Fauntroy assesses the Republican Party and its relationship with African Americans in context of the party's conservative ideological shift. He traces the origin of the Republican Party's antislavery, expansionist perspective and support of Reconstruction to the current southern strategy that has sought to secure white southern votes with what is perceived as significantly antiblack views. Fauntroy examines demographic changes in America that conflict with that strategy. But he sees Republican outreach to black voters to be more form than substance, with too many of the issues, policies, and even symbols of the party perceptibly antiblack. Fauntroy, who spoke with prominent Republican policy makers and its few black party members, including former Oklahoma representative J.C. Watts, gives an overview of policies and strategies that have failed to attract blacks, and suggests some areas of overlapping interest can be more effectively highlighted. In addition to the relationship between blacks and the Republican Party, this work provides an excellent overview of domestic political issues of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Vernon FordCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to the
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Review
A balanced and nuanced discussion of race-party intersections.... I recommend this book highly.... Consider [it] for undergraduate courses on political parties, race and ethnicity, and electoral politics; for graduate courses and reading lists it dovetails nicely with books like James Reichley s (1992) The Life of the Parties. --Peter W. Wielhouwer, Perspectives on Politics
A useful, coherent picture of recent Republican activities regarding race. --Choice
An illuminating analysis of how the Republican Party has strayed from African American voters and how much ground there is to make up. --Keith Reeves, Political Science Quarterly