Home / Full timeline / Ron Walters, a professor of political science at Howard University, analyzes the political victories of David Dinkins and L. Douglas Wilder.
Ron Walters, a professor of political science at Howard University, analyzes the political victories of David Dinkins and L. Douglas Wilder.
1989 (Nov 17)
Ron Walters, a professor of political science at Howard University, observed that "the key to victory for [David Dinkins and L. Douglas Wilder] was that, in terms of both style and substance, they ran mainstream campaigns tailored to the political realities of their respective jurisdictions.... But the new crossover Black politics creates an ultimate irony for the Black voter. Historically the Black voter has laid the basis for the emergence of Black politicians and has taken heart in their upward mobility. The danger is that the higher they go, the more restrained they will be in pursuing a Black political agenda." Hodding Carter III, a national political commentator, warned that "no one should minimize the distance yet to travel before the mountaintop is achieved. There is no excuse for complacency. But there is also no excuse for refusing to celebrate when, as with last week's election results, real cause for celebration is provided."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.