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Obama win not to supplant civil rights campaign

If Barack Obama wins November's election and becomes the first black president in US history, will an older generation of civil rights leaders go out of business?

  • Reuters
  • Published: 23:47 July 29, 2008
  • Gulf News

Atlanta: If Barack Obama wins November's election and becomes the first black president in US history, will an older generation of civil rights leaders go out of business?

On the surface, this might be expected as political inclusion has been a key goal of the civil rights movement for half a century, back to a time when millions of black Americans in the South could not vote.

But black leaders argue that problems like discrimination, police brutality and unfairness in the legal system are still rife and they remain committed to fighting them.

Lagging behind

Beyond that, many African-Americans lag behind the overall population in social standards, like health, education, income and employment, and protest remains an effective way to bring change, as it was during the civil rights heyday, they say.

Although blacks account for around 12 per cent of the US population, 44 per cent of all prisoners in the United States are black, according to US census data, and the number of blacks in prison has quadrupled since 1980.

The income of an average black family is 58 per cent of that of an average white family's, according to a 2007 study.

The issue of the different roles played by Obama, who is the Democratic presidential candidate, and civil rights leaders came into focus this month after comments by veteran black campaigner Jesse Jackson on Obama.

Jackson, 66, said Obama, 46, was "talking down to black people" and said he wanted to cut the Illinois senator's "nuts" off. He quickly apologised for the crude remark, which was recorded in a TV studio without his knowledge.

Some commentators suggested that Jackson, who himself ran for president in 1984 and 1988, was jealous of the younger Obama and saw his power slipping away.

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