Obama's
Race-Based Spoils System
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Why
Are We Baiting the Bear?
Chester Arthur
was a most unlikely reformer.
A crucial cog
in the political machine of the Empire State's Sen. Roscoe Conkling,
he was named by President Grant to the powerful and lucrative post
of collector of customs for the Port of New York.
Arthur was
removed in 1878 by President Rutherford B. Hayes, who wanted to
clean up the federal patronage system. But when James Garfield of
Ohio was nominated to succeed Hayes, he sought to unite his party
by picking the Stalwart Arthur as running mate.
Six months
into the new administration, a deranged office-seeker shot Garfield.
Arthur was president. And in a dramatic turnabout, he became the
president forever associated with civil service reform, converting
the U.S. government into a meritocracy where individuals were hired
based upon examinations and advanced based upon merit.
In our time,
however, Arthur's achievement has been undone, as a racial spoils
system in federal hiring and promotions has been imposed by Democratic
presidents, unresisted by Republicans who rarely exhibit the courage
to stand up for their principles when the subject is race.
A week ago,
an item buried in The Washington Post reported that Obama
had "issued an executive order requiring government agencies to
develop plans for improving federal workforce diversity."
Obama, wrote
Isaac Arnsdorf, is targeting "a problem that has been on the administration's
radar. Whites still hold more than 81 percent of senior pay-level
positions."
Now,
as white folks are two-thirds of the U.S. population, and perhaps
three-fourths of those in the 45 to 65 age group who would normally
be at senior federal positions, why is this "a problem"?
As no one has
contended otherwise, we have to assume that the men and women who
hold these top positions got there because of the longevity of their
service and the superiority of their skills.
Why
is the color of their skin a "problem" for Barack Obama?
As
reported here previously, African-Americans are hardly underrepresented
in the U.S. government.
Though only
12 percent to 13 percent of the U.S. population, blacks hold 18
percent of all federal jobs. African-Americans are 25 percent of
the employees at Treasury and Veterans Affairs, 31 percent of State
Department employees, 37 percent of the Department of Education,
38 percent of Housing and Urban Development. They are 42 percent
of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corp., 55 percent of the Government Printing Office, 82
percent of the Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency.
According to
The Washington Post, blacks hold 44 percent of the jobs at
Fannie Mae and 50 percent of the jobs at Freddie Mac.
The EEOC, where
African-Americans are overrepresented by 300 percent, has been asked
to oversee the new "government-wide initiative to promote diversity
and inclusion in the federal workforce."
I'm not making
this up.
Perhaps, while
he is battling for a greater diversity of sacrifice and rewards
up there on Martha's Vineyard, our president might reflect on another
example of the overrepresentation of white males – in the caskets
coming home to Dover.
In the first
five years of the Iraq war, Asian-Americans were 1 percent of our
fallen heroes, Latinos 11 percent, African-Americans 10 percent.
White Americans were 75 percent of the dead, and from photos of
the fallen in newspapers since, the ratios appear to hold.
Does this overrepresentation
of white men in the body bags and caskets coming home bother our
commander in chief, who wants fewer white men at the top level of
his executive branch?
"Why beholdest
thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not
the beam that is in thine own eye?" says the Lord in Matthew's Gospel.
Has Obama taken
a close look at his hypocritical party on Capitol Hill? Though African-Americans
are fully 25 percent of all Democratic voters, in a Senate Democratic
Caucus of 53 members, there is not a single black man or black woman.
Well, regretfully,
we are told, none was elected
But if liberals
believe in affirmative action, why don't Democratic senators practice
as well as preach it? Why don't they lead by example rather than
by exhortation?
Sens. Dianne
Feinstein and Barbara Boxer have been around for decades. Why do
they not agree to flip a coin, have one resign, and have Gov. Jerry
Brown appoint Rep. Barbara Lee, head of the Black Caucus, to the
U.S. Senate?
Why
does not Barbara Mikulski, who has been there forever, not stand
down and let Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley appoint Rep. Elijah Cummings
of Baltimore to the Senate? Let Chuck Schumer go forth and do likewise,
show us what a heroic liberal is, and let Gov. Andrew Cuomo name
an African-American to replace him in the Senate.
Senate liberals
applaud affirmative action programs that deny white students and
white federal workers admissions and promotions they have earned
by their labors. But when, ever, has one of these liberals voluntarily
made the sacrifice that he demands be imposed upon others?
August
29, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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