Old Issues, 'New Diversity' By Rob Patton Daily Minority Issues Reporter What Does the New Prominence of Black Conservatives Mean? This was originally meant to be a story about the new conservative thought in Black America. Earlier this fall, during Clarence- Thomas' Senate confirmation hearings, I was surprised by polls that showed a majority of Black Americans supporting his confirmation, despite Thomas' opposition to affirmative action and other controversialgovernment programs designed to facilitate racial equality. I also knew of a number of other Black thinkers who had broken with the civil rights mainstream. Such scholars as Shelby Steele and Thomas Sowell, for example, have received a good deal of media attention for their outspoken views. Like Thomas, these Black academics generally preach "self help" as the best way to deal with the problems facing the Black community. Rightly or wrongly, this has earned them the label "Black conservatives." When I started work on this story, I wanted to know ifallof this added up to a trend. Was the Black community turning away from the programs that had come out of the civil rights movement? Were these conservative views taking hold? But what Ifound was that this is a debate that has been going on within the Black community for a long time. And both empirical and anecdotalevidence suggest that these conservative thinkers do not have much support at all within the Black community. The real question, then, is this: if these conservatives lack grass-roots support, what are the implications of their new-found prominence? Many say it represents a successful effort by conservative whites to promote the few Blacks who will agree with their views. They see Black conservatives as out of touch with the average Black American, as having turning their backs on programs they themselves have benefitted from, and as having taken advantage of the conservative mood in America to gain political and financialsuccess by promoting conservative philosophies. But to some, even among the conservatives' detractors, they also represent a growing and needed debate within the Black community over the sources of- and solutions to - its problems. Even if their philosophies are not the answer, these people say, they raise important questions - questions that need to be addressed. 'Not a new phenomenon' One important - and often overlooked - fact is that conservatives are nothing new within the lFlack community. "This is not a new phenomenon, that all Black people aren't thinking the same thoughts about how to gain liberation and freedom," says Vice Provost for Minority Affairs Charles Moody. Indeed, the existence of a conservative school of Black thought has always existed. At the turn of the century, Booker T. Washington was arguing - much as Thomas does today - that hard work and self- As DuBois wrote in 1915, "The American Negro demands equality - political equality, industrial equality and social equality, and he is never going to rest with anything less." Harold Cruse, professor emeritus of history and Afro- American studies and co-founder of the Center for Afro-American and African Studies, explains the continuing debate: "What at bottom was the basis of the rift between Booker T. Washington and DuBois was conservatives and other Blacks beginning with Booker T. Washington, coming on down through the different decades, is federally sponsored civil rights versus self help," Cruse says. DuBois' philosophy eventually gained the upper hand. His call for political agitation was expressed in the civil rights battles of the '50s and '60s. But the conservative strains of Black thought, though they receded from the limelight, never disappeared. Conservatives today While they have always been around, Black conservatives today enjoy a prominence not known in recent times. Cruse points out that until recently, "the Black community has never had a prominent conservative ideologue." Now Thomas sits on the Supreme Court. "Thomas represents the emergence of this new conservative elite that has never considered the prominence it now enjoys," says English lecturer Bazel Allen, who teaches a seminar on "Integration, Segregation, Pluralism and Diversity in Contemporary America." In addition to Thomas, an increasing amount of attention is being given to contemporary scholars such as Sowell and Steele. And a number of conservative Blacks have taken positions under the Reagan and Bush administrations. Sowell, an economist at Stanford, has written articles with such titles as "Affirmative Action: A Worldwide Disaster." Steele has written, "The barriers to Black progress in America today are clearly as much psychological as they are social or economic." Michael Dawson, a professor of political science and Afro- American and African studies, points out that "Black conservativism" is not necessarily the same as conserva- tivism among whites. "One of the things that's sometimes confusing about understanding Black politics, Black activism and Black political thought is that what's considered conservative within the framework of Black society is in fact moderate or even liberal within the framework of society as a whole," he says. Allen adds that Blacks as a group are, in fact, no more or less conservative than whites on such issues as family, abortion, or the status of women. The "Black conservatives" are noted for conservativism on issues of racial, economic and social policy, he says. While these conservatives do not stand united on all issues. However, generalizations can be made about them. Unlike their earlier counterparts, they accept the gains of the civil rights movement in eliminating legal racial discrimination. But they de-emphasize the role of racism in hindering Black progress, and question the need for programs like affirmative action to rectify injustices caused by racism. Instead, they see internal weaknesses in the Black community and programs like affirmative action themselves as responsible for economic problems faced by Blacks. Cruse describes the modern Black conservatives in this way: "The Black conservative might agree that in the past, all those measures were good, but that now they've outlived their usefulness, and that they're not doing all that they claim to be doing... that these programs are not really helping." A lack of support And some of these conservative Blacks have enjoyed a great deal of success. Steele's book The Content of Our Character was a bestseller; Clarence Thomas has replaced Thurgood Marshall to sit on the Supreme Court. But this does not translate into general support among Black Americans. Dawson is a member of the Race and Politics Program at the University's Institute for Social Research. His work involves periodic surveys of Black Americans' attitudes on social and political issues. He says the most recent data do not indicate much support for conservative thought in Black America. "Clearly if you look at the data from 1988, Black Americans overwhelmingly - 85 to 95 percent - vote for Democratic candidates, they identify themselves with the Democratic party, and in terms of most political issues they are very liberal, particularly on the most salient issues.of economics and race," Dawson says. Dawson says this- is because Blacks have made more social and * 0 economic progress under liberal administrations than under conservative ones.- "And except for the middle part of the 20th century, the parties that have been conservative on racial issues have also been conservative on social issues," he says. "That's the reason there's been, up until now, remarkably little support for conservativism in the Black community." And Dawson does not believe the polls that show support for Thomas indicate support for his philosophies. "The parsimonious explanation toward the Black support for Thomas is that many Black Americans feel he would be better than any white conservative... Second, there is a segment of the Black community that will support a Black for any position, government position or appointment." And in addition to the statistical evidence that they lack support, there is widespread criticism of their policies and motives. "I can't speak for all Black people, but generally, within the Black community, those people are not even known... except maybe among the upper middle class, or among college students whose professors have had them read the books," says first-year Rackham student Pilgrim Spikes. Rackham Student Trayce Matthews, a member of the board of the Baker-Mandela Center for Anti-Racist Education, says Thomas' proximity to and support from powerful whites is another parallel between him and Booker T. Washington, who had support from Theodore Roosevelt and Andrew Carnegie. And indeed today, as before, the support given to such people by white conservative interests raises questions about the legitimacy of Black conservatives as spokespersons for any segment of the Black community. "On a personal level I think the reason they've become so popular is because of the views they hold. Anyone speaking against affirmative action is going to get attention because certain people want to promote those views. I think that's the way to get a million copies of your book sold," says third-year law student Mark Randon, president of the Black Law Students Alliance. "There are a lot of good Black sociologists out there who make arguments in favor of affirmative action, and it's a shame that they don't get the same attention," he adds. "You have to look at these things in context," agrees third- year law student Lamont Satchel. "What's happening within the Black community has to be viewed against the backdrop of the current political climate. The best way for them to implement their programs is to find conservatives within the Black community." School of Education graduate student Amy Jordan says conservatives turn the debate away from the real problems in the Black community with their emphasis on affirmative action's shortcomings. She also levies a criticism heard frequently during 0 Third-year law student Lamont Satchel sees shortcomings in programs like affirm conservatives who de-emphasize the need to fight racism. "We've got to find a problem," Satchel says. "But that includes racism." the Thomas hearings. "I think it bothers a lot of people that people... benefit from affirmative action and then turn around and denigrate it." 'A New Diversity' So the significance of Black conservatives does not lie in novel ideas. And it does not lie in a widening base of support. To many, their significance is that white conservatives have been successful in finding a few Blacks to promote views that are not supported by most Blacks. But there are those, including some who criticize Black conservatives, who also see them as playing a role that is - at least in some ways - positive. "They cause us to begin a dialogue on whether affirmative action is the best method of achieving racial equality, or whether we should switch to another method," Randon says. "I don't agree with any of their conclusions, but their reasoning has some points." Allen says the growing prominence of these conservatives, who question the tactics of the civil rights movement, represents a loosening of solidarity within the Black community that is, ironically, a result of the successes of the movement itself. "For Black Americans the old world of crude, overt racism produced a form of ethnic solidarity," Allen says. "With the successes of the civil rights movement in eliminating at least the crudest forms of racism, there's no longer the pressure to be as ideologically unified... You can't have.the same kind of unity you had in the era of mass lynching. "There is a new diversity within the Black community. The political implication of this is that you might have less consensus on any given issue that the civil rights community decides is important," he adds. And Allen's view of the situation seems supported by the fact that at least some members of the Black community are, like the conservatives, questioning whether the programs of the civil rights movement - and particularly affirmative action - are working the way the were intended. This does not mean they are arriving at the same conclusions as the conservatives; on the contrary most do not. But they are posing the same questions. The problems "I think the civil rights community, back in the '60s and '70s, thought they had hit on a good thing - the right thing, and I think now they're realizing they didn't," law student Satchel says. "I think they thought this would alleviate all the problems of the Black community, and it didn't, and now we've got to find another solution. "We've got to find a solution that addresses the whole problem, that helps everyone, including the part of the Black community not helped by affirmative action - which is, statistics show, lower income Blacks." That affirmative action does not help the poor is a criticism repeated by others. Cruse puts it more bluntly. "The people who are really faced with economic difficulty today are being laid off and fired. Affirmative action doesn't speak to them. Affirmative action is speaking to people way up there, on some higher level, trying to get a white col goi por So bac tha like ma the A: prc situ agr Hi con wh self is r hav pol goi (leg dis "B and don the don -1 qu con pro jus wh wh ala wit act go soc I'm Q English Lecturer Bazel Allen: "With the successes of the civil rights movement in eliminating at least the crudest forms of racism, there's no longer the pressure to be as ideologically unified." improvement, rather than political agitation, were the best strategies to achieve racial equality. "We have a right, in a conservative and sensible manner, to enter our complaints," Washington said in 1903, "(But) let us not forget to lay the greatest stress upon the opportunities open to us, especially for growth in labor, in business, and education." However, W.E.B. DuBois, who spearheaded opposition to Washington during that era, urged Blacks to fight politically for their rights. The civil rights leaders who oppose Thomas have their roots in the rejection by DuBois if Washington's apolitical philosophy. simply the basic fact that DuBois was involved in the founding of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) in 1909, and the NAACP was organized on the basis of fighting for constitutional guarantees and all that that implied, which boiled down to it being a civil rights organization. "Booker T. Washington, on the other hand, you might call the prototype Black conservative." Cruse points out that, while political action and self help are certainly not mutually exclusive, the debate is over where the emphasis should be placed. "The arguments change, the situation changes, but the basic thematic conflict between Black LSA Sophomore Corey Hill calls himself a conservative. "I think what Thomas is really saying is: You've got to have more faith in yourself. Any policy or legislative act is not going to do it for you." T 7 w r w w .J p _ December 6, 1991 WEEKENLD Page 6 .Page 7 WEEKEND Decemn -s F f - - Ja A S... ............... -