Page 2 P orti and/Observer Thursday February 1, 1973 Barriers to Black Political Participation Th« Editor’s Desk by Vernon Jordan, J r . (The material for thia article is drawn from AbrMgiug the Right to Veto, a study pre pared by the National Urban League's Research Depart ment. ALFRED LEE HBÍO6RS0N WE SEE THE WORLD THROUGH BLACK EYES A ffirm ative action: A piece of paper? O ve r th e ye ars, O reg on 's yo u n g Blacks have left th e s ta te and gone to C a lifo rn ia or o the r sta te s w h e re th e y co uld fin d m o re o p p o r tu n ity in th e ir chosen professions. It is n o t an a c c id e n t th a t w e have ju st th re e d o cto rs, th re e d e n tis ts , and one p ra c tic in g a tto rn e y . L ast year th e S ta te of O reg on p ut in to effect an a ffir m a tiv e a ction a gree m e nt — a g re e in g to seek m in o ritie s for s ta te e m p lo y m e n t. T h e C ity o f P o rtla n d and M u ltn o m a h C o u n ty m ade s im ila r a g re e m e n ts - necessary to o b ta in c e rta in fe d e ra l funds. Black peo ple a re now w o n d e rin g if th e s ta te re a lly in te n d s to im p le m e n t its p ro g ra m , or w h e th e r th is is ju s t another piece o f p a p e r, a m e th o d to get fe d e ra l m oney or a g e s tu re of to k e n is m to hold o ff c ritic is m . M a n y yo u n g Blacks a re s till u n a b le to o b ta in p o sitio n s th a t o fte n go to less q u a lifie d w h ite a p p lica n ts. O th e r Blacks a re in s ta te p osition s fa r b e lo w th e ir ca p a citie s — a n d can see less capable fe llo w em ployees a d v a n c in g b eyo nd th e m . T h e G o ve rn o r says th e s ta te is se eking q u a lifie d Black em ployees — and in fact w ill g iv e p re fe re n c e in som e cases if th e Black is as q u a lifie d as th e w h ite a p p lica n t - e spe cia lly in d e p a rtm e n ts th a t have not h ire d m in o ritie s B u t th is does not seem to hold tru e . The O b s e rv e r has just h ea rd fro m a yo u n g m an w h o a p p lie d fo r a p o sitio n in th e E x e c u tiv e D e p a rt­ m e n t. H e has a B.S. in E conom ics and spent n e a rly tw o years at th e U n iv e rs ity of O regon L a w School. H e has held re sp o n s ib le p osi­ tio n s — s u p e rv is o ry p o sitio n s - in p riv a te in d u s try . T h is yo u n g man was to ld th a t he was w e ll q u a lifie d for th e p o sitio n and was g iv e n th e im p re ssio n th a t he w o u ld be h ire d . H o w e v e r, he was n o t. W e w o u ld lik e to kn o w w h y not. W as he b e tte r q u a lifie d ? W h y d id th e s ta te not ta k e th is o p p o rtu n ity to h ire a capable yo un g Black man w h o w o u ld have been an asset to th e d e p a rtm e n t? It is because of th e se u n e xp la in e d in c id e n ts th a t Blacks look e lse w h e re for o p p o rtu n ity . W e have kn o w n fo r ye ars th a t th e S ta te of O reg on is not an E OE e m p lo y e r. N o w , a lth o u g h th e G o ve rn o r says th e re has been a change, w e see no g re a t increase in m in o r ity e m p lo ym e n t w ith th e s ta te . B ut w e d o hear c o n s ta n tly o f Block peo ple w h o have been re je c te d . T h e a ffir m a tiv e a ction a gree m e nt m ust be ju st a n o th e r piece of paper. Thia Nation has been lulled into a state of complacency by the apparent success of the Voting Rights Act. However, American citizens must now be made to realize that the right to vote is being abridged by a web of antiquated regu- I a t i o n s that discriminate against the Black and the poor, a web that affects the entire country. Recause of this, the Na tional Urban League recently launched a voter registration and education project that concentrates on moderate size cities with relatively large Black populations outside the South. This non-partisan project is part of a long range effort to significantly increase Black participation and rep resentation in the political process. Most discussion of voting rights and of barriers to Black voting c e n t e r s upon the South, the region that histori rally has enforced the pattern of exclusion of Rlarks from the voting booth. I t is true that the South gave birth to the "grandfather clause" and to the white primary as methods of deny ing Blacks a voice in the political process. And when those were ruled unconsti­ tutional. the region took re­ fuge in illegal means to achieve the same ends. Ter- roism and violence followed. Combined with c o n f u s i n g regulations and capricious ad ministrations. Black citizens were robbed of the right to vote. Consequently, any discus sion of Black voting rights has been filtered t h r o u g h a "Southern perspective". W ith passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which removed the most blatant forms of dis franchisement, most Am eri­ cans assumed that the consti­ tutional right to vote was secured and a f f o r d e d to everyone who wished and exercised it. Opinion The Observer a s k e d a number of Portland citizens for their reaction to the cutting back of federal funds and the witholding of ap­ propriations b y President E. Shelton Hill, Executive Director of the Urban Lea­ gue of Portland, said the cutting of the federal budget cut services needed by the common man. “I t effects the common man in a nega tive way." Ranee Spruill, Director of the Albina Youth Oppor tunity School, said the cut­ ting of the federal budget leaves the non-profit agen­ cies in a very precarious position. I t starts an evolu tion back to nothing since the private contributors fol­ low governmental t r e n d s . This will force many people onto Welfare. Voter p a r t i c i p a t i o n in America is generally much lower than in other Western countries and is especially lower mong Black people, a situation that has been "ex­ plained" by their supposed apathy and disinterest in poli tical affairs. Even many who h a v e actively encouraged greater Black participation in the political process have as­ sumed that people that to not vote because of disinterest, poverty, family and health problems, and a host of other reasons that have nothing at all to do with the actual external barriers to Black voting. The fact is that low voter participation rates a m o n g Blacks and other minorities is not due to internal causes, but to the external impediments placed in their way by anti­ quated State and local regis­ tration procedures and regu lations. Since the late 1960’s, with the dramatic rise in Southern voters, it has be come apparent that the right to vote has been abridged in the North and the West, and that Black people and all poor people are victims of dis crimintory pracices which ex ­ clude them from the demo­ cratic process. This may seem an odd. perhaps even an extreme, statement to make at a time when front page publicity is regularly given to the Black bloc in Congress and to the proliferrating n u m b e r s of Black mayors of major cities. But minority group members are still sharply under repre sen ted in important elected positions, and we cannot let the visibility of a few obscure the continued powerlessness of the many. There are some 522.000 elected officials in the United States, from county school board members up to and including the President. Of these, one might expect that roughly a tenth would be Black, corresponding to the approximate Black share of the population. That would come to more than 50,000 office-holders. But what are the figures? There are a mere 2,264 Black elected officials in this country, or 0.4 percent of the total! Only 14 of the 535 members of the U.S. Congress are Black - 3 percent of the total. There is 1 Black Sena tor and no Black Governors in any of the 50 states. Blacks elected to State offices make up 1.6 percent of the total of State elected officials, only 0.7 percent of elected municipal officials, and 0.2 percent of the total county elected officials, and 0.2 percent of the total county elected officials across the nation. So much for the highly vanunted Black p o l i t i c a l power that has been so exaggerated in recent years. Black people do have political power, but to date it has been a latent power that must be brought to bear on a situation marked by gross under-rep- resentation of Black people in the elected offices that affect Right this timel M a y o r N e il G o ld sch m id t sh ou ld be com m ended for his fo r th r ig h t m anner in n o m in a tin g m em ­ bers to th e P la n n in g C om m ission. C o m m is s io n ­ ers Iv a n c ie and M cC re a d y co m p la ine d th a t th e y d id not have an o p p o rtu n ity to m ake su gg estio ns b ut th is c a n n o t be true , since th e M a y o r asked even th e press and th e p u b lic to s u b m it su gg estio ns. G o ld sch m id t n o m in a te d for re a p ­ p o in tm e n t th o s e m em bers he th o u g h t could g iv e se rvice , b ut p la cin g th e c ity 's in te re s t above p o litic a l e xp e d ie n cy d id not re n a m e G len P a rk s , a labor leader M a yo r G o ld sch m id t's a ppointees a re a good cross-section, yet have th e edu catio n and p ro fe s ­ sional b a ckg ro u n d s to do th e necessary rese arch and p la n n in g . H e has d ra w n fro m se veral fie ld s : law , a rc h ite c tu re , business, social w o rk , e n g in e e rin g . T he se a ppointees a re not ju s t names d ra w n out of a hat, but a re persons w ho possess over and a bo ve th e ir p ro fe ssio n a l s k ills , a c o m m itm e n t to c ity p la n n in g . C om m issio ne r M cC re a d y calls it " K in g A r ­ t h u r " or "D a le y T a c tic s ". W e call it le a d e rs h ip - a m ayo r b e in g s e n s itiv e to th e needs o f th e c ity . I f C om m issio ne r M cC re a d y had her w a y , w e a re s u re it w o u ld be "P e ttic o a t g o v e rn m e n t" M a y o r G o ld sch m id t has n o m in a te d O cie T r o t ­ te r, a y o u n g Black social w o rk e r, to th e P la n n in g C om m issio n. W e b e lie v e T ro tte r w ill add m uch in th e a re a of social se rvices and th a t he w ill speak to th e needs of Blacks and o f th e poor In th is case w e th in k th e M ayo r used good ju d g e m e n t MEMBER Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association i a MEMBER IN P A N ê W A pm Aaioclatlon - Founded 1885 THE NORTHWEST’S BEST W EEKLY A BLACK OWNED PUBLICATION their hvee. The under participating in registration and voting by Blacks is a nationwide pro­ blem affecting all regions, but available statistics show that it is particularly acute in small and medium-size cities in the North. Fewer S o u t h e r n Blacks are registered and fewer vote than in the North, but their numberrs are stead­ ily increasing and reflect, to a degree, the overall regional differences in voter regia tration. The major causes of the lower Black voting participa tion are the residency and other registration qualifica lions that disproportionately affect lower-income i n d i - vidua Is. Under provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1970. the residency requirement f o r voting in presidential elec tions is 30 days. However more than 30 States have 1 year residency requirements. A National Llrban Ix-ague survey of local registrars indi cates that about one third of the areas outside the South have residency requirements of 6 months or more in order to vote in county or municipal elections, and only a third apply the 30-day Federal s t a n d a r d for presidential elections to local races. l.ast term, the United States Su­ preme Court, in Dunn vs. Blum stein, also indicated that the residency requirement should not be more than 30 days. Restrictive residency re quirements hit hardest at minority groups, which tend to have high mobility rates within States and cities, and so are disproportionately af fected by outmoded residency requirements. Minorities a r e also h i t hardest by the disqualification of convicted felons in most States. Studies of police records suggest that a sizable proportion of Black men in particular are ineligible to vote because of this require ment. Most ex-convicts, who have supposedly paid their debt to society, are also denied the franchise. Persons in pretrial detention and p ri­ soners, too, cannot vote. The limited period and hours for registration and the relative inaccessibility of re gistration offices, however, loom as the largest of the many obstacles to the would- be voter. In 1972. about half of the registration polls around the country were closed 2 months before the primary elections, effectively limiting participa tion to party stalwarts. The same situation holds true for general elections. Depending upon the region, between 25 and 40 percent of cities have registration deadlines that end 2 or more months before the elections. Since election r campaigns create an interest in the candidates and their programs, and since issues emerge in campaigns that stimulate citizen concerns, this requirement effectively disenfranchises many people whose educational b a c k - grounds are relatively limited and who are not aware of the limits placed on registration. Most year round registra tion sites are located far from predominately Black neigh borhoods. Must are in county courthouses or some other official building site average of 3 miles away from the ghetto, often in the area that is unfamiliar to most Blacks, or regarded with a degree of hostility. And they are open on a 9 to-5 basis, meaning that working people must take a morning off. frequently with a loss of pay. in order to register to vote. For a typical low income ghetto dweller without a car who is paid on an hourly basis, a downtown registration site open only from 9-to-5 might just as well be located on the moon. The inaccessibility to sites com bined with their inconvenient hours effectively discourages low income working people of all colors from voting. Evening qnd Saturday re gistration hours would go a long way toward making the registration process available to large numbers of people now excluded from it. But when such hours are insti tuted it is usually for a very short time several days or a week and so poorly publicized that it offers no real answer to the problem. Another means of increas­ ing citizen participation is to use community organizations and minority individuals as deputy registrars. T h is seems a logical step that would bring the elctoral pro cess closer to the community at very low rust, since volun leers might be- used. But two-fifths of the registrars polled indicated they would not use this approach. While officials are fully aware of the problem of inaccessible registration sites, an overwhelming majority three fourths do not intend to use mobile units. It is clear then, that Black voters fare institutional bar riers to voting that limit their right to full participation in the political system. It is also clear that it will take a concentrated campaign to win the necessary legislative re forms and to sensitize State and local officials to the need for change. The time has come to move beyond the surface appear ances of equal access to the political process and to recog nize that the reality of regis tration procedures and regu lations have closed the doors of the political system to millions of Americans. As I See It Th« NAACP and the Community: Some observation» by Lenwood O. Davis In the past this w riter has been one of the staunchest critics of the N A A C P and other civic organizations in the community When these groups did things that I thought were not in the best interests of the community. I let them know how I felt. Moreover, some mav have even thought that I was antagonising them. (The (act is that 1 am a member oi most of these groups, i.e. NAACP. Black Caucus, etc.). On the other hand, when they did things that I thought were laudable 1 praised them. Hence, which brings me to the point of this article. I am pleased to see that the NAACP has a regular column, ’ Voice of the N A A C P ”, in the Portland Observer. Thus is a worthwhile project. One of the historical criticisms of the organization, other than being elitist and a closed group, has been that non members (and even members), were not suf ficienlly informed of its acti- Lyndon B a i n e s John­ son was my father's friend and mine for more than thirty years. He was always moti vated by a strong desire to make life better for the disadvantaged, in America and around the world. He did not see these people as ob­ jects of charity, but as poten­ tial assets who could help the nation and humanity at large if they themselves had a chance to develop properly. When lie became President of the United States, he Anally had an opportunity to put his ideas to work and he was responsible for the greatest amount of social legislation in the history of the nation. Medicare, the Higher Educa tgion Act. reforms in the Immigration Act - all were a part of his work. But he always considered as hit greatest achievement t h e passage of the Civil Rights and Voting R i g h t s Acts, which eliminated formal dis­ criminations against Negroes in empoyment, public accom modations, housing and vot­ ing for the flrst time in the nation's history. Lyndon Johnson was a Southerner and thoroughly familiar with segregation and discrimination. He was al­ ways ashamed that at one stage of his life he had been a participant in the m a i n tenance of institutions which condoned and furthered such practices. He resolved to A YOUNG VIEW OF WASHINGTON OBITUARY FOR WAR ON POVERTY W A SH IN G TO N Even as the body of Lyndon Baines Johnson lay in state in the Austin, Texas library which bears hrs name, his successor in the White House made clear his intentions Io abolish the Office o f Economic Opportunity, the war room of Mr Johnson's battle against poverty. It was ironic that the news of OFO's demise should come at the lime of Lyndon Johnson’s death, hut the news itself was no surprise The organization's life has been as stormy as was the Johnson Presidency Head Start was perhaps OFO's best known creation. A program to aid under­ privileged pre-schoolers, it was Ihe main­ stay which assured the agency's contin­ ued funding by Congress in the nudsl of failures on other more turbulent fronts, failures like the Job Corps, which created expections both in Congress and among its participants which the program's ad­ ministrators knew it could not fulfill Therein lies the real cause of OFO's failure and the failure o f the “ war on poverty" itself: expectations were cre­ ated, among the poor and within the American public as a whole, which the government had no intentions of fu lfill­ ing, indeed, which it knew would be impossible to meet The existing programs administered by OEO will be divided among various feder­ al agencies, the bulk o f them going to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Predictably, the organization's controversial legal services program is not among those proposed to be transferred, and presumably the President will again push for the creation o f a separate legal services corporation, more directly under his control. R Sargent Shriver, the Democratic candidate for Vice Piesidenl in 1972. is OFO's best known former director Known on Capitol Hill as a “ super-sales­ man'', Shriver was able to wrangle funds for the agency's programs but failed to deliver the results he so eloquently pro­ mised He is likely to join (hr large group which will no doubt oppose the dismant­ ling of O F O when Congress considers Ihe President's fiscal year 1973-74 budget proposal, scheduled to be presented this week The Administration exudes confi­ dence that the President's proposal will carry in Congress We don't intend to do away with O FO programs, they say, merely transfer (hem to the appropriate agencies for administration What they fail to add is that bidden away in the cavernous bowels of IIF W , programs which now operate under (hr flag of the Executive O llie r ol Ihe Presi­ dent will have little muscle ol their own to use in lighting for survival at the departmental money trough Thus, good programs in time will stand a bettrr-lhan- fair chance of perishing along with the had There's a word for it. It's called backlash I t ’s what happens when expec­ tations consistently exceed, and by aston­ ishing margins, that which is delivered So it was with O FO S yiK lio le il 117 J by W A SH IN G IO N Wl l Kl Y . In, All l l f his I ceri veil Î SHOP order matters so that other Southerners would n e v e r have to degrade themselves by being forced to engage in d is c r im in a to r y prar tires which they knew to be wrong. He had a special afflnity to the Negro people. He knew and understood them as one from the same soil and background. He made equal opportunity the main goal of his Administration and the monument by which he would like to be remembered. He was without illusions - he knew what he was doing and why. In his passsing, all America loses a stalwart champion; but, if we are wise, we also gain a deepened sense of unity and common purpose which will enable the republic to prosper and to make reality of our ideals for generations to come. lENOW'S FO R B R A N D S y o u Icnc V A R IE T IE S y o u lil SIZE S • • Application to mall at second class postage rates Is pending at Portland, Oregon. ALFRED LEE HENDERSON, Publisher/Edltor The Observer’s official position Is expressed only In Its Publisher's Column (The Observation Post) and the Editor's Desk. Any other m aterial throughout the peper is the opinion of the Individual w rite r or submitter and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Observer. Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of person, firm or corporation, which may appear In the Portland Observer w ill be cheerfully corrected uponbelng brought to the attention of the Editor. a I 1 ► « I I t , • you . w ant . I «•’,-» e te » • i M IM K IV Ol U N IttO . G » O (t« S Binyon Optical D is p a n s e rs o f Fashio n E y e w e a r Published every Thursday by Exle Publishing Company. 2201 N , Kllllngsworth, Portland, Oregon 97217. M ailing address, P.O . Box 3137, Portland, Oregon 97208 Subscriptions $5.25 per year - Tri-County area, $6.00 per year - Outside Portland. Telephone, 283-2486. heard much about it. We in the community have come not to expect any regular news from the Black Panther Party We only hear about or from (hem when they do something grandeloquent. Obviously, it would Ijc to their advantage o inform the community of its activities. The Urban League and Albina Ministerial AI lumce are doing a laudable job of keeping tne community informed of its activities. I suggest that other or g u n iz u t i o n s , clubs, and c .iiiu p s follow the lead of the hs'.il N A A C P and inform the isimmunity of their artiki- oes on regular bases! With Ron Hendren Notes on LBJ (Editor's Note: Hobart T ay­ lor. Jr. served at the W hite House as a personal and legal advisor to President Lyndon B. Johnson. He also was Executive Vice Chairman of the President's Committee on equal Employment o p p o r - tunity, of which M r. Johnson was Chairman.) vitias. Consequently, this was (and is) one of the superficial reasons that people do not support the NAACP K vm though the past presidents of the groups may have had articles in the Black presses, they were not continuous. It may have been that they did not have the time (or took the time). Information and public relations are vital organs to any group. Therefore it is refreshing to see that the president of the local N A A C P is preceptive enough to see the value and need ol informing the general public of what nis orgam.’.i tion is not only doing, but its position on issues that affect the Black community. Other groups in the coin munity have recently become lax in informing the com munity of is activities. The must conspicuous is the Ore gun Black Caucus. At one time, it captured most of the headlines in the newspapers. However, of late, we have not 6 3 0 SW B r o a d w a y 2 2 6 -6 6 8 8 The 60,000 member» of Delta Sigma Theta, Inc. In 430 communities are deeply saddened over the passing of a great American, President Lyndon Baines Johnson. We shared with him his belief that our nation could only be a strong nation if each parson had an equal opportunity to de­ velop to his hi! lest potential without regard to race, creed, age or other such Impedi­ ments. What is most Import­ ant Is that he supported his beliefs with affirm ative ac­ tions and firm declarations. Our personal memories of President Lyndon Baines Johnson include meetings with the member» of the Executive Board in 1966 and in 1970. In 1966 at the White House, he talked with u t fo r two hour» of hl« plana, hop»» and a s p ir­ ations fo r the right» of all Americans, and specifically fo r Americans of minority group». In 1970 our entire Board of D irectors chartered a flight and visited with him at the LBJ Ranch in Johnson C ity . It was clear that he held fast to hie strong beliefs in C ivil Rights and his faith in our Country. Whan asked what he thought to be the most sig­ nificant piece of legislation passed during his administra­ tion as president, ha paused and aald, "T h e Voting Rights Act of 1965 which ensured all Americans of the prlvlledge of the ballot.** We shall continue our public service program In the strong tredltlona of freedom, justice and concern fo r others aa exemplified by thia great Am erican. by M rs . L illia n P. Benbow National President J a n tz e n B each 2 8 3 -3 1 9 5 SIDNEY THOMAS DISPENSING OPTICIAN D r. L. W e s le y A p la n a lp O p to m e tris t S o ft a n d R e g u la r co n ta c t lenses Associate Optometrists: BRIGGS, HATTEN, M ILLER A STENGER