Obama Says McCain
Flip-Flops by Opposing Affirmative
Action
July 28, 2008
William Douglas
CHICAGO - Presidential challengers
John McCain and Barack Obama sparred
over affirmative action Sunday, with
McCain backing an effort to end
state and locally run minority
preferences and Obama saying
policies that consider race need to
continue.
McCain, speaking on ABC's "This
Week," said he backs a proposed
ballot initiative in his home state
of Arizona that would prohibit
affirmative action policies by state
and local governments.
The initiative is part of a
nationwide attempt by Ward Connerly
to have governmental affirmative
action policies eliminated. Connerly,
a conservative African-American
businessman from Sacramento, Calif.,
who led a successful drive to ban
affirmative action in California,
has been trying to do the same thing
in other states.
Asked Sunday whether he supported
Connerly's efforts in Arizona,
McCain said "Yes, I do," adding that
he had not seen the details of the
proposal. "But I've always opposed
quotas."
McCain's endorsement was an apparent
shift on affirmative action. The
Republican senator has spoken out
against quota systems but he has
also backed affirmative action in
certain cases. He opposed a 1998
resolution in the Arizona
legislature that asked voters to
eliminate most preferences based on
race, gender or ethnic origin.
"Rather than engage in divisive
ballot initiatives, we must have a
dialogue and cooperation and mutual
efforts together to provide every
child in America to fulfill their
expectations," he said at the time.
Obama, speaking at the UNITY
minority journalism convention in
Chicago, accused McCain of
flip-flopping and reminded
convention attendees about McCain's
1998 remarks.
"And I think he's right," he said.
"You know, the truth of the matter
is, these are not designed to solve
a big problem, but they're all too
often designed to drive a wedge
between people."
The Illinois Democratic senator said
America has made progress on race
relations but argued that there is
still a need for affirmative action
policies in the country.
"I am a strong supporter of
affirmative action when properly
structured so there it is not a
quota, but it is acknowledging and
taking into account some of the
hardships and difficulties that
communities of color may have
experienced, continue to experience,
and it also speaks to the value of
diversity in all walks of American
life," he said.
"I've also said that affirmative
action is not going to be the
long-term solution to the problems
of race in America, because,
frankly, if you've got 50 percent of
African-American or Latino kids
dropping out of high school, it
doesn't really matter what you do in
terms of affirmative action. Those
kids aren't going to college."
Obama said he would like to see
affirmative action policies altered
in a way so "some of our children
who are advantaged aren't getting
more favorable treatment than a poor
white kid who's struggled more."
On another matter regarding race and
ethnicity, Obama rejected any notion
that he would back reparations or
offer a formal apology on behalf of
the United States for the
enslavement of Africans or the
mistreatment of Native Americans,
should he be elected president.
The Canadian government last month
apologized for the treatment that
aboriginal children received in that
country's residential schools. The
Australian government issued a
similar apology in February.
In 2006, then-British Prime Minister
Tony Blair expressed "deep sorrow"
over Britain's role in the African
slave trade but stopped short of a
full apology.