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What Took Him So Long?

Posted by on July 20, 2006 at 11:27 AM

What took him so long?

For five years in a row, President Bush has declined invitations to address the annual NAACP convention. This year, with the Senate poised to renew the 1965 Voting Rights Act, Bush said yes.

The White House says Bush wants to address the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People on Thursday to show his commitment to civil rights.

''The president has had five years to prepare for this speech,'' Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, past chairman of the Congressional Black Democratic Caucus, said Wednesday. ''I hope that this time, he makes it worth the wait.''

Democrats have called on Bush to use his appearance to renew the Voting Rights Act. ''He could sign it right here on this stage,'' Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., told the NAACP on Wednesday, eliciting cheers from the audience.

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Every president for the past several decades has spoken to the Baltimore-based group. Until now, Bush, who received 11 percent of the black vote in 2004, had been the exception. His appearance comes in a critical midterm election year, when Republicans fear losing control of Congress.

In light of the President's decision to finally speak to the members of this important organization, the DNC has prepared a list of 6 questions for the President, one for every year he has ignored the NAACP.

1. If the President is committed to civil rights, what took the President so long to address one of the nation's preeminent civil rights organizations?

2. Why has President Bush failed to provide real leadership on voting rights issues or use his political capital to get the Republican Congress to reauthorize the Voting Rights Act, stopping Republicans across the country from pushing discriminatory voter ID laws, and fully funding Help America Vote Act reforms?

3. Why has President Bush slashed small business loan programs that have been crucial for African American-owned businesses?

4. Why is it that, even though the number of African Americans who lack health insurance has climbed to more than seven million, President Bush has slashed funding for Medicare and Medicaid and forced through a prescription drug plan that raises prices for low income seniors?

5. If average household income for African American families has fallen by more than $2,000 and more African Americans are living in poverty, why have President Bush's budgets shortchanged college opportunities and gutted job training programs?

6. If African American seniors and children rely on Social Security at a rate disproportionately higher than the rest of the population, why is President Bush promoting a Social Security privatization scheme that would slash benefits for African American seniors and make it harder for survivors to receive benefits?

Yesterday at a press conference Tony Snow, the President's Press Secretary, said he was speaking with the group, "because he wants to." So by that logic, he has declined invitations for the past six years because he did not "want to" spend his time addressing the group.

Just for giggles, it's worth noting that President Bush is the first United States President in 80 years to go an entire term without speaking to the NAACP.

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