Why the lie still??

glenn beck

Platinum Member
Oct 6, 2004
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Kerry reaches out to black voters
PHILADELPHIA - Meeting with black religious leaders and traveling with civil rights activist Rev. Jesse Jackson, Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry reached out this week to black voters as the campaign entered its final month.

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Newsweek News Alert
African Americans have historically supported the Democratic party. Kerry has solid support among black voters, though not quite as much as Democrat Al Gore in 2000, when 90 percent of blacks voted for him, according to exit polls. An AP-Ipsos poll taken in mid-September found that 80 percent of black registered voters supported Kerry, while 7 percent supported Bush.

Kerry's contacts focused on Ohio and Pennsylvania, states teetering in a virtual tie between the Democrat and President George W. Bush, where neither campaign takes any votes for granted.

In Philadelphia, Kerry held a long, private meeting Monday with religious leaders, mostly from Ohio and Pennsylvania, who asked for inclusion and influence in his administration, which he obliged.

"If you make me president of the United States, I will do my best to even do better than Bill Clinton did to make sure the government of the United States looks like the face of America," Kerry said.

He told them that urban economic development would be on the agenda for his first 100 days in office. The religious leaders agreed strongly with his assessment that money spent in Iraq is money not spent at home, participants said.

A pamphlet detailed his promises for civil rights, economic opportunity, education, health care and commitment to Africa.

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Kerry also aims to reach black voters through an interview with Black Entertainment Television. Taped in Philadelphia, the half-hour interview is scheduled to air Thursday night and again on Friday, the night of his second debate with Bush.

In Cleveland, local religious and political leaders heard Kerry assail the president for turning the charitable works of religious groups into a political cause and neglecting obvious needs for jobs, health care and education.

He talked about rebuilding the country's foreign alliances as a path to creating the moral authority to tackle AIDS and violence in the Darfur region of Sudan.

Kerry said twice on Sunday that Democrats see evidence of Republican efforts to suppress voting and turnout in battleground states.

"We're not going to let that happen because the memories of 2000 are too strong. We're not going to allow 1 million African Americans to be disenfranchised," Kerry said to an enthusiastic congregation at East Mt. Zion Baptist Church.

Kerry spends much of his time on the road reaching out to moderate, undecided voters in closely divided states.

Black community and elected leaders have expressed frustrations with feeling excluded from the Bush administration. Even so, Jackson said Kerry can't take the black community's votes for granted.

"You have to earn votes, you have to touch the leaders, and you have lay out issues that inspire them," he said.

Rep. Elijah Cummings, a Maryland Democrat and chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, said a question came up in Monday's private meeting about the feeling that blacks "could be more excited" about Kerry's candidacy.

Cummings said Kerry told the group that the choice is "very easy" when you compare Kerry's plans and promises to Bush's record.

Kerry can do better than being favored because he's not the Republican incumbent as voters get to know him through televised debates, Cummings said.

"I think that day by day the excitement about Kerry is growing," he said. "This is not just the African American community."





We're not going to allow 1 million African Americans to be disenfranchised



why do they still run with this? it has already been proven not true...talk about scare tactics...


 

lordtyranus

Banned
Aug 23, 2004
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Bush placed 2 blacks in prominent cabinet positions. More than any other president has done I believe.
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
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Nice username. :roll: Let me guess...this is his talking point of the day?


Anyway, I agree that there was no "disenfranchisement" of 1 million African American voters. There might have been some blacks "disenfranchised" but I doubt it approaches 1 million.

As for what Bush has done with blacks, you have Rod Paige (well, his credentials are certainly dubious), Colin Powell (had impeccable credentials but has been all but ignored by this administration in favor of the neocons therein), and Condi Rice (again, someone with questionable decision-making skills and an eagerness to spout party talking points on the talk show circuits.) But, at least Bush made an effort that none before had accomplished.
 

glenn beck

Platinum Member
Oct 6, 2004
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<--btw not a Repub. or Dem.


but the problem is the Repubs won't reach out to the black community(they should at least try a little harder) like the Dems do, therefore people like Jesse and Al can throw about anything at them and it will stick.
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
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Originally posted by: glenn beck
and yes conjur...it was the topic for today :)

heh heh...isn't he the one that yells out "Shut your piehole!! :| " when a caller really gets him riled up? I was in tears one day listening to him rant like that! :laugh:
 

GoPackGo

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 2003
6,521
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The pubs have never had one on the ticket...but I bet they have one on in 2008
 

dannybin1742

Platinum Member
Jan 16, 2002
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its not 1 million, but its enough in swing states like florida and other southern states where mearly disenfranchising 2-5k is enough to swing an election, in 2000 its was 26,000 in jacksonville county alone
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
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fwiw, Bush isn't real concerned with the black voters. He shunned the NAACP annual convention and stretched the truth precariously thin last night in the debate re: meeting w/the Black Caucus:

Rep. Cummings says the president saw them only because they refused to leave until he did.
http://www.latimes.com/news/po...=la-elect2004-complete
WASHINGTON ? When President Bush, responding to a question about affirmative action, said during Wednesday's debate that he had met with the Congressional Black Caucus, it wasn't exactly the kind of meeting you would expect.

The caucus members got to see Bush only after showing up at the White House gate and refusing to leave until the president agreed to meet with them, according to the group's leader.