arguments, has already signaled in a 2009 written opinion that he believes Section 5 is unconstitutional.

The purpose of Section 5 was to proactively quash voter discrimination where it’s most likely to emanate, but conservatives argue that it has outlived its purpose and now discriminates against the mostly southern regions covered.

The historic 1965 law has been reauthorized four times by Congress, most recently in 2006 for a period of 25 years. Its constitutionality has been affirmed four times by the Supreme Court, most recently in 1999.
 
Re: Right Wings Conservative Supreme Court Justices Want To Over Turn Voting Rights A


Do any of you self-described Conservatives on this board,
(black, white or indifferent), believe that Section 5 of the
Voting Rights Act -- which requires Pre-clearance, i.e., the
governmental body proposing a change in law that affecting
voting must first show that the proposed law will not have a
discriminatory effect -- before it can enforce the law -- is a
”Racial Entitlement" ???





 
Re: Right Wings Conservative Supreme Court Justices Want To Over Turn Voting Rights A






gPAYY.SlMa.91.jpeg






 
Black conservatives launch effort to scrap part of Voting Rights Act


A group of prominent black conservatives is trying to help scrap a key part of the Voting Rights Act, the landmark civil rights-era legislation that enshrined the right of black Americans to have equal treatment at the ballot box.

This organization of so-called "prominent black conservatives" (with their WHITE bosses) are speaking out on the Trayvon Martin case, as well.

See: Post 22 in the thread, Trayvon Martin - After The Verdict

 
Those colored people dare to think differently!

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I have no problem with them thinking differently, I don't expect every black person to be a democrat. However, it is somewhat difficult to process how they can align with a party who is hell bent on using black folx as the boogey man to get most of their agenda passed. A party who has gone from not just subtle hints to malign black folx but flat out unabashed racist rhetoric. They covered black republicans at the 2008 rnc, the handful that was there. I lost total respect for them during that time. This was the convention where folx were walking around in gator baiting rnc hats. There is no way you make a hat like that with out knowing the racial history attached to it.

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/10675528034/" title="gatorbaiting2 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3817/10675528034_1af044374f.jpg" width="500" height="361" alt="gatorbaiting2"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/10675465395/" title="gatorbaiting by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3820/10675465395_4e30a034f5.jpg" width="500" height="334" alt="gatorbaiting"></a>

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42852019@N07/10675738603/" title="gatorbaiting4 by S C B, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5473/10675738603_b577be969f.jpg" width="400" height="400" alt="gatorbaiting4"></a>​

And the 2012 convention was where they threw nuts at the black cnn camera person. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/28/republican-cnn-attack-animal-peanuts-racist_n_1838249.html

In 2008 they also went after a black camera man after John McCain and Sarah Palin got those folx riled up. Thats why he had that moment with the woman in the red shirt saying Obama was a good man and not an arab, McCain had gotten spooked before when they called out they should kill Obama. I recall vividly the shocked look on his face. I also remember the guy with the monkey doll with the Obama name tag on it, tho, he had enough shame to try to pass it off to a kid once he realized he was being filmed.

Not to mention all the racist signs at teaparty rallies. etc.

If they went independent, I could see it. But to go conservative/GOP when they have made it clear that their leadership as a whole considers us beneath them... I just don't see it. Sorry... :smh:
 
New Blood
Can Black Republicans Save Their Party Next Year?


Earlier this year, the GOP released a self-generated autopsy report about what went wrong in the 2012 presidential elections, and how they failed to pick up any considerable percentage of votes from people of color. It urged the party to adopt the best practices recommendations of think tanks that have been researching how they can better diversify their ranks. They took some steps, opening offices of “African-American engagement” in North Carolina, and the same for Asian-Americans in Virginia. But the implementation hasn’t been without its missteps: Last week, the Republican National Committee celebrated Rosa Parks, releasing a statement, “We remember and honor Rosa Parks today for the role she played in fighting racism and ending segregation. At the same time we rededicate ourselves to the causes of justice and equal opportunity.” And then the RNC tweeted that racism ended with Parks’s defiant stand. And then there’s the Tea Party rallies in front of the White House featuring the Confederate flag. It’s been a clunky start to say the least.

However, a new crop of black Republicans are rising with the hope they can turn their party around on race. In running for Congress in next year’s mid-term elections, they are essentially saying to their party, “You’re rededicated to equal opportunity? Prove it. Help get us elected.” The proof will come in the form of how much money the party and its benefactors put behind these candidates, and of course, in how many Republican voters actually come out to support them. I spoke with four African-American candidates running for Congress next year under the GOP mantle.

Hear ‘em out:


David Earl Williams III is seeking Illinois’s District 9 seat in the House of Representatives (covering parts of Chicago) currently held by Democrat Jan Schakowsky. Facebook followers: 6,405. Twitter: 472.

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Recent Tweet:

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David Williams III @DEWforCongress
Follow
Small businesses like the Barber shop I go to, get hurt the most by higher taxes. @janschakowsky kills jobs


3:05 PM - 4 Dec 2013

Why should we look out for you in 2014? At 30 years old, I’m young and I come from a working-poor family with a real understanding of what common people go through. People get to D.C. and they let the power go to their head and forget about the plight of common people, but what I’m running on is reducing national debt, and also real immigration reform, meaning securing the border, and legalization, not citizenship, but legalization of immigrants here through a work permit or study visa, or for military service. But not citizenship.

Summarize your campaign in one hashtag. #fun

What does the GOP need to improve upon to attract more people of color? I would say you have to get rid of the Republican In Name Onlys, or what’s called RINOs. And also, what the Democratic party is good at is they say that Republicans are racist, white people, so you need to put more people from different backgrounds out there to represent the party — and not just anyone off the streets, but people who actually promote the values that Republicans believe in.

What’s one thing people of color most misunderstand about the GOP in your opinion? Well, that they hate the poor. They don’t. When it comes to charity, people who consider themselves Republicans donate far more than anyone who calls themselves a Democrat. And they say we hate welfare, but that’s not true. if you create an atmosphere where you have less taxation and less regulation then the jobs start there.

What do you think of the RNC’s Rosa Parks Tweet about ending racism? This is first time I heard of that.

The Congressional Black Caucus: Friend or foe? You know I’m of African-American heritage, but I look at people all the same. I would prefer to join the Liberty Caucus. I won’t look at anyone in Congress as my foe, though, unless people are trying to undermine liberty and those things that promote equality. We’re friends as long as you are trying to promote equality by looking at people based on what they’re worth, not based on skin color, gender or sexual orientation, but by their abilities.


_________________________________​



sean-herman-thumb-400x182-9876.jpg

Gloreatha “Glo” Smith: Seeking Florida’s District Five seat (Jacksonville) currently held by Rep. Corrine Brown, a Democrat. Facebook: 662. Twitter: 103. Recent Tweet: [Ed. Note: The @GloForCongress account was de-activated shortly before publication.]

Why should we look out for you in 2014? My candidacy is exciting because the constituents finally have an opportunity to choose an alternative U.S. representative that understands the plight faced in the district. I was born in the projects, and grew up in the poorest part of Jacksonville. I recall standing in line with my mother at the government food distribution trucks parked in our neighborhood waiting for handouts of canned meat and cheese. Thankfully, with the moral support of family and church, I was inspired to excel beyond those conditions and eventually received my MBA degree as an adult. I’m running because the high unemployment rate and lack of job opportunities greatly impact the constituents. This has resulted in high crime rates, lower graduation levels, and an even higher number of families living in poverty over the last 20 years. My goal is to utilize my experience to create meaningful careers for all district constituents willing and able to work.

Summarize your campaign in one hashtag. #TogetherWeCanDoBetter!

What do you think of the RNC’s Rosa Parks Tweet about ending racism? I respectfully disagree with the tweet, because racism exists within many ethic groups nationwide, and especially around the world. The valor of Rosa Parks help shaped the freedoms that Americans enjoy today, and her act of courage is a beacon of hope to many races, cultures, and the religiously oppressed people around the world.

Congressional Black Caucus: Friend or foe? As the trend of black Republicans continue to increase in number, I believe that the CBC will be more inclusive in its representation of all African-Americans interests. The CBC should be instrumental in helping to elect America’s first black female Republican to Congress. Our generation can celebrate a historic moment in history if just one of five such candidates currently running wins.

What do you think about Florida’s law that bans ex-felons from voting, especially as it impacts African-Americans? I believe that if a Floridian successfully pays their debt to society, he or she should have an opportunity to apply for a restoration of civil rights.


____________________________________​



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Brenda Lenard: Running for the U.S. Senate seat in Tennessee currently held by Lamar Alexander, a Republican. ]Facebook: 3,301. Twitter: 1,369.

Why should we look out for you in 2014? My life is a testament of the American dream. I know and understand the American traditions of hard work, community service and strong values very well, because those are the same values I was born, raised and educated with. Once elected, my American values and common sense [will be] a testament to the work I strive to accomplish such as the promotion of individual liberty, economic opportunity and a smaller federal government. Finally, I believe in America and the people which make up this great nation.

Summarize your campaign in one hashtag: #Better.Brighter.Bolder


What does the GOP need to improve upon to attract more people of color? The Conservative message does not need to be altered, however they should consider individuals of diverse cultural backgrounds for their branding and messaging.

What’s one thing people of color most misunderstand about the GOP in your opinion? [That] the GOP is exclusively comprised [sic] of old, Caucasian males that do not embrace the American worker or their families.

What do you think of the RNC’s Rosa Parks Tweet about ending racism? Though Jim Crow laws are no longer in effect, racism in many segments still exists.

Congressional Black Caucus: Friend or foe? Friend—I have no enemies.



___________________________________​




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Katrina Pierson: Running for Texas’s 32 Congressional district seat (Dallas) currently held by Rep. Pete Sessions, a Republican. Facebook: 8,841. Twitter: 25,199.

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Why should we look out for you in 2014? This particular campaign challenges the status quo on all levels. There’s stigma among Republicans that they’re all white, old and male, and there’s stigma from the Democrats who say that the Tea Party are all white, angry racists. So, my campaign shutters all preconceived notions about Republicans and the Tea Party in general.

Summarize your campaign in one hashtag: #AmericansFirst and #NoMoreExcuses

What does the GOP need to improve upon to attract more people of color? Well, when you look at their own autopsy report, it states that they struggle most among voters who are single mothers, women and minorities. As someone who checks off all of those boxes, if Republicans are seen as just white, rich men and they know they have these demographic issues then they should put more people like me in office. Our problem isn’t our message, it’s our messengers.

What’s one thing people of color most misunderstand about the GOP in your opinion? Growing up, we’re told that Republicans are all about the rich getting richer and making the poor get poorer, and Republicans haven’t gone into communities to confront that message head on. Meanwhile, policies from liberals maintain the status quo that keep people poor, and that’s what we have to get away from. We need Republican candidates who aren’t afraid to go into communities and take those messages on while explaining what conservative values are really all about.

Congressional Black Caucus: Friend or foe? I don’t consider them either because I don’t know any of them well enough to determine that. But I do intend to join the Congressional Black Caucus. [Former Florida Rep.] Allen West was a CBC member, and I consider him a friend. But, I wouldn’t blanket label all of them as friend or foe.





SOURCE



 
New Blood​



Can Black Republicans Save Their Party Next Year?


I guess this post is confirmation of this previous comment, as if so called Black republicans even matter to the republican party other than window dressing.

Negro are a glutton for punishment.

Perhaps!!! But, on the other hand, I believe that we're the most forgiving people on the planet.
 
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