In the 1990s, a new race-neutral, ‘‘post-black’’ leadership of African Americans emerged who favored political pragmatism and centrist public policies. Barack Obama, Newark Mayor Corey Booker, and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick were representative of this group. During his successful 2008 presidential campaign, Obama minimized the issue of race, presenting a race-neutral politics that reached out to white Republicans and independents. Yet despite his post-racial orientation, critics repeatedly attempted to ‘‘racialize Obama,’’ questioning his racial authenticity, religious affiliations, and Americanism. Despite extremist attacks, Obama successfully won the election by building an unprecedented coalition of blacks, Latinos, Jews, Asian Americans, women, and youth. The question remains whether the pragmatic, centrist Obama will commit his government to oppose all forms of racial inequality and oppression.
Barack Obama, "brain gap", "Bradley Effect", center-left nation, Democratic Party, Deval Patrick, Douglas Wilder, Islamophobia, Katrina Crisis, Keynesian economics, laissez faire economics , post-black politics, race-neutral politics, racial hate crimes, Reverend Jeremiah Wright , 2008 Presidential Election