Identity politics

How many of the 91 Republican leaders who elected Michael Steele to chair the Republican National Committee would today admit Steele's being black made them more likely to support his candidacy? Probably not many. Republicans generally claim to favor meritocracy over the politics of racial identity, and Steele arrived with impressive credentials: clearly the guy's smart, articulate, accomplished, principled.
But let's be real. A whole bunch of Republican leaders apparently figured they could play the race card covertly by electing a qualified person who, incidentally, happened to be black. (Buy one, get two.) What they probably never considered was how easily Steele would overtly play the race card when challenged on his competence, judgment, and leadership of the Republican Party.
Which presents a bit of a problem. Kathleen Parker: "If you can't play the race card with your own race, you might be in a heap of denial":
Appearing recently on ABC's "Good Morning America," Steele told George Stephanopoulos that being African American has magnified his travails. Stephanopoulos had asked Steele whether his race gave him a "slimmer margin for error."
"The honest answer is yes," said Steele. "It just is. Barack Obama has a slimmer margin. We all -- a lot of folks do. It's a different role for me to play and others to play, and that's just the reality of it."
Except that African American Republicans aren't buying it. For starters, Steele was elected by the predominantly white party. After months of unforced errors, he can't now turn around and charge his party with racism. Actually, racism would mean expecting less from an African American than from a white counterpart.
... As Juliette Ochieng wrote in a blog item that was picked up by BookerRising.net, the black, moderate-conservative news site:
"Mr. Steele's margin for error is smaller than it was when he first became RNC chair due entirely to the fact that he has made so many errors and due to the fact that he seems incapable of learning from them."




