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The Post-Racial McCainby Ken Blackwell Jul 10, 2008 On July 16 Senator McCain will address the NAACP at its national convention in Cincinnati, Ohio. It will
give him a historic opportunity to lay out his vision for individual empowerment, and offer concrete solutions
for solving the challenges facing many African-Americans today.
For all the talk of post-racial politics, the Obama camp tries to make his campaign all about race when
he speaks to African-American audiences.
When campaigning for Rep. Harold Ford of Tennessee for a U.S. Senate seat in 2006, Senator Obama
off-handedly told an audience of African-Americans at a rally that they needed to vote for Mr. Ford because
Mr. Obama was "lonely" in the Senate. There already were 45 Democrats in the Senate. So how could Mr.
Obama be lonely? Because Mr. Obama was the only African-American. He was asking those voters to cast
their votes -- in large measure -- on the basis of racial pride.
Mr. Obama's surrogates will attempt to do the same thing at the NAACP convention. They will urge
NAACP members and others to vote for an African-American for president largely out of racial pride. But is
that sufficient reason alone to cast this important vote?
Mr. McCain's challenge is to redefine that choice. He must make the case that every American's vote,
regardless of their skin color, should be based on who is the better candidate. He must challenge them to
rise above racial politics. He must urge the attendees to cast their votes from a forward-looking perspective
of what is best for all Americans.
There are several policies he can advocate that would make that challenge.
The first is school choice. Many public schools have failed our children. Unfortunately most of those schools
are inner-city ones filled with African-American children, where standards are low, discipline is lax, and the
dropout rate is high. School choice enables parents to choose a school that will best educate their child. The
key to economic prosperity and a brighter future is through giving children a first-rate education, not
mindlessly throwing money at an ineffective public school system that fails to deliver. The success of
Washington, D.C.'s school voucher program proves this.
The second is energy independence. High fuel prices hit lower-income minority communities hard
because they feel the price increases more than many. Mr. McCain must press his full-spectrum energy
agenda, including everything from domestic exploration and refining to nuclear power to wind and solar to
cars that do not use gasoline. He must make the case that this will drastically reduce fuel prices, and create
millions of new jobs.
The third is health care. Mr. McCain must make the case for tort reform, empowering doctors and
overhauling the health care industry to focus on families and individuals, and how this will provide better and
less expensive medical care than government run health care.
Fourth is retirement security. Mr. McCain should make the case that expanding health care savings
accounts and reforming Social Security will enable every African-American to own their own retirement as
private property. By adding stocks, bonds, and other investments a comfortable retirement plan can be
established, and the remaining assets can be passed to their children to build family wealth across
generations.
And finally is national security. Mr. McCain must make the case that the chief task of the president is to
protect this nation, and all Americans must vote for the person most capable of protecting their children and
giving them a safer world to inherit.
These all work to empower African-American families. By strengthening families to responsibly raise
their children and look to their own future, Mr. McCain can make the case that he should be the next
president.
Although Mr. McCain cannot win the African-American vote in this election, he can get a respectable
percentage. He first will receive points for showing up, and if he makes the case that his agenda is what will
best address African-Americans' concerns and safeguard the nation he can close the deal with some.
The presidency is far too important to allow insufficient considerations to determine our vote. We must
vote for the person who is best qualified to lead our country. We must vote for the leader who has the
strength and the wisdom to keep our nation safe and the vision to successfully deal with the challenges we
face.
The NAACP convention provides Mr. McCain the opportunity to demonstrate he is the candidate of post-
racial politics in America.
Ken Blackwell is a member of NTU's Board of Directors. This article appeared in The New York
Sun, where Mr. Blackwell is a contributing editor.
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