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Black On Black Crime: “You Can’t Vote Against Health Care And Call Yourself A Black Man”



Nov 19, 2009 15 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

rev_jesse_jackson

The Hill:

The Rev. Jesse Jackson on Wednesday night criticized Rep. Artur Davis (D-Ala.) for voting against the Democrats’ signature healthcare bill.

“We even have blacks voting against the healthcare bill,” Jackson said at a reception Wednesday night. “You can’t vote against healthcare and call yourself a black man.”

The remark stirred a murmur at the reception, held by the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Foundation as part of a series of events revolving around the 25th anniversary of Jackson’s run for president. Several CBC members were in attendance, including Chairwoman Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), who’d introduced Jackson.

Davis, who is running for governor, is the only black member of Congress from Alabama.

He is also the only member of the CBC to have voted against the healthcare bill earlier this month.

Davis referred to Jackson’s 1988 run for president in a statement, issued through his office, that said he would not engage Jackson on his criticism.

“One of the reasons that I like and admire Rev. Jesse Jackson is that 21 years ago he inspired the idea that a black politician would not be judged simply as a black leader,” Davis’s statement said. “The best way to honor Rev. Jackson’s legacy is to decline to engage in an argument with him that begins and ends with race.”

Jackson said later that he “didn’t call anybody by name and I won’t.”

He added that he wasn’t saying that black lawmakers must vote a certain way. Instead, they should vote the interests of the people in their districts, and he said the healthcare bill would help Alabama because it’s one of the poorest states in the country.

“The poorest people need healthcare protection,” Jackson said. “They have the highest infant mortality and the lowest life expectancy. They’re dying from lack of access.”

Other members of the CBC found no fault in Jackson’s words. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.) was in the audience. He called Jackson’s criticism of Davis “accurate,” but said he did not hear Jackson say “You can’t vote against healthcare and call yourself a black man.”

“If it is an issue that disproportionately impacts black folks, race has to be considered,” Cleaver said. Jackson, he added, “is expected by his constituency to call balls and strikes.”

Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) called the remarks “vintage Jesse Jackson,” but said Davis’s vote against healthcare was consistent with a voting record more conservative than many CBC members.

“Artur Davis has a more conservative constituency,” Waters said. “Since he’s running for governor of Alabama, he reflects an even more conservative constituency.”

Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Texas) said each man was doing what he considered the right thing.

“People have a right to vote their constituency, and people have a right to speak their conscience,” Jackson-Lee said. “Both happened.”

Davis’s Democratic primary opponent, Agriculture Commissioner Ron Sparks, highlighted Davis’s status as the lone African-American vote against the bill.

“He was the only Black Caucus member to vote against it. I don’t get it,” Sparks said last week, according to The Associated Press. Sparks is white.

Davis said he voted against the healthcare bill because “House leadership’s approach is not the best we can do.” He said he preferred a version passed by the Senate Finance Committee because it reduces subsidization of the healthcare industry, taxes high-value health plans instead of wealthy people, and is more effective in getting employers to help with health coverage.

Davis has countered that Sparks’s position on healthcare has changed over time, saying he’s being “deliberately dishonest.”

The primary will be June 1. All of the GOP candidates for governor have been critical of the healthcare legislation, according to the AP.


  • militia

    WOW im glad he set me straight. at least i can no longer call my self a black man………wait a min? i never? oh yeah im and American man….slightly tainted brown

    • karl anglin

      Jesse Jackson? That guy still around?
      HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!

    • the friendly grizzly

      Karl: He’s still around. I heard a rumor that I made up myself just 10 seconds ago that he will be doing infomercials for KayTel starting this spring.

  • cold soldier

    I hereby decree, “You can’t vote for obama and call yourself a white man” :smile:

  • Sponge

    Racist f’ing dirtbag. WHY is he still in ANY public forum? He sets race relations back 50 years any time he opens his mouth. I’m sorry, but until the black community understands the fact that it’s not them, it’s their self-appointed spokespeople that ruin it for everyone, we’ll never ‘all just get along’…….

    :gun: :roll:

    • the friendly grizzly

      He makes very good money at it. And the press keeps him before the cameras because, racial relations be darned, he gets eyeballs on TV screens. To the press, that is all that matters.

  • TerryTate

    So, in essence Jesse’s saying all black people have to be against the constitution and support socialism?

    Hmm, telling people what they can and cannot believe based upon their skin color. Sounds kind of racist if you ask me.

  • lilyredrose

    Race–race—RACE! :roll:

  • vincenzo4

    Because Jesse is black, there will be no consequences, and his career will remain intact. He is above accountability and we must nurture the reasons why he feels this way, after all his bloodline sufferes from starvation, in extremis slavery that the could not escape, forced to sit in the back of busses, and forced to fraud every public assistance known to man and rarely get sent to prison because they are hands-off. Forced to take primo career positions because they are black and a senior executive wants his career path cool so he hires based on race rather than honor.

    Lawsuits filed for nebulus reasons but summary judhement is lavished because again no one wants to confront dishnor because it will be labeled racist and a career killer.

    Yeah Jess, I feel your pain.

  • Ernest T. Bass

    ….yeah…’cause it’s something that THEY won’t have to pay for…WE will

  • EL GONZO

    I’m so proud to be white and not African America…. it must be something they drink….that’s all I got to say. Sorry to insult anyone but I cannot understand why this guy is the voice of blacks. Until they get this filthy leadership out, I cannot see past their motives….. just can’t. It’s all about “getting and giving it to the white folk” at the same time. I have actually overheard that in a Corporate Environment, not in a strip join or other type of job…. but from educated “african americans”. After that, all trusts is gone,…and to make things worse we have Obongo who also believes in “Sticking it to the White Devils”…..just keep loading clips, I tell myself, just keep loading clips…………..

  • Rocky Mtn1776

    Has Je$$ie Jack$on ever had a real job ? Seems like he has been living off making whites pay for something that ended over 140 years ago. Odd thing is, many agree with him. Sorry Je$$ie, th USA is flat broke, your racist comments mean nothing anymore !

  • JJIrons

    Guh!

  • Sully

    A foundational belief of Jackson (and Sharpton, Wright and Obama) is that Civil War Reconstruction ended too soon. That the issue of reparations was not and still is not resolved.
    They are willing, even eager, to overlook the transgressions of the Dems and Progs in exchange for wealth re-distribution in whatever form they can manage.
    They’d prefer a check but free health care will do for now.

  • ODIN2012

    Jessie, Why do you insist branding blacks as a sub-species? :beer: