Racist
Incidents Give Some Obama Campaigners Pause
By Kevin Merida
Washington Post Staff Writer
May 13, 2008
Danielle
Ross was alone in an empty room at the Obama campaign headquarters
in Kokomo, Ind., a cellphone in one hand, a voter call list
in the other. She was stretched out on the carpeted floor
wearing laceless sky-blue Converses, stories from the trail
on her mind. It was the day before Indiana's primary, and
she had just been chased by dogs while canvassing in a Kokomo
suburb. But that was not the worst thing to occur since she
postponed her sophomore year at Middle Tennessee State University,
in part to hopscotch America stumping for Barack Obama.
Here's the worst: In Muncie, a factory town in the east-central
part of Indiana, Ross and her cohorts were soliciting support
for Obama at malls, on street corners and in a Wal-Mart parking
lot, and they ran into "a horrible response," as
Ross put it, a level of anti-black sentiment that none of
them had anticipated.
"The
first person I encountered was like, 'I'll never vote for
a black person,' " recalled Ross, who is white and just
turned 20. "People just weren't receptive."
For
all the hope and excitement Obama's candidacy is generating,
some of his field workers, phone-bank volunteers and campaign
surrogates are encountering a raw racism and hostility that
have gone largely unnoticed -- and unreported -- this election
season. Doors have been slammed in their faces. They've been
called racially derogatory names (including the white volunteers).
And they've endured malicious rants and ugly stereotyping
from people who can't fathom that the senator from Illinois
could become the first African American president.
The
contrast between the large, adoring crowds Obama draws at
public events and the gritty street-level work to win votes
is stark. The candidate is largely insulated from the mean-spiritedness
that some of his foot soldiers deal with away from the media
spotlight.
Victoria Switzer, a retired social studies teacher, was on
phone-bank duty one night during the Pennsylvania primary
campaign. One night was all she could take: "It wasn't
pretty." She made 60 calls to prospective voters in Susquehanna
County, her home county, which is 98 percent white. The responses
were dispiriting. One caller, Switzer remembers, said he couldn't
possibly vote for Obama and concluded: "Hang that darky
from a tree!"
Documentary
filmmaker Rory Kennedy, the daughter of the late Robert F.
Kennedy, said she, too, came across "a lot of racism"
when campaigning for Obama in Pennsylvania. One Pittsburgh
union organizer told her he would not vote for Obama because
he is black, and a white voter, she said, offered this frank
reason for not backing Obama: "White people look out
for white people, and black people look out for black people."
Obama
campaign officials say such incidents are isolated, that the
experience of most volunteers and staffers has been overwhelmingly
positive.
The
campaign released this statement in response to questions
about encounters with racism: "After campaigning for
15 months in nearly all 50 states, Barack Obama and our entire
campaign have been nothing but impressed and encouraged by
the core decency, kindness, and generosity of Americans from
all walks of life. The last year has only reinforced Senator
Obama's view that this country is not as divided as our politics
suggest."
Campaign
field work can be an exercise in confronting the fears, anxieties
and prejudices of voters. Veterans of the civil rights movement
know what this feels like, as do those who have been involved
in battles over busing, immigration or abortion. But through
the Obama campaign, some young people are having their first
experience joining a cause and meeting cruel reaction.
On Election Day in Kokomo, a group of black high school students
were holding up Obama signs along U.S. 31, a major thoroughfare.
As drivers cruised by, a number of them rolled down their
windows and yelled out a common racial slur for African Americans,
according to Obama campaign staffers.
Frederick
Murrell, a black Kokomo High School senior, was not there
but heard what happened. He was more disappointed than surprised.
During his own canvassing for Obama, Murrell said, he had
"a lot of doors slammed" in his face. But taunting
teenagers on a busy commercial strip in broad daylight? "I
was very shocked at first," Murrell said. "Then
again, I wasn't, because we have a lot of racism here."
The
bigotry has gone beyond words. In Vincennes, the Obama campaign
office was vandalized at 2 a.m. on the eve of the primary,
according to police. A large plate-glass window was smashed,
an American flag stolen. Other windows were spray-painted
with references to Obama's controversial former pastor, the
Rev. Jeremiah Wright, and other political messages: "Hamas
votes BHO" and "We don't cling to guns or religion.
Goddamn Wright."
Ray
McCormick was notified of the incident at about 2:45 a.m.
A farmer and conservationist, McCormick had erected a giant
billboard on a major highway on behalf of Farmers for Obama.
He also was housing the Obama campaign worker manning the
office. When McCormick arrived at the office, about two hours
before he was due out of bed to plant corn, he grabbed his
camera and wanted to alert the media. "I thought, this
is a big deal." But he was told Obama campaign officials
didn't want to make a big deal of the incident. McCormick
took photos anyway and distributed some.
"The
pictures represent what we are breaking through and overcoming,"
he said. As McCormick, who is white, sees it, Obama is succeeding
despite these incidents. Later, there would be bomb threats
to three Obama campaign offices in Indiana, including the
one in Vincennes, according to campaign sources.
Obama
has not spoken much about racism during this campaign. He
has sought to emphasize connections among Americans rather
than divisions. He shrugged off safety concerns that led to
early Secret Service protection and has told black senior
citizens who worry that racists will do him harm: Don't fret.
Earlier in the campaign, a 68-year-old woman in Carson City,
Nev., voiced concern that the country was not ready to elect
an African American president.
"Will
there be some folks who probably won't vote for me because
I am black? Of course," Obama said, "just like there
may be somebody who won't vote for Hillary because she's a
woman or wouldn't vote for John Edwards because they don't
like his accent. But the question is, 'Can we get a majority
of the American people to give us a fair hearing?' "
Obama
has won 30 of 50 Democratic contests so far, the kind of nationwide
electoral triumph no black candidate has ever realized. That
he is on the brink of capturing the Democratic nomination,
some say, is a testament to how far the country has progressed
in overcoming racism and evidence of Obama's skill at bridging
divides.
Obama
has won five of 12 primaries in which black voters made up
less than 10 percent of the electorate, and caucuses in states
such as Idaho and Wyoming that are overwhelmingly white. But
exit polls show he has struggled to attract white voters who
didn't attend college and earn less than $50,000 a year. Today,
he and Hillary Clinton square off in West Virginia, a state
where she is favored and where the votes of working-class
whites will again be closely watched.
For the most part, Obama campaign workers say, the 2008 election
cycle has been exhilarating. On the ground, the Obama campaign
is being driven by youngsters, many of whom are imbued with
an optimism undeterred by racial intolerance. "We've
grown up in a different world," says Danielle Ross. Field
offices are staffed by 20-somethings who hold positions --
state director, regional field director, field organizer --
that are typically off limits to newcomers to presidential
politics.
Gillian
Bergeron, 23, was in charge of a five-county regional operation
in northeastern Pennsylvania. The oldest member of her team
was 27. At Scranton's annual Saint Patrick's Day parade, some
of the green Obama signs distributed by staffers were burned
along the parade route. That was the first signal that this
wasn't exactly Obama country. There would be others.
In a letter to the editor published in a local paper, Tunkhannock
Borough Mayor Norm Ball explained his support of Hillary Clinton
this way: "Barack Hussein Obama and all of his talk will
do nothing for our country. There is so much that people don't
know about his upbringing in the Muslim world. His stepfather
was a radical Muslim and the ranting of his minister against
the white America, you can't convince me that some of that
didn't rub off on him.
"No,
I want a president that will salute our flag, and put their
hand on the Bible when they take the oath of office."
Obama's
campaign workers have grown wearily accustomed to the lies
about the candidate's supposed radical Muslim ties and lack
of patriotism. But they are sometimes astonished when public
officials such as Ball or others representing the campaign
of their opponent traffic in these falsehoods.
Karen
Seifert, a volunteer from New York, was outside of the largest
polling location in Lackawanna County, Pa., on primary day
when she was pressed by a Clinton volunteer to explain her
backing of Obama. "I trust him," Seifert replied.
According to Seifert, the woman pointed to Obama's face on
Seifert's T-shirt and said: "He's a half-breed and he's
a Muslim. How can you trust that?"
* * *
Pollsters
have found it difficult to accurately measure racial attitudes,
as some voters are unwilling to acknowledge the role that
race plays in their thinking. But some are not. Susan Dzimian,
a Clinton supporter who owns residential properties, said
outside a polling location in Kokomo that race was a factor
in how she viewed Obama. "I think if it was somebody
other than him, I'd accept it," she said of a black candidate.
"If Colin Powell had run, I would be willing to accept
him."
The
previous evening, Dondra Ewing was driving the neighborhoods
of Kokomo, looking to turn around voters like Dzimian. Ewing,
47, is a chain-smoking middle school guidance counselor, a
black single mother of two and one of the most fiercely vigilant
Obama volunteers in Kokomo, which was once a Ku Klux Klan
stronghold. On July 4, 1923, Kokomo hosted the largest Klan
gathering in history -- an estimated 200,000 followers flocked
to a local park. But these are not the 1920s, and Ewing believes
she can persuade anybody to back Obama. Her mother, after
all, was the first African American elected at-large to the
school board in a community that is 10 percent black.
Kokomo,
population 46,000, is another hard-hit Midwestern industrial
town stung by layoffs. Longtimers wistfully remember the glory
years of Continental Steel and speak mournfully about the
jobs shipped overseas. Kokomo Sanitary Pottery, which made
bathroom sinks and toilets, shut down a couple of months ago
and took with it 150 jobs.
Aaron
Roe, 23, was mowing lawns at a local cemetery recently, lamenting
his $8-an-hour job with no benefits. He had earned a community
college degree as an industrial electrician, but learned there
was no electrical work to be found for someone with his experience,
which is to say none. Politics wasn't on his mind; frustration
was. If he were to vote, it would not be for Obama, he said.
"I just got a funny feeling about him," Roe said,
a feeling he couldn't specify, except to say race wasn't a
part of it. "Race ain't nothing," said Roe, who
is white. "It's how they're going to help the country."
The
Aaron Roes are exactly who Dondra Ewing was after: people
with funny feelings.
At the Bradford Run Apartments, she found Robert Cox, a retiree
who spent 30 years working for an electronics manufacturer
making computer chips. He was in his suspenders, grilling
shish kebab, which he had never eaten. "Something new,"
Cox said, recommended by his son who was visiting from Colorado.
Ewing
was selling him hard on Obama. "There are more than two
families that can run the United States of America,"
she said, "and their names aren't Bush and Clinton."
"Yeah, I know, I know," Cox said, remaining noncommittal.
He opened the grill and peeked at the kebabs. "It's not
his race, because I got real good friends and all that,"
Cox continued. "If anything would keep him from getting
elected, it would be his name. It might turn off some older
people."
Like
him?
"No,
older than me," said Cox, 66.
Ewing
kept talking, until finally Cox said, "Probably Obama,"
when asked directly how he would vote.
As
she walked away, Ewing said: "I think we got him."
But
truthfully, she wasn't feeling so sure.
Staff writer Peter Slevin and polling analyst Jennifer Agiesta
contributed to this report.