1st Black elected governor PRESSES Democrats over the issue of HBCU support

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Ex-Virginia Gov. Doug Wilder says state Democrats have not earned black support

October 23, 2021
a8e7825f04132c14dc63c83ea1dd497a



Virginia’s only black governor accused fellow Democrats of taking the African American vote for granted, even as they neglect historically black colleges and tell parents to stay out of their children's classrooms.

Douglas Wilder, who served from 1990 to 1994, said Virginia Democrats, including current Gov. Ralph Northam and candidate Terry McAuliffe, have shortchanged the state’s five historically black colleges and universities.



"I’ve been talking with the presidents of all of those universities," Wilder, 90, told the Washington Examiner from his home in Richmond. "They’re not happy with what’s going on. And many of them are limited in terms of expressing themselves because they don’t want to be punished.”

The HBCU issue is personal for Wilder, a grandson of slaves who was born during the Great Depression and worked his way through Virginia Union University, where he earned a degree in chemistry in 1951. Now, Virginia Union and its four sister schools are in disrepair, with many lacking the resources to attract students and start new programs, he said.

“And yet without historical black colleges and universities, many of us would never have had an education, and you’re talking to one of them now,” he said.



Black Virginians care “that they have an opportunity to participate in the fullness of American life,” said Wilder, who went on to receive a law degree from Howard University Law School.

He said that political candidates who commit to funding these schools “will strike a chord.”

McAuliffe is locked in a tight race against Republican nominee Glenn Youngkin, a political newcomer endorsed by former President Donald Trump.

Youngkin has said funding HBCUs is a top focus of his agenda, pledging this summer that “[a]s Governor, every budget I sign will include direct funding for all five Historically Black Colleges and Universities.”

Wilder said voters notice.

“When Glenn Youngkin says that it’s a high priority, there are people who won’t forget it.”

While higher education is a critical issue in the race, so is K-12 schooling. Parents balked when McAuliffe said last month that he did not think parents should be weighing into the classroom.

McAuliffe's words could hurt him with black voters, Wilder said.

“When the [prospective next] governor of Virginia says, ‘I am not going to allow parents to tell schools what to teach,’ You say, ‘My God,’” Wilder told the Washington Examiner. “Parents vote to have something to say about the education of their children.”

Wilder did not offer an endorsement, but he made it clear that he is not pleased with the Old Dominion party he once led. And he is not surprised that McAuliffe is struggling to nail down the support of the Democratic Party's most reliable constituency.

Virginians “are independent-thinking people,” he said. “And you see what the polls are showing as it relates to independents: Youngkin is leading with independents as they crossover.”

Indeed, polls show McAuliffe’s support with independent voters collapsing in a neck-and-neck race Democrats expected to win handily.

Asked why black Americans may be reluctant to support McAuliffe, Wilder responded, “The better question would be: 'What reasons do they have to turn out?'

“No Virginian running for statewide office is going to be elected without strong black support," he said. "And what has anybody done in Virginia to merit that?”

Hoping to stir up enthusiasm, especially among black voters, Democrats have surged prominent figures to the state.

Former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams held a "Souls to the Polls" event with McAuliffe, a voter registration drive typically associated with black churchgoers. On Thursday, the country’s first black vice president, Kamala Harris, stumped for McAuliffe, while former President Barack Obama will hit the campaign trail over the weekend.

But Wilder said the most crucial need was to appeal to voters on the issues, not with personalities.

”Surrogates are not going to determine the outcome of this election. People will,” he said. “Knock on somebody’s door and tell them Stacey Abrams said they should vote, or the former mayor of Atlanta — Keisha Lance Bottoms. They’re going to say, ‘Who?’ Do they know Virginia? Do they know the status of our schools?”


Wilder also criticized the nomination process, likening the practice that put McAuliffe, who served from 2014 to 2018, at the top of the ticket to the "Byrd Machine" of decades old.

“Something is happening in Virginia that has never happened other than in one instance, with Mills Godwin when he ran as a Republican when he came back from having run as a Democrat,” Wilder said, referencing the 60th and 62nd governor of Virginia who ran two non-consecutive terms. “Is this situation creating a dynasty like the old Byrd Machine?”

The political machine led by former Gov. and U.S. Sen. Harry F. Byrd is not a flattering comparison. He also said McAuliffe knocked diverse hopefuls from the race to again take his place atop the gubernatorial ticket.

“Who did McAuliffe run against? All of the people he ran against were black Virginians,” he said.
 

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SHILL...


THATS EXACTLY WHAT MOST
OF THESE POLITICAL NEGROS ARE.
:devil:
:evil:
RM was tagged with that label, yet in second post of the thread there's a segment with Gov. Wilder airing out VA's Democratic leaders by name on his platform.
Is he still a shill? Temporarily unshilled? Or is it based on whether you agree with him on a stance he took?
 

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I don't fault Wilder for his criticism (I agree with a lot of it) or speaking out in general but I do take issue with him holding this criticism yet not doing the one thing within his power that could've mattered during the primary and that is endorsing one of the black candidates.
Because as it stands no one running in the Dem Primary ended up having much of a shot against McAuliffe in what seemed like a repeat of the 2020 Dem Presidential Primary where voters decided that only an old white guy who everyone knows would have a realistic chance at winning in the general.

jF49EH7.jpg


But maybe those numbers would've been different if someone of Gov. Wilder's stature had given a full throated endorsement of Foy, McClellan or Fairfax (who he endorsed for Lt. Governor in 2017) at the start of the primary season.
 

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RM was tagged with that label, yet in second post of the thread there's a segment with Gov. Wilder airing out VA's Democratic leaders by name on his platform.
Is he still a shill? Temporarily unshilled? Or is it based on whether you agree with him on a stance he took?
HE DOESNT GET CREDIT FOR
WHAT HIS GUEST DOES.

WHO DID RM AIR OUT?



:devil:
:evil:
 

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I don't fault Wilder for his criticism (I agree with a lot of it) or speaking out in general but I do take issue with him holding this criticism yet not doing the one thing within his power that could've mattered during the primary and that is endorsing one of the black candidates.
Because as it stands no one running in the Dem Primary ended up having much of a shot against McAuliffe in what seemed like a repeat of the 2020 Dem Presidential Primary where voters decided that only an old white guy who everyone knows would have a realistic chance at winning in the general.

jF49EH7.jpg


But maybe those numbers would've been different if someone of Gov. Wilder's stature had given a full throated endorsement of Foy, McClellan or Fairfax (who he endorsed for Lt. Governor in 2017) at the start of the primary season.
At 7:50 of the video, RM asks Wilder why he didn't make these public criticisms of McAuliffe during the primary?

I'd like to know what you think of his answer.
 

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HE DOESNT GET CREDIT FOR
WHAT HIS GUEST DOES.

WHO DID RM AIR OUT?



:devil:
:evil:
Gov. Wilder doesnt run that show, nor does he title the video excerpts of the show that are posted. RM does.
maxresdefault.jpg


Giving a respected Dem. politician a forum to double down on his criticism of the Dem. candidate for governor ahead of an election.

I know dudes don't think for themselves, and just repeat catchphrases from others, so I get it.
 
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Douglas Wilder, three other former Virginia governors to advise Youngkin during transition


Posted: Nov 10, 2021
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Former Virginia Gov. L Douglas Wilder gestures during a news conference in Richmond, Va., Thursday, Oct. 24, 2019. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)


RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Former Democratic Gov. Douglas Wilder will be one of four former Virginia governors advising Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin during his transition.

Wilder will join former Republican Govs. Robert F. McDonnell, James S. Gilmore III and George F. Allen as an honorary co-chair of Youngkin’s Transition Steering committee, the governor-elect’s team announced Wednesday.

“In order to change the trajectory of our great Commonwealth, we can’t operate on government time. We’re going to do things differently,” Youngkin said in a statement. “That’s why this incredible transition team represents various backgrounds—business owners, law enforcement officers, veterans, healthcare providers, and most importantly, parents—who will bring an array of experience and fresh perspectives that will pave the way for a transformation where Virginia soars and never settles.”

Wilder, the first Black person to be elected as governor in the country, was particularly critical of former Gov. Terry McAuliffe’s re-election bid and did not support any candidate in this year’s race.


========
@skylove4
We briefly discussed this in the other thread about the VA race
 
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