Home Invites Blogs Careers Chat Events Forums Groups Members News Photos Polls Singles Videos
Home > News > Post Content

Democrats Spar Over Domestic Issues at Howard (881 hits)


Democrats Spar Over Domestic Issues at Howard


Photo Credit:

John Harrington/PBS
Hillary Clinton, left, Bill Richardson, John Edwards, Barack Obama and Dennis Kucinich were among candidates on stage at Howard University.



By Drew Costley
Black College Wire

Tavis Smiley said he wanted to have the Democratic presidential candidates at historically black universities. "I wanted them to come to our institutions to answer our questions," the broadcast personality said.

And so Howard University became the battleground June 28 as the eight Democratic candidates debated domestic issues.

The first presidential forum to have three questioners of color attracted black luminaries Cornel West and Michael Eric Dyson from academia, activist performer Harry Belafonte, actress and dancer Debbie Allen, a Howard alumna, and activist the Rev. Al Sharpton.

DeWayne Wickham of USA Today and Gannett News Service, Michel Martin of National Public Radio, both African American, and national syndicated columnist Ruben Navarrette Jr. of the San Diego Union Tribune, who is Latino, comprised the panel.

"This is where Thurgood Marshall and the Brown team worked on Brown v. Board of Education," Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., said in reference to the historic 1954 case that struck down "separate but equal." Arguments for the case were planned at Howard's School of Law. "I wouldn't be where I am today if it wasn't for the ruling in that case."

After the debate, West said Obama's reference should have prompted a moment of silence.

"We want people to know that Howard is a huge part of the history of gaining equal educational opportunities,"said West, professor of religion and African American studies at Princeton.

The forum came on the same day the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against integration programs in public school systems in Seattle and Louisville, Ky.

Howard students demonstrated Dec. 4 to support the continued use of race as a factor in maintaining racially diverse schools. Despite the outcome of those cases, some say the school remains a juncture of social awareness.

Tonight "is a beautiful moment for Howard University," said Dyson, author and University Professor at Georgetown University. "It shows that it can be a political powerhouse that it once was."

Obama said that despite the progress made since the landmark ruling, a "sense of mutual responsibility" by Americans is necessary to provide equal educational opportunities. Sens. Hillary Clinton of New York, Dennis Kucinich of Ohio and Christopher Dodd of Connecticut echoed Obama's sentiments.

Other candidates blamed Supreme Court justices and the tone set by the president as reasons for racial inequality.

"We weren't tough enough on Justices Roberts and Alito," said Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, referring to Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito. "And they have turned the Court upside down."

Economic opportunity and access to universal healthcare were also hot issues. Candidates blamed the lack of economic opportunities for blacks on the educational system and uneven tax cuts.

"I don't think that we can separate the education issue and the economic issue," said Clinton, who reflected on a career focused on improving child welfare. "There are people that are qualified for jobs that are being turned away." Poverty and education "is a broader issue," she said.

John Edwards, former senator from North Carolina, said tax cuts should be more evenly distributed among tax brackets, a sentiment that most candidates agreed with.

But Mike Gravel, a former senator from Alaska, said, "What these people are saying is not going to make any difference in the tax system."

Obama said that tax money should be reallocated to make universal healthcare a possibility. He also said tax money "should be allocated fairly and in the right places."

The percentage of African American youth with HIV/AIDS was attributed to a lack of healthcare education and limited access to healthcare. All candidates proposed universal healthcare as a solution.

They all said the issue of HIV/AIDS in the black community is being neglected.

“If HIV/AIDS were the leading cause of death in [young] white women,” Clinton said, "there would be an outrage." The crowd, mostly African American, responded with thunderous applause.

Sade Faulkner, a junior political science major at Howard, said the candidates need a more definite plan for solving African American problems.

"It seems as if the candidates understand the issues, but there isn't a definite plan to make changes," Faulkner said. "A definite plan needs to be put in place once and for all."

Syndicated radio host Tom Joyner opened up the forum, sponsored by PBS, where Smiley hosts a talk show. He thanked Smiley for pulling together the event.

"I am also glad that this is taking place at the historically black Howard University," Joyner said. "Thanks for doing something that we do everyday; making black America a priority."


Drew Costley, a student at Howard University, is editor in chief of the Hilltop. Sakita Holley of Howard University contributed to this report. To comment, e-mail Black College Wire.

Posted June 29, 2007
Posted By: Jehan Bunch
Friday, June 29th 2007 at 3:03PM
You can also click here to view all posts by this author...

Report obscenity | post comment
Share |
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
More From This Author
Nerjyzed ENT., Inc. Announces Official Release of The Doug Williams Edition of Black College Football
Economy hits Historically Black Colleges hard
Jump Start U 4 College Program-HBCU College Tour
HU President Named to NCAA Division I Board
The Jenzabar Foundation Announces Award Competition
Teen Prodigy Picks Southern University
Team
She get's it from her big sis!:-)
Forward This Article Entry!
News Home

(Advertise Here)
Who's Online
>> more | invite 
Latest Photos
>> more | add
Most Popular Bloggers
how may i help you nc has logged 36889 blog subscribers!
agnes levine has logged 24253 blog subscribers!
reginald culpepper has logged 11990 blog subscribers!
robert walker has logged 6488 blog subscribers!
tanisha grant has logged 5300 blog subscribers!
>> more | add