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Dems after black votes
By Michael R. Blood
Wire Service Correspondent
LOS ANGELES (AP) – Hillary Rodham
Clinton pursued votes last Friday in the Los Angeles area’s
historical black heartland with basketball legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson
at her side. Less than a week ago, her rival Barack Obama banked
$3 million
at a fundraiser at Oprah Winfrey’s seaside estate.
For the two leading Democratic presidential contenders, the dueling
events just six days apart highlighted the stiff competition for
support and dollars within one of the party’s key voter groups – blacks.
Johnson, the former Los Angeles Lakers star whose sprawling business
interests range from movie theaters to health clubs, also held
a fundraiser for Clinton at his Beverly Hills home Friday night.
It
was expected to be considerably smaller than the lavish event staged
by Winfrey for Obama, an Illinois senator, on Sept. 8.
Johnson’s fundraiser was co-hosted by music industry heavyweights
Quincy Jones, Berry Gordy and Clarence Avant, and scheduled guests
included Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. Guests at the Obama event
included Sidney Poitier, Forest Whitaker and Chris Rock.
The divided loyalties among blacks show “the community just
isn’t going to go lockstep behind any candidate, even a black
one,” said University of California, Los Angeles, political
scientist Franklin D. Gilliam Jr.
When it comes to competing celebrity endorsements, “I don’t
know if anybody stands equal with Oprah,” Gilliam said. But
Clinton, a New York senator, is not conceding the black vote to Obama
and “she can compete for it in a legitimate way.”
On Thursday, the California Legislature’s black caucus endorsed
Obama – but one of its eight members is backing Clinton.
And independent polls in California suggest the black vote is divided,
largely between Clinton and Obama.
Obama, whose late father was Kenyan, gives blacks a chance to put
one of their own in the White House for the first time. But Clinton
benefits from the strong relationship her husband, former President
Bill Clinton, maintained with blacks for years.
“
People in the black community love Bill Clinton; she’s seen
as comfortable in the community,” Gilliam said. And “there’s
concern about Obama being electable, period, because he’s
black.”
The rivalry between Obama and Clinton also showcases the clout
of black political influence and money.
Obama has predicted that black voter turnout could swell by at
least 30 percent if he wins the presidential nomination, giving
Democrats
victory in Southern states that have been voting Republican for
decades.
Asked last month why she would be a better candidate for blacks
when Obama was in the race, she cited her years of public service
and
advocacy, and described herself as the more experienced candidate.
“
My attitude is, I don’t deserve anyone’s vote. I have
to earn everyone’s vote,” Clinton said.
At an event earlier Friday at a school in a heavily-minority neighborhood
near the Watts section, Clinton shared a stage with Johnson, Villaraigosa
and other local leaders. She told a largely minority crowd including
many students and supporters that she would bring a new style of
leadership to Washington to take on issues like health care, education
and ending the Iraq war.
“
When I’m president, there will not be any invisible Americans,” she
said.
Several people in the audience said they were comfortable with
Clinton, in large part because of her long record in the public
eye and efforts
in her husband’s administration.
John Bruce, 45, a Democrat from Los Angeles who works in security,
said the black community is looking for leaders and Obama “seems
to be heading in the right direction.” Bruce, who is black,
said race was not an issue in picking a candidate.
He said he remains undecided on 2008 but added, “I’m
an all-Clinton Democrat.”
Black community activist “Sweet Alice” Harris, who
is backing Clinton, said she worked closely with her during her
days
in the Clinton White House.
What about Obama?
“
I don’t know him, but I know her,” Harris said.
Earlier in the day, Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez, D-Los Angeles,
held a private fundraiser for Clinton at a Mexican restaurant in
Lynwood, a Los Angeles suburb.
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