Democratic presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT)

Hillary Clinton is on a roll. If her candidacy ever looked in doubt to an insurgent Bernie Sanders, she’s all but guaranteed the Democratic nomination – thanks overwhelmingly to African Americans.

A month after her bruising defeat in New Hampshire, where Sanders won every category of voter except those older than 65 and earning more than $200,000 a year, Clinton has chalked up massive wins.

In Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia she romped to victory, and is tipped to win today in Mississippi and Michigan, which all have sizeable African American communities.

Black voters have become critical to winning US elections. Without decisive African American turnout in seven states, Barack Obama would have lost to Mitt Romney in 2012, the independent Cook Political Report found.
 Certainly Clinton has done much more than Sanders to address systemic racism, white privilege and the need for more opportunities for blacks.

“I have spent a lot of time with the mothers of African American children who have lost them,” she told Sunday’s Democratic debate in Flint, Michigan, the black majority city suffering from water contamination.

“I can’t pretend to have the experience that you have had and others have had, but I will do everything that I possibly can, to not only do the best to understand and to empathise, but to tear down the barriers of systemic racism.”

Clinton raised the spectre of environmental racism, questioning whether the lead-contaminated scandal would have happened in wealthy white suburbs.

“She talks very forcefully about these issues in a way that she hasn’t before and you don’t normally have from presidential candidates,” said Stefanie Brown James, Obama’s African American vote director in 2012.

While Sanders has spent his career in Vermont, where only one percent of the population is black, Clinton was first lady of Arkansas for 12 years, taking on a prominent role in trying to improve health and education.

She ran legal clinics representing disenfranchised people.

While still a student at Yale Law School, she went to South Carolina to investigate juveniles in adult jails and to Alabama to investigate segregation in schools for the Children’s Defense Fund.

After more than a generation on the national stage, all of this has become common knowledge – particularly among blacks.

In South Carolina, she addressed the nation’s oldest black sorority, dressed in green – a courtesy to an organisation whose colours are green and pink.

“That’s the kind of little stuff, the attention to detail that people notice and appreciate,” said Andra Gillespie, an associate professor of political science at Emory College in Atlanta, Georgia.

Right or wrong for a feminist campaigning to become the first woman president of the United States, experts also agree that much of her appeal stems from her marriage to Bill Clinton.

For more than a generation, black Americans have embraced the Clintons as a couple who have worked against racial prejudice and presided over economic prosperity in the 1990s when black unemployment fell and incomes rose.
Source :AFP