During a week where there is a Democratic debate the Power Rankings usually focus on who performed best, and how much time candidates spent speaking to issues and policies that concern African-American voters, but not this week. This whole committee was hit hard by the news that Rep. Elijah Cummings died early Thursday morning, and it put all of our rankings into a new light. In addition to being Politics Editor for The Root.com, Iâm also faculty at Morgan State University, a school that sits in Cummingsâ district, and he was always a huge advocate for our students. Fellow rankings judge Marcus Ferrell (former African American Outreach Director for Bernie for America 2016 and Senior Advisor Swing Left) texted that Cummings had been a mentor to so many young black politicos and activists all over the country.
Cummings died fighting to preserve a democracy that has never quite served black folks but nonetheless has the potential to be great. His legacy is a reminder to the Black Power Rankings committee that we can never ask too much of the candidates running for president. There is no ask so outrageous, no demand too petty and no policy so outlandish that we as African Americans canât place it at the feet of those who seek our votes and expect action from them. If Elijah Cummings could show as much compassion for local Maryland issues (He once served on the Coast Guard and Maritime Sub-Committee so that he could make sure the Chesapeake Bay was clean and to protect black fisherman) as he did for national immigration issues at the border and impeaching Donald Trump as Chair of the House Oversight Committee, we should never shy away from demanding the most of presidential candidates who canât win a thing without the black vote.
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We know heâs up there âDancing with Angelsâ as he used to say, and weâll do our best to hold future leaders to his standard as long as weâre still here. With that, on to this weekâs rankings.
For the first time in the history of the rankings, we have a TIE! Yes, Senator Kamala Harris and Senator Cory Booker are both the Biggest Risers for the week, jumping 3 spots after great debate performances and actually acting like they still have a chance at this nomination. This weekâs biggest loser is actually Bernie Sanders, who drops four spots, but heâs still riding a post-heart-attack high. Senator Klobuchar falls off the list this week and Tom Steyer literally bought his way back into the Top 10. Want to know how we do our rankings? Check out our system below.
How do you rank a campaignâs Black Power? Well, we have our âFLEXâ rating, aka:
Finances: Are you paying black staff, advertisers, consultants?
Legislation: What legislation are you pushing or have passed for black people?
External Polling: No matter how good you are for black people, if your poll numbers are terrible we canât rank you that high!
X-Factor: Whatâs your rhetoric like? How do you handle a crisis or the kinds of events and scandals that directly impact black lives?
âPolice Violence is also gun violenceââJulian Castro Oct. 15, 2019. Democratic Debate
Honestly, Castro couldâve just dropped the mic and left the stage after that, but he went on to explain how gun violence, police confiscation of weapons and the murder of Atatiana Jefferson by another lawless cop are connected policy-wise. In a debate where most candidates couldnât find a way to mention black people or issues, Castro kept his eyes on the prize. This week, he also rolled out an endorsement list bigger than a Wu-Tang Clan family photo, which included black, queer Muslim activist Blair Imani, Executive from the Delaware Democratic Party Coby Owens, Angela Lang of BLOC (Black Leaders Organizing for Communities) and a slew of others. His campaign manager Maya Rupert hit us with the specific ways that Castroâs new Foster Care policy helps black families and keeps the system from tearing families apart, and most importantly, whenever that 3-hour snoozefest of a debate veered into talking head minutia, Castro kept it 100 and pivoted back to real issues. The Committee recognizes Castroâs poll numbers are flatter than pancakes stacked on two ironing boards on Kyrie Irvingâs version of the Earth but his policies, his debate, and his staff went HAM this week so he comes out on top.
During the debate, a Kamala Harris staffer complained to Buzzfeed about how white women reporters praise Elizabeth Warren for being snide to Harris but jump all over Harris when she does anything remotely assertive towards a white male candidate. Not only does the Committee agree with Harrisâ staffer but much respect to her staff in general, who know how to work the press behind the scenes, compared to Bernie staffers, who seem to think heâs running for president of Twitter. Harris had a great debate, and was one of the few candidates to talk specifically about black womenâs maternal health issues, and connected Trumpâs tweets to violence against black people.
While Warren may think it was cute to dismiss Harrisâ idea to boot Trump off Twitter, it was just a few months ago the President was calling the black residents of Baltimore vermin because he was angry at Elijah Cummings, and all but calling for assassination attempts on Rep. Ilhan Omar. Plus, Harris finally has her black knight in shining neck-chains, aka Luther âUncle Lukeâ Campbell, who will be accompanying her to black town halls in South Carolina this week. It was one thing to get the former 2 Live Crew rapperâs endorsement, it is a huge coup to actually have him campaign with her.
Lastly, shout out to one of our Greek committee members who informed us that whenever Harris says âThis is a SERIOUS matterâ during the debates that itâs a shout out to AKA. Iâm #MePhiMe so I didnât have a clue. The committee is always happy to give Greeks love, and weâre still offering free tickets to the Root 100 gala and a yearâs supply of D.C.âs Mumbo sauce for anybody who has an old dusty VHS tape of Harris at a Howard step show or even her Rollout.
Mike Tyson famously said, âEverybodyâs got a plan until they get punched in the mouth.â Well, Elizabeth Warren has a plan for everything but she was catching hands from Biden, Buttigieg, Harris, and I think Marianne Williamson got in a shot from the spiritual plane. Joe Biden was so aggressive with Warren, Kamalaâs husband Doug Emhoff thought he was gonna have to rush the stage again.
Heavy is the crown of the front-runner and the committee thinks Warren stumbled a bit. Outside of mentioning HBCUs Warren didnât say much for black voters during the debate and she would have dropped further but her polling numbers went up post-debate; sheâs jumped over Sanders as the second choice of black voters in a recent poll; she co-sponsored addiction support legislation with the late Elijah Cummings and she called out HUD Secretary Ben Carson for finding yet another way to discriminate against people. The Committee will be interested to see if Warren the Front Runner can keep the same energy as Warren the Insurgent.
Did you feel that? Thatâs a thug tear rolling down your cheek after Cory Bookerâs closing statement at this weekâs Democratic debate. Cory Booker did something that nobody on the committee thought was possible: He made the case for staying in the race despite the fact that heâs got little chance to win the nomination. The passion, moral clarity, and arguments that Booker made, especially about men fighting for womenâs reproductive rights (Theyâre PEOPLEâImagine THAT?!) and child poverty (and trust, those are black issues) moved him up this week.
Even if he never wins this nomination, Booker SOUNDS more like a president than anybody on that stage, so he moves up. Booker played nice with most everyone, which was either a play for VP (Heâs more likely to be Warrenâs VP than Andrew Gillum, trust us) or just Cory being Cory. His explanation for his low polling with black voters on NPRâs Off Script wasnât particularly impressive, and the fact that he tried to straddle the fence on who was better, Tupac or Biggie offended some of our more music-minded committee members (also, whereâs the love for Redman, Lauryn Hill and Fetty Wap? No love for Jersey rappers, Senator?)
The 2020 healthcare debate for Democrats is basically an argument about which version of the Medicare for All bill theyâre not going to be able to pass once elected, so the committee gives Bernie Sanders credit for that. So why the drop? First, Sanders is now the third choice of black voters behind Warren and Biden in a recent poll.
Next, Bernie did some good talking with Rashad Robinson on the Voting While Black Podcast discussing specific issues that address the black community, but where was that on the national debate stage? Say our name say our naaaaame, Bernie if you want the black vote, donât get onstage then choke, why you running gaaaame? Next, while he scored endorsements from some of âThe Squadâ this week, the committee remains unimpressed. Rep. Ilhan Omar and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez were supported by Justice Democrats (a PAC founded by former Sanders staffers) so their endorsement is no surprise (and we expect Rashida Tlaib to join them soon). No shade to the rest of the group, but Sanders basically got a shout-out from Michelle and Kelly, but as far as the committee is concerned Ayanna Pressley is the Squadâs Beyonce and she made it very clear she is NOT endorsing Sanders.
Maybe itâs because sheâs from the same state as Elizabeth Warren, maybe itâs Maybelline, we donât know, but a high profile black woman with impeccable progressive credentials taking Sandersâ money and still giving him the Heisman says something about where Dems see his chances of winning the nomination.
Hunter Biden is about to win the Tariq St. Patrick Award for the Son Most Likely to Cost His Daddy the Bag. Hunter is a grown-ass man, and the fact that his LinkedIn is constantly popping with requests from foreign companies should have nothing to do with his father. Yet, Uncle Joe, Corn-Pop Joe, the man who said heâd take Trump behind the high school gym and beat the hell out of him, had nothing but weak sauce with a side of mumble when it came to defending Hunter and responding to Trumpâs ridiculous Ukraine smears during the debate.
Worse, Biden trying to take credit for Warrenâs work to create the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was out of bounds even for him. He was a step away from calling her sweetheart and rubbing her shoulders. Given that Ohio was the scene of Bidenâs most infamous line-stepping with women maybe he was having a flashback. Biden also drops because he said little or nothing specific for black voters during the debate, blowing yet another chance to distance himself from the rest of the field.
Beto did a decent job this week keeping the focus on Trumpâs corrosive racism, praising the life of Elijah Cummings and putting together his #RallyAgainstFear which featured a rap group so bad Beto shouldâve said âHell yes, weâre coming for your mics.â Since the never-Trumper media elites love Mayor Pete, they totally misread the tense exchange between him and Beto during the debate so allow the Committee to clarify:
Pete Buttigieg: I donât need to take lessons from you on courage, or politics, or mouthwash or hip-hop or anything. I hate you Beto, I hate you with all my heartâŠ.
Beto OâRourke: Uhmm Pete, this is an ArbyâsâŠ
While Mayor Pete played the little Engine That Wants That Smoke, Beto was Lightning McQueen; heâs not ashamed of his far-left stances on guns and was happy to stay in his lane. The Committee also credits Beto for dusting off whatâs left of Bill OâReilly just so he could smack him down a flight of stairs again. Betoâs polls are still terrible, but he moves up one for debate clutchness this week.
Angry Pete, Pistol Pete, Pete with Priors, Butti-Snatch-Edges, Mayor Pete from South Bend, South-South Bend ⊠Look whatever name you want to give him, Mayor Pete has decided that his best strategy going forward is to pick fights with errrbody on stage. When you get clapped back from Harris, Beto, and even Cory Booker, itâs time to evaluate your life choices.
While some press outlets loved the new Pete, he didnât do much for black voters on the main stage. Youâve got this supposedly amazing Douglass Plan thatâs supposed to be a game-changer for black folks, but you donât mention it once during the debate? You canât change the game if you leave Jordan on the bench in the 4th quarter.
To make matters worse, given Mayor Peteâs own history with cops killing unarmed black men on his watch, hanging out with anybody associated with the Laquan McDonald cover-up isnât a good look, or itâs a serious dog whistle.
Pete is lucky he only drops one spot this week – His saving grace is that heâs started to make moves in South Carolina, appearing at more town halls and holding fish fries at HBCUs to connect with students. The committee is feeling nice, so weâll consider this a move to connect with black voters and not blatant disregard for our high cholesterol levels. But honestly, we see you, Mayor Pete, and it doesnât look good.
You know, not one check has been mailed to anybody for being part of #BlackTwitter. All those Thanksgiving clapbacks and #OscarsSoWhites are making Twitter, Instagram and Facebook billions while the black folks producing the content get nothing, which is why Yang gets some credit this week. Heâs the only person in the debate that pointed out âdataâ (which social media sites snatch from you) is now valuable more than oil, and not one of you is getting paid for it.
If thereâs one group of people in America who should be wary of producing work that we donât get paid for, itâs black folk. Catch is, Yang didnât make that connection, and he drops because outside of tech, the committee didnât see much that he did for black voters this week. Plus, how are you going to rail against companies using consumersâ private information when thatâs how you fundraise?
Tom Steyer didnât do much to impress during the debate but we have to give him at least some credit for a tremendous hustle in even getting on stage. Steyer has spent about $42 million of his own money, running ads in small states to push up his national averages so that he could get in the debate mix. Whatâd that get him? About seven minutes of airtime. Now, the committee is not in the habit of counting other peopleâs coins, but when you spend roughly 6 million dollars per minute on the air, youâd get a better return on investment running ads during the Super Bowl than youâre getting running for president. He slips back onto the rankings this week in part because back when Steyer was just a billionaire trying to get Trump impeached he held town halls in Cummingsâ Maryland District to thank him for calling for Trumpâs impeachment and to give the Congressmen support going forward. At least that was an investment we could all get behind.
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