Jan. 5, 2007
Ceremony Raises Raw Issue of Race
By James Rosen
McClatchy Newspapers
Washington, DC (SHNS) -- It was supposed to have been a simple
ceremony
symbolizing a new bipartisan spirit in Washington:
The outgoing House majority whip, Republican Rep. Roy Blunt of
Missouri, was
to hand his successor, Democratic Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina,
an
actual whip that had been on display in Blunt's leadership office at
the
U.S. Capitol.
But racial overtones apparently undermined the plan.
As camera flashes popped and video recorders whirled Thursday, Jan. 4,
2007,
Clyburn, a 66-year-old African-American from the South, did not receive
the
whip from Blunt, a 56-year-old white man from a border state.
Instead, Clyburn was given the whip by former Rep. William Gray of
Philadelphia, who in 1989 became the first black House majority whip.
Clyburn, now the second African-American to hold the House's No. 3
post, and
Blunt declined repeated requests to explain why the ceremony was
changed.
Ronald Walters, a black political science professor at the University
of
Maryland, said he had little doubt that racial sensitivity prompted the
decision to have Clyburn receive the whip from a fellow
African-American
instead of from a white man.
"What it tells us is that race is still a very salient and touchy and
dangerous issue to politicians," Walters said.
Recalling the criticism of former Sen. George Allen for having
displayed a
noose in his former law offices, Walters said the whip also remains a
potent
symbol for blacks.
"These symbols are still very raw," Walters said. "They drudge up
memories
of the way they were used to punish and brutalize black humanity."
Cole Blease Graham, a white political science professor at the
University of
South Carolina, said that in changing the ceremony, Clyburn missed an
opportunity to highlight positive change in the country, and especially
in
the South.
"It's as if the various players are trapped in appearing politically
correct, but missing the reality of the ceremony," Graham said. "Here
is a
person (Clyburn) who within his lifetime would have struggled to even
register to vote. The fact that he's been able to achieve what he has
is
really one of the positive stories in American politics."
Maryland's Walters, though, said it was smart for Clyburn and Blunt to
have
changed the ceremony.
"They were attempting to restore some of the dignity of the moment,"
Walters
said. "To me, it makes a lot of sense. What they tried to do was
neutralize
the racial component of this issue."
Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.