Black Ministers Start
Groundswell:
Turner as Secretary of State
in 2014
A
small but influential group of black ministers, labor officials and community
activists met at a Glenville area church Tuesday night to promote the candidacy
of State Senator Nina Turner as Ohio’s next Secretary of State, hoping to spark
a fuse that will catapult a black candidate to the upper levels of state
government.
If
their efforts prove ultimately successful, Turner would be the first African
American Democrat of either gender to be elected to statewide office in Ohio.
The
dismal history of African American Democrats as candidates for statewide office
— not one has ever achieved a statewide win in 12 attempts by ten different
candidates dating to 1972 — was detailed at the beginning of this week in a front
page story from Sunday’s Plain Dealer.
The
article was clearly the immediate catalyst for the meeting. Transparencies of
the article were projected on a wall and read aloud, with meeting convener, the
Rev. Dr. E. T. Caviness regularly interjecting emphatic commentary to
underscore his disgust with what he portrayed as an unacceptable lack of
commitment by Ohio’s Democrats to support its black candidates in state
contests.
Following
this discussion of the article, a critical excerpt was read on-screen and
discussed from Carl Stokes’ seminal book, Promises
of Power. The selection described the origins of the Twenty-First
Congressional District Caucus, that hallowed moment in the early seventies when
black political power reached its short-lived apex in Cuyahoga County. Under
then-Mayor Stokes leadership, the unified political strength of the black
community drew respect from every politician of any color and either party. The
Caucus occasionally would provide crucial support to a white Republican
candidate, sending a message to both renegade black candidates and retrograde
Democratic Party leaders.
The
message of Tuesday’s meeting was clear: it is time for the Ohio Democratic
Party to do whatever it takes to
elect a black Democrat to statewide office. Caviness acknowledged that the
Party had worked to retain incumbent Justice Yvette McGee Brown on the state
Supreme Court, investing a reported $750,000 in her campaign. But it wasn’t
enough, he thundered, adding that if need be they should spend one million seven hundred and fifty
thousand dollars to support Turner.
Rev. E. T. Caviness [Photo by Jeff Ivey] |
Caviness
kicked off the fundraising part of the meeting by saying he had pledged $1000
to the draft Turner effort and that Rev. Larry Harris of Mt. Olive Baptist
Church and the president of Black Pastors in Mission would do the same. Before
the evening was over almost $15,000 had been pledged, much of it coming from
the national transit workers union, whose local representative, William Nix,
Local 268 president, was in attendance.
No Permanent
Friends or Enemies, only Permanent Interests, so Politics Makes Strange Bedfellows
Addressing
the unspoken irony that this gathering of very mainstream black Democrats in
the room was working to draft the same black woman whose outspoken policies and
independent ways they had spent much of the last three years vilifying,
Caviness said that “we had to forgive her” even though she had “stabbed us in
the back”. Caviness was referring to the contention of many that Turner had
agreed at a meeting of black politicos to oppose the reformation of county
government only to emerge a few days later as a featured champion of reform.
Turner
offers a different version of those events but the stark reality is that she
proved to be right and her political foes wrong on all counts. Black voters all
across the community rejected the conservative counsel of their elected
representatives and hoary leaders. And hindsight suggests that the voters were
right: not only is there a more rational system of county government in place,
but the black community appears to have stronger representation and voice in
that new government.
This
outcome no doubt fueled Turner’s flirtation late last year with the idea of
challenging Congresswoman Marcia Fudge in this year’s Democratic primary. Fudge
reacted quickly with an impressive show of district-wide support. Once again
Turner was vilified in large measure by the establishment black political
community. This time, Turner’s political calculus, informed by Fudge’s
demonstration and the truncated Ohio primary season belatedly set by the
legislature, convinced Turner to channel her political ambition elsewhere.
Turner
has done so energetically, maintaining a rigorous and demanding schedule.
Somehow she manages to juggle her work as a state legislator along with her
duties as a history professor at Cuyahoga Community College, speaking regularly
before community groups, and appearing frequently as a guest on MSNBC talk
shows.
“Secretary of Suppression”
With
Ohio in the national cross-hairs as the quintessential battleground state in
the recent presidential campaign, much attention was focused on the coordinated
nationwide efforts of Republicans to curtail voting rights by cutting back
early voting, seeking to establish unnecessary voter ID requirements, and
generally discouraging voting by those whose lives were already burdened with
the pressures and complications of just trying to get through the day. In Ohio,
those partisan efforts were centered in the office of Secretary of State Jon
Husted, who Turner took to lambasting on MSNBC as the “Secretary of
Suppression”.
After
the meeting, Caviness called and spoke with Turner in Columbus, where she is
working in the midst of the General Assembly’s lame-duck session. Reached later
by this reporter, Turner seemed at a rare loss for words, saying that she was
“humbled” by the show of support. Pressed as to whether she had made a decision
on whether to take on Husted in 2014, Turner said that she would decide
sometime in January, acknowledging that an early decision was necessary given
the requirements of running a statewide race.
Other
sources contacted by The Real Deal
said they expected Turner to make the race. She is passionate about making a
difference through government service, they say, and protecting citizens’
voting rights has once again become a core issue, nearly fifty years after the
country’s civil rights revolution.
Turner
is also term-limited as a state senator, which is likely to spur her
willingness to become the standard bearer for what may turn out to be, in the
words of one meeting participant, “an excellent opportunity to elect the first
black to statewide office.”
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