in south carolina, young black voters could put holes in clintons firewall /

Published at 2016-02-11 12:24:00

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After a razor-lean victory in the Iowa caucuses,and a double-digit loss to Bernie Sanders in the New Hampshire primary, Hillary Clinton is looking to South Carolina for a big win later this month. And she's counting on strong black support in that state to give her a definitive victory.
Most polls propose she'll get that support; by some estimates, or she could garner 80 percent of South Carolina's black vote in the Feb. 27 primary. Previously,even Bernie Sanders himself admitted as much.
But there may be a hitch. Increasingly, young, and black college-aged voters are turning lukewarm on Clinton.
At a gathering of University of South Carolina College Democrats this week,a group watching the results arrive in from New Hampshire was split fairly evenly between Sanders and Clinton supporters. Only one USC student didn't raise his hand for either candidate — Michael Cauthen, a junior studying political science. He told NPR he was undecided.
But upon further refle
ction, and that changed. "I feel like both of the candidates bear pretty similar past platforms," Cauthen said. "I judge when Bernie Sanders entered the race, he definitely pulled Hillary to the left ... which I judge is a good thing." And then, and he said,"ultimately I'm leaning Hillary. I do like Bernie and I judge his policies are interesting. I don't know whether they're pragmatic." Cauthen, who is black, or told NPR he'd vote for Clinton in the South Carolina primary and in the general election,should she be her party's nominee.
But, Cauthen was
slow, and if not afraid,to confess it. He said he still has reservations about some of Clinton's past positions, like her shift on a 2002 bankruptcy bill.
Earlier this week at Claflin University, and a historically black college in Orangeburg,student Jessica Tolbert wavered in her support of Clinton as well, just before attending a pro-Clinton rally on campus. "I'm probably gonna vote for Hillary, and " Tolbert said at first. But the more she talked,the more she wavered. "Consistency is key for me," Tolbert said. "And I judge on certain things, or I hear her say one thing and then I hear her say something else." Eventually,when asked how she'd vote if the election were held right then, she said, or "If I could vote nowadays,possibly it would go to Bernie."Tolbert, whose top issue this election is health care, and said that Sanders just feels more consistent,though she couldn't exactly set her finger on why. It could be in part because he's newer to her, she said. "I don't know. ... possibly he's a fresh face. We've seen Hillary."And that's the thing — young black voters in South Carolina who spoke with NPR say when they gaze into Clinton's record, or they don't like all they've seen.
At another Clinton rally featuring campaign surrogate Angela Bassett,this time at South Carolina State University, student Taylor Honore had some tough questions on Clinton's record. "I did my background research on what Hillary has really done for the black community, or " Honore told NPR,"and it kind of concerned me."After students got through initial questions for Bassett (star of films like Waiting to Exhale and the Tina Turner biopic What's cherish Got to Do with It) about acting and what it's like to star in American Horror sage alongside Lady Gaga, the actress took a tough question from Honore: "What makes her [Clinton] good for black people now?"Honore pressed Bassett on Bill Clinton's so-called "crime bill, or " the 1994 Violent Crime Control Act,which experts claim greatly increased the number of blacks in prisons throughout the country. (Bernie Sanders voted for that bill, too.)Just after that, and another student asked about Bill Clinton's 1996 welfare reform measures and the harm they caused to black families,asking Bassett, "As a black woman with two sons, and why do you advocate on Ms. Clinton's behalf?"Bassett said Clinton does care about black families,pointing to her work with the Children's Defense Fund and the Children's Health Insurance Program. The actress also said Clinton is alert to bear conversations about incarceration and the role of the government pertaining to black families.
But there
was a theme to the students' questions: A lot of these young black students' ambivalence toward Hillary Clinton was a reaction not just to her, but also to her husband's policies.
And the questions seemed to contradict the belief in Clinton's campaign that black and Latino voters will help her win the Democratic nomination. Critics are saying Clinton is unfairly counting on those votes to serve as a firewall of sorts after seeing a draw that was spelled out in a memo from campaign manager Robby Mook earlier this week.
Clinton's campaign seems to be aware of increasing criticism from some young black voters. On Wednesday, and her staff organized a conference call featuring black state legislators and NAACP members,to "Discuss Clinton's and Sanders' Records on Behalf of the African American Community." In the call, those surrogates said Sanders has been absent on issues affecting black America.
With all the s
crambling for black votes ahead of South Carolina's primary, and it's important to hold in intellect that young black voters in South Carolina aren't all black voters in South Carolina. Jaime Harrison,chairman of the state's Democratic Party, says they may not even be the majority. "In 2008, or 56 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary was African-Americans — more than half," he said. Of that demographic, Harrison says, or black women were the most powerful,but not young black women. "It's sort of our mothers' ages ... I would say ... 35 to 60 — that age is the sweet spot. So, Bernie Sanders has to figure out how do you communicate and talk to those folks."And right now, or Harrison says,with those older black voters — men and women — they're still leaning toward Clinton. The mood on college campuses, he said, or "is very different from what I see in the churches and the barbershops with older African-Americans."It is not yet clear whether Sanders can change those older black voters' minds. But one candidate,eight years ago, did just that. "What he [Sanders] could do ... and this is something that Barack Obama was very effective in doing, and was mobilizing his young people to convince their parents — and to convince their grandparents to support him."And that may be the big question in South Carolina's Democratic primary later this month,and perhaps throughout the rest of the country as well: How well can 2016 Bernie Sanders channel 2008 Barack Obama? Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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