Fear of a Black Republican
Fear of a
Black Republican
DVD Review
by Kam Williams
Documentary
Poses Question: Does the GOP Even Want the Black Vote?
Have you ever noticed how few
African-American Republicans there are? At any Grand Old Party gathering you
see on TV, including the recent convention, there are generally so few blacks
in attendance that they tend to stand out like a sore thumb.
That
sorry state of affairs inspired Tavis Smiley to remark that “You can fit all
the black Republicans with any clout into a phone booth.” And they’re probably
also about as hard to find as a phone booth is nowadays.
This phenomenon was not lost on Kevin Williams, a white Republican
from Trenton, New Jersey, who felt frustrated by the fact
that the Democrats had a stranglehold on all the political positions in his
predominantly African-American hometown. So, as a filmmaker, he decided to
shoot a documentary getting to the bottom of why blacks aren’t represented in
the Republican Party.
Is
it that the GOP would prefer to remain lily-white or are African-Americans
simply short-changing themselves by remaining so loyal to the Democratic Party?
That fundamental question rests at the heart of Fear of a Black Republican, an
eye-opening expose’ supplying a variety of intriguing answers.
In order to unravel the mystery, Williams approached some of the
black Republicans crammed into the aforementioned phone booth, from former RNC
Chairman Michael Steele to ex-U.S. Senator from Massachusetts Ed Brooke who
warns of “corruption where there’s no two-party system.” Yes, there’s that danger
in districts where a Democratic nomination assures a candidate of victory.
Still, there’s probably some truth to Tavis’ suggestion that once
the Republican Party figured out that it could win national and statewide
elections without blacks “then the needs of that constituency never rose to the
top of its agenda.” Among the other pundits weighing-in here are Princeton
Professor Dr. Cornel West, right-wing journalists Michelle Malkin and Ann
Coulter, governor-turned-Fox TV host Mike Huckabee and Republican presidential-nominee
Mitt Romney.
Nonetheless, the most meaningful interviews are with rank and file
black Republicans, average folks who make heartfelt pitches for their fellow
African-Americans to abandon the Democratic Party which they indict for taking
the black vote for granted. Whether it’s up to white Republicans or jaded black
Democrats looking for an alternative to make the first overture, Fear of a
Black Republican might serve as a great conversation breaker. Who knows, it
might encourage both camps to bury the hatchet and to give each other serious
consideration as a viable political partner.
However, I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting for the GOP to embody
the all-inclusive rainbow the Party envisioned during more enlightened times after
Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves when a plethora of Reconstruction Era black
Republicans ran successful campaigns for political office.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 111
Minutes
Studio: Shamrock
Stine Productions
DVD Extras: Trailer.
To see a trailer for Fear of a Black Republican, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6P1jC1h9LCM
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