Mass shootings hit in Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas; the stock market crashes; and Toni Morrison passes away. Why is it that every week of the Donald Trump presidency feels like a depressing opening scroll in some post-apocalyptic â80s movie?
In last weekâs power rankings, we noted that in times of crisis, the committee (composed of myself, Dr. Jason Johnson, politics editor for The Root, and Marcus Ferrell, former head of African-American outreach for Bernie Sanders 2016, along with our rotating committee) tries to imagine if this candidate would calm the fears of black America as president. Trust me, a nationwide rise in white nationalist terror, aided and abetted by extremist white-boy incels with gun fetishes, is an emergency for black America. Weâve seen this movie before and it doesnât end well for us.
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A line has been drawn in the sand this week. Itâs no longer acceptable for Democrats to play the âeconomic anxietyâ or seek the âtax cuts with a side of racismâ voters. There are enough Democratic voters to win the primary and the White Houseâget to work on earning their votes.
This week, some stepped up to the plate and others reminded us why black America could never trust them to begin with. As usual, our ranking system is explained 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?
This is the most volatile week in the history of our Black Power Rankings, with almost every candidate moving up or down. This weekâs big losers? Itâs a tie between Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, who both dropped five spots but for vastly different reasons. This weekâs big riser? Beto OâRourke, who stepped in as a leader who can empathize during a crisis and hasnât let up all week.
Cory Booker will never be Barack Obama, but this week, he surpassed Morgan Freeman in the movie Olympus Has Fallen, Jamie Foxx in White House Down and Chris Rock in Head of State as the not-quite-real president that black America would actually want in a crisis. Booker is the only 2020 candidate to give a major speech from the pulpit of Mother Emanuel A.M.E. Church in Charleston, S.C., which is not just a sign of respect from the black community but an impressive feat by his staff. His speech was passionate, called out Trumpâs white nationalism, advocated for stricter gun laws and shared a vision of what Bookerâs America would look like. He also called Trumpâs words of comfort to America âbullshit soupâ (which I believe comes with a side of word salad at Panera), and he shared some personal thoughts about the passing of Toni Morrison on Twitter. No matter how you slice it, Booker had the best 2020 week ever, in one of the worst weeks for the United States.
You know how serious Kamala Harris is about white nationalist terror? Sheâs been talking about it since her campaign started. Sheâs a co-sponsor of the Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act of 2019, which is specifically designed to address white nationalists. She was calling Trump a racist long before it was popular. As Californiaâs attorney general she fought to keep an avowed neo-Nazi in prison for a crime he didnât commit because sheâs not about second chances for bigots and the fastest cure for âeconomic anxietyâ is three hots and a cot. Not that weâre advocating judicial malfeasance, but itâs pretty clear Harris is not about coddling white terror. Are we happy she hedged on calling Trump a white supremacist? No. But overall, Cautious Kamala took a break this week and O.G. AG Harris was slamming down stricter gun control proposals like she was playing dominoes. Word on the street is that Harris has started to get more aggressive about fundraising too, which she will need since sheâs fallen to fourth in most post-debate polls. If youâre black in America and wake up at 3 a.m. wondering about your safety, President Harris would put your mind at ease. At least for this week.
Obamaâs former fixer Rahm Emanuel famously said: âNever let a good crisis go to waste.â Thatâs a cynical take on the world of politics but itâs true, and Beto OâRourkeâs rise in the polls this week proves it. Beto wasnât automatically getting a bump this week; a racist mass shooting doesnât necessarily mean heâs better for black America, but Beto has been one of the loudest, most consistent and cogent 2020 candidates on the dangers of white nationalism and Trumpâs influence on it.
Beto took a cue from the Booker campaign and realized that a few well-placed cuss words caught on camera can really show the world what you think of the media and the Grand Dragon-in-chiefâs racism. The White House still owes the El Paso Police Department $500,000 for security costs from a rally months ago, and had Beto just looked into the camera and yelled âFUCK YOU, PAY MEâ before Trumpâs visit to El Paso (which Beto boycotted), we mightâve put him at No. 1 this week, just on principle. OâRourke actually pushed for gun control, did great constituent service and still had time to praise Toni Morrison. Oh, and heâs not dropping out to run for Senate. If this is the real Beto, he might have a higher ceiling than we thought.
If Panera starts selling bullshit soup, they should also add the Joe Biden sandwich: Barack Obamaâs reheated respectability politics slid between two slices of gaffe. First, Biden got confused and expressed empathy for the nonexistent mass shootings in Houston and Michigan, which, I guess were carried out by the imaginary gunman from Riverdale High School. Then, he mentioned violent video games, which are the âwhat about black-on-black crime?â of mass shooting pivots. Black men comprise one of the largest groups of gamers in America, yet you donât see waves of angry black men shooting up festivals and Walmarts every week. In fact, from the congressional baseball game shooting in 2017 to the Waffle House shooting in 2018 to El Paso this past week, itâs almost always black people saving white folks from their own homegrown domestic terrorists.
Nevertheless, Biden recovered with a great speech in Iowa directly connecting Trump to the rise of white nationalist violence in America and making it clear that mental health isnât an excuse for violence and bigotry. But just when you thought he was OK, you get to the second slice of gaffe when Biden said: âpoor kids are just as bright as white kidsâ in a speech to minority voters in Iowa on Thursday. Good thing Biden has expanded his lead in the polls this week, but he still hasnât figured out this frontrunner thing.
Mayor Pete gets points for churning out a domestic terrorism plan that would âname and shameâ white nationalist spaces on the internet, while most candidates were still grasping for airtime. Given that Indiana is the birthplace of Americaâs oldest terrorist group, the Ku Klux Klan, and consistently has one of the highest populations of hate groups, Buttigieg should be an expert.
Mayor Pete said the obligatory nice words about Toni Morrisonâs passing and to keep it 100, the committee believes he might be the only white guy in the top five that has actually read a Toni Morrison book. Mayor Pete will be one of the few 2020 Dems to speak at the National Association of Black Journalists conference in Miami this weekend, so if he follows up his plans with a major speech, he might stabilize himself in our polls.
No, Elizabeth Warren didnât drop this far because Dayton shooter Conner Betts was a fan. Unlike ex-felons, black people in Georgia, and college students, angry, gun-owning incels are still allowed to vote in America. Warren drops because sheâs been much quieter than most other 2020 top candidates after last weekâs shootings. Yes, she pushed for gun control and yes, sheâs always called Trump a racist, but we have a terror movement growing in the United States, Sen. Warren. Whereâs your plan? She also hasnât signed the Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act like Sanders, Booker and Harris have. Lastly, how are you going to roll out a public option for the internet and not talk about the web as a radicalizing tool for white nationalists? And sheâs not coming to NABJ? This was a pretty tone-deaf week from Warren.
When the toughest move that comes out of your campaign during a week of deadly shootings is a tweet from your twin brother exposing big-time Trump donors in Texas, you drop in our poll. Iâm all for public shaming, especially since campaign donors are readily available public information, but Castro didnât offer much for black voters to seek comfort from in the wake of these domestic terror attacks in his own state. Castro is also at risk to not make the polling threshold for the September debate in Houston, which would all but end his White House bid. A month ago, Castro was a dark-horse favorite after kicking sand in Betoâs face during the first debate; now heâs hanging on by a thread while his black campaign manager is getting doxxed by racists. Castro needs to step up.
While Sanders is tied with Warren for the single biggest drop this week, there were calls to actually take him off the list entirely. It was bad enough that Sanders was occasionally trafficking in the âmental illnessâ excuse in the wake of these tragedies. Then, he went on Joe Roganâs radio show. For the uninitiated, Joe Rogan is Tucker Carlson for the college bro crowd. His regular interviews are with alt-right bigots and sympathizers, and he peppers them with more softball questions than a NERF convention. The committee has no problem with candidates going on racist programs (Tucker Carlson, etc.), and weâve long come to accept that Sanders has a blind spot for bigotsâwhom he insists are just really stressed by waking up white every day and not being rich. However, doing the Joe Rogan show after two white domestic terrorist attacks is like finding out your wifeâs boss is sexually harassing her but you still watch Monday Night Football with him because you need to understand his perspective, too.
It would be one thing if Bernie aggressively called out white nationalism on the show, but he stuck to talking about minimum wage and aliens. His staff shouldâve known better than to let him do this, and if it werenât for him pulling back into second or third place in most national primary polls, heâd have been out this week.
The committee didnât like Marianne Williamson going on Fox News and saying that you canât draw a direct line from Trump to white nationalist violence. Girlfriend, they are literally quoting him in their manifestos. However, she did lay out a gun violence plan this week, gave more details about her reparations plans and did a good job on the Daily Show. Hereâs the catch thoughâshe, like Tulsi Gabbard, gets lots of Google searches after debates but itâs not turning into money or increased votes. We may not see Marianne again on the debate stage.
Black Power Rankings Judge Marcus Ferrell is fond of saying that most political campaigns donât know how to campaign to black folks for 52 weeks out of the year. They can give us a good interview, maybe a few hours at a town hall or a whole month if there are enough federal holidays but, 52 straight weeks of addressing black interests and policies? Most campaigns canât do it. Thatâs the Gillibrand campaign in a nutshell; after being the woke senator who called out white peopleâs complicity in institutional racism, she gave about 48 hours of attention to white nationalism and terror in America and now sheâs back to healthcare and touring around Iowa. She hasnât even signed on to the Senate domestic terror bill. The only reason Gillibrand didnât fall off the list is because there was hardly anybody worse on black issues this week, but trust us, she wonât get a second chance to show she doesnât care.
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