Rep. John Lewis, civil rights icon, lawmaker and Hillary Clinton supporter, intentionally or unintentionally called out Vermont Sen. Bernie Sandersā civil rights bona fides Thursday.
Lewis, who was among several members of the Congressional Black Caucus to endorse Clintonās presidential bid, was asked whether Sandersā involvement in the civil rights movement swayed him. It did not.
Suggested Reading
āWell, to be very frank, Iām going to cut you off, but I never saw him, I never met him,ā Lewis said. āIām a chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee for three years, from 1963 to 1966. I was involved in the sit-ins, the freedom rides, the March on Washington, the march from Selma to Montgomery, and directed their voter-education project for six years. But I met Hillary Clinton. I met President Clinton.ā
Ouch.
Sanders, who has been a member of Congress since 1991 and a senator since 2007, hasnāt exactly had the warmest relationship with the CBC. In fact, itās been largely nonexistent. Thereās a good chance that Lewis probably hasnāt āmetā him, if āmetā means asked him for help or had Sanders offer some help, congressman to congressman.
And while āBernie Brosā bashed Lewis and pointed to Sandersā past as a supporter of the civil rights movement, others are picking that apart. Is that photo of Sanders in college organizing among other activists even Sanders? Probably not. Is that other photo from Selma Sanders? Snopes says nope. But the Sanders campaign insists: He was involved.
Sanders did participate, but heās not helped by the legion of white people over 60 who swear they marched with Martin Luther King Jr. Mitt Romney famously was caught in a gaffe in 2008 when he mistakenly said his father, George Romney, marched with King. These would-be, wannabe civil rights trailblazers are an insult to thoseāwhite and blackāwho actually did risk life and limb for the freedom of black people. Theyāre annoying, and the claim happens so often that my 74-year-old father, who vividly remembers the 1960s and all the crazy that entailed, jokes that those old, iconic Ebony magazine photos and film reels should be nothing but a sea of white people. The war should have been won overnight if that many conscientious Caucasians were in support of it.Ā
This is the conceit Sanders is up against. āI supported the civil rights movement in the 1960sā is up there with saying, āI have a black friendā and āI donāt see colorā to black people. As in, it sounds like bullsāt. Black people would hope you supported the civil rights movement (I mean, really) and that you would have āa black friendā if you claim to be any sort of liberal or progressive who is anti-racism, but what have you done for black people lately? These are bare-minimum things. And stop saying you donāt see color! Everyone sees color. How else would you know your black friends were black?
Lewis, who was there and did march and did organize and did get beat about the head for freedom, probably has heard the many stories of those who were āthereā whom he does not recall being āthere.ā So his shade on Sanders is probably rooted in that incredulity. Itās not that he doesnāt believe, but as the late, great Whitney Houston used to say, āI wanna see the receipts.ā
Sanders, who is garnering black support of late for his economic policies, is an attractive candidate for black America, but his interest in black America post the civil rights movement is relatively recent. Heās the senator from Vermont, after all. Itās not as if he had to worry about the black vote there, so of course he hasnāt met with the CBC much. Of course, before running for president, he didnāt talk about race. Of course, there is this whiff about him where it seems like Sanders just discovered black people a few months ago when he realized that Democrats need upward of 90 percent of the black vote to keep the White House.
This is the opposite of Hillary Clinton, who is begging, pleading, promising everything short of a new bike for every black child in South Carolina in return for the black vote. The Clintons, as a unit, have always been popular with black people (Toni Morrison famously called hubby Bill Clinton āthe first black presidentā), but the love has always seemed a little surface, a little one-way, a little one-sided. Some even accuse the Clintons of outright betrayal. The Clintonsāloved by the CBC and sort of tolerated by the rest of usāare problematic, but the pragmatic voter that exists in every black person says, āI donāt want to throw my vote away. So, I guess I support Hillary Clinton? I donāt know. Canāt PresidentĀ Obama just stay in office another four years until we figure this thing out?ā
Thatās what Sanders is really up against. Clinton is a known entity. While she was once againstĀ Obama, she is now for continuing and improving upon what he started (if that means you will please, please vote for her, black people). Clinton is one we know we can talk to and yell at and protest against and throw fits upon and even burn in effigy if it gets really bad. We know what weāre getting into when we climb into her (and Billās) political bed. Bernie āI might have done some civil rights stuff 50 years agoā Sanders is an unknown entity, so he has a tougher row to hoe. Thereās more scrutiny. There are more questions. More demands for receipts. But that doesnāt mean he canāt win our support or our vote.
But heās probably not going to get John Lewisā.
He doesnāt know him.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.