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Some time ago, the South African government decided that Chinese are black by virtue of an official government decree which finally decided an issue which had wandered through the court system for many, many years before its ultimate resolution. As one of the last-minute highlights of an intellectually fascinating election season, we'll soon find out if Vietnamese, who are genetically similar to Chinese, are also black.
One reason Republicans are less glum than just after the Presidential election is that Republicans have, surprisingly, been winning special elections following Mr. Obama's victory. In the most recent and resounding victory, a Republican named Anh "Joseph" Cao defeated Rep. William Jefferson, the Democratic member of the House of Representatives who was caught with $90,000 of inexplicable cash stashed in his home freezer, to represent the Louisiana district that represents New Orleans.
Rep. Cao is of Vietnamese extraction; his district is more than 60% black. A more natural Democratic base could hardly be imagined, and indeed, Rep. Jefferson defeated his opponent by 27 points two years ago. Not this year; apparently Mr. Obama's coattails do not extend to ballots he's not on, nor to excessively corrupt politicians.
Mr. Cao ran on purely local issues, staying out of the national fray to the best of his ability. In keeping with his desire to best represent his constituents, Mr. Cao has asked to join the Congressional Black Caucus when he arrives in Washington.
In theory, the Congressional Black Caucus, whose operations are supported by taxpayer-supplied funds, is open to representatives whose districts are predominantly black and not just to representatives who are themselves of that color, but theory and practice are not always the same in the fetid swamps of Washington politics. The New Orleans Times-Picayune reports:
Since its founding in 1971 by 13 black members of Congress, the caucus has never had a member who was not African-American. And the caucus has had only one Republican member -- Gary Franks, a former representative from Connecticut -- and that ended in acrimony.
Here we have a government-sponsored blacks-only group trading political advantage and connections in our nation's capital. As women once wanted to join the "old boys' clubs" in order to make connections and get ahead, there's no reason why a new Representative wouldn't want to join an "old blacks' club" to make connections and get ahead. After all, his district is mostly black; members of the Congressional Black Caucus ought to have some information for Mr. Cao which would be of benefit to his constituents.
It appears, however, that Mr. Cao is fated to languish without the gates of privilege and connection:
"They're not going to let him; it ain't going to happen," said David Bositis, a seasoned observer of the Congressional Black Caucus at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in Washington.
We've pointed out that the only thing Pelosi's Democrats didn't like about Republicans stealing our money was that they weren't in on it. Once the Democrats settled into power two years ago, talk of ethics reform died out.
Earmarks went on as usual, and Democrats violated the law without suffering consequences. The history of Illinois politics in particular is a sorry tale of corrupt cooperation between Democrats and Republicans; as long as the ill-gotten gains were shared around, the "opposing" party didn't much mind.
The only thing Democrats don't like about theft is when they aren't in on it; the only thing Democrats don't like about institutional racism is when someone else does it. Government-funded racism is OK as long as it's Democrats doing it.
If Mr. Obama truly wants to lead America into a post-racial era, he has his work cut out for him, starting with his own party. A call for the Congressional Black Caucus to accept Rep. Cao as a member would be a good beginning.