6.10.2005

Dean Was Right: The GOP is Pale

AmericaBlog points out something from 2004 that - to many - is rather bleeping obvious: GOP bigwigs are, with little exception, extremely white. Their idea of diversity and color is when a red state Rep dyes her hair brown instead of the prerequisite bottle blonde.

Seems that big tent looks more like a big white hood.

And, why does Howard Dean insist on telling the truth?
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Jessica Smith or Brendan McCarthy,
    Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2004 Fenton Communications

    BEHIND TODAY'S FACADE OF DIVERSITY LIES
    A NEARLY ALL-WHITE REPUBLICAN PARTY

    One Percent of Republican Legislators in the States And Washington are African-American or Hispanic

    The uninformed viewer watching TV coverage of this week's Republican national convention in New York might come away thinking that the President's party is built upon a solid commitment to inclusion of racial minorities. Once again, as it does every four years, the Republican Party is trying to portray itself as a 'big tent,' with room for every American.

    But a new book about America's political divisions notes that the 99 percent of all Republican legislators across the country and in Congress are white. The national Republican Party, whose base is in the South, the Plains and the Mountain states, looks to white men as its power base and source of leadership. Even when Republican states have significant minority populations, the elected Republican representatives rarely are drawn from those communities.

    The Great Divide: Retro vs. Metro America, a new look at political divisions in America by educator-entrepreneur Dr. John Sperling, calls those states 'Retro America,' and notes: 'Its whiteness and maleness are mirrored in the Republican Party.'

    Of 3,643 Republicans serving in the state legislatures, only 44 are minorities, or 1.2 percent. In the Congress, with 274 of the 535 elected senators and representatives Republican, only five are minorities - three Cuban Americans from Florida, a Mexican American from Texas and a Native American senator originally elected as a Democrat. [NOTE FROM JOHN: That means the GOP has elected ZERO blacks to Congress.]

    'President Bush's home state leads the way. Texas, with a minority population of 47 percent, has 106 Republicans in the state legislature, but there are 0 blacks and 0 Hispanics among them,' Sperling writes. 'No major corporation doing business with the government could be so white without being subject to Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) action!'