|
January 18, 2006“People don’t want 50-50 leadership.”
Ohio Sec’y of State Ken Blackwell sounds like a man who bears watching. Ken Blackwell has so many people worried because he represents a new political calculus with the power to shake up American politics. For Blackwell is a fiscal and cultural conservative, a true heir of the Reagan revolution, who happens to be black, with the proven power to attract votes from across a startlingly wide spectrum of the electorate. Born in the projects of Cincinnati to a meat-packer who preached the work ethic and a nurse who read to him from the Bible every evening, Blackwell has rejected the victimology of many black activists and opted for a different path, championing school choice, opposing abortion, and staunchly advocating low taxes as a road to prosperity. The 57-year-old is equally comfortable preaching that platform to the black urban voters of Cincinnati as to the white German Americans in Ohio’s rural counties or to the state’s business community. Responding to GOP criticism that he’s too conservative to win in a “50-50 state,” Blackwell argues that “voters don’t want 50-50 leadership.” With that kind of track record, Blackwell has become a growing target of left-wing blacks like Jesse Jackson, aghast that the first black governor of a major midwestern state might actually turn out to be a conservative who doesn’t trade on race. Though Blackwell has yet to suffer the kind of indignities of Maryland’s Steele—pelted with Oreo cookies in his campaign appearances—black Democrats have dismissed him as an opportunist for joining the GOP and accused him of trying to “disenfranchise” blacks to help elect George Bush president. In the midst of the campaign, one Ohio Democrat compared Blackwell to a “children’s Transformer toy,” because he wore an Afro in college and today is a conservative. Jackson showed up in the state just before the 2004 vote and denounced “beneficiaries of our work engaging in election schemes to undermine the right to vote,” a reference to Blackwell’s role as the state’s chief election officer. Mindful that many people found it hard to swallow the notion that a black was disenfranchising other blacks, Blackwell shot back, “I am Jesse Jackson’s worst nightmare.” Maybe, maybe. Maybe Hillary’s too, since Ken Blackwell is clearly not doing what all politicians do. You’ll want to read Steven Malanga’s entire excellent profile on him. http://theanchoressonline.com/2006/01/18/people-dont-want-50-50-leadership/trackback/ 5 Responses to ““People don’t want 50-50 leadership.”” |
Bad Behavior has blocked 15562 access attempts in the last 7 days.
January 18th, 2006 at 5:16 pm
I’ll be watching Blackwell from now on. Mark my words: he’s going to be president someday.
‘
And when that day comes, expect to see Jesse Jackson carried away to the hospital after the heart attack…
January 18th, 2006 at 5:33 pm
White House, Gore In Spat Over Spying
The White House blasted former Vice President Al Gore for his assertion that President Bush broke th
January 18th, 2006 at 10:08 pm
Blackwell Pushes The 95-Cent Solution
Isnt there something called good judgment that qualifies a person for adulthood? After years of adolescent thinking and juvenile escapades, a young person finally advances into adulthood. While I am strong Reagan/Bush conservative, I have one phrase…
January 21st, 2006 at 2:49 pm
Thespis Journal Presents Posts of the Week
What a week! Moon-Bat Monday (Aka Martin Luther King Day, 2006) provided an unlimted number of posts and columns from which to select. We hope you enjoy all of the wonderful reading. Use this reading list to accompany your Sunday brunch and all of your…
January 22nd, 2006 at 6:55 pm
How refreshing. A Black politician that that can not only think for himself but can also see that the only thing holding him back is his own initiative. I like the sounds of this guy. I don’t like all his views, burt you can’t have everything!