RSN: Marc Ash | Joe Biden Finally Wins a Primary ... in the Heart of Dixie
Marc Ash, Reader Supported News
Ash writes: "With Fort Sumter as the backdrop, the place where secession first reared its ugly head, South Carolina, the first state to secede, embraced an old white man from neighboring Delaware, itself a slavery state, and set the stage for Joe Biden to carry the Confederacy."
Marc Ash, Reader Supported News
Ash writes: "With Fort Sumter as the backdrop, the place where secession first reared its ugly head, South Carolina, the first state to secede, embraced an old white man from neighboring Delaware, itself a slavery state, and set the stage for Joe Biden to carry the Confederacy."
Biden has had little success in Democratic strongholds thus far, but South Carolina held the promise of a revival with its old-school southern perspectives and contempt for northern intellectualism.
South Carolina might matter to the Democrats in a presidential election year if it were not dead-red and there were no plausible scenario in which it might be in play in November’s general election.
The cable news talking heads want to depict Biden’s win as a product of black voter enthusiasm. But black voters in the deep South hew as much to the right side of the political spectrum as their white neighbors. They will vote for the Democrat in the general election — if inspired — but they traditionally are more than happy to get onboard with more conservative and corporate-friendly establishment candidates during the primary season.
Jim Clyburn, Democratic Party Boss
Jim Clyburn, along with his future wife Emily, embarked on his path to becoming a Civil Rights Movement icon with organizing efforts starting as early as age 12. When he and Emily were arrested in 1960, they were detained longer, being earmarked as leaders. Clyburn would indeed gravitate to leadership.
It was, however, curious to see Clyburn reject and deride Senator Bernie Sanders — the candidate leading the race for the Democratic Presidential nomination — as too liberal and too likely to lose. Sanders and Clyburn have something in common. Clyburn’s arrest was what John Lewis likes to call “Good trouble, necessary trouble.” Lewis would know: he nearly lost his life on the Edmund Pettus Bridge marching for black voting rights.
Clyburn was arrested while organizing for the rights of black people, but three years later, in 1963, so was Bernie Sanders. Sanders was arrested while organizing against racist Chicago police policies while at the University of Chicago. You would think that Clyburn held some sense of camaraderie with Sanders. That’s obviously not the case. Why?
Bernie Sanders’s revolution is largely intended to do what FDR did in the 1930s … take on the corrupt and powerful interests dominating the political process in the United States. That necessarily includes getting between the politicians and the money. That’s not something that elected officials, Republican or Democratic, appreciate.
Jim Clyburn is Democrats’ House Majority Whip. It is the job of the Whip to whip the votes and voters into line. It’s something he does very well on the part of Democratic leadership in Congress.
It worked this time in Dixie, we’ll see if the blue states are moved.
Marc Ash is the founder and former Executive Director of Truthout, and is now founder and Editor of Reader Supported News.
Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.
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