AMSTERDAM NEWS
March 2 – March 8
Lenora Fulani is
here to stay
despite the white-bread naysayers
By Richard
Carter
“You’re good, kid. But as long as I’m around
you’re second best. And you might as well learn to live with it.” –
Edward G. Robinson, “The Cincinnati Kid” (1965)
Here’s a flash for Frank McKay (sic), state chairman
of the Independence Party, as well as U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton and State
Atty. Gen. Eliot Spitzer: Lenora Fulani is not going away, no matter how much
you rag on her. She’s here to stay, so you might as well learn to live
with it.
Aided and abetted by a scurrilous editorial in the
scurrilous New York Post on Feb. 13, McKay, Clinton and Spitzer have shown
their true colors in an ongoing effort to ring down Dr. Fulani. And their
reason is obvious. They are deathly afraid of her.
As Democratic mainstays, Clinton and Spitzer are alarmed
that many Black voters eschewed their party in the last mayoral election and
voted for Michael Bloomberg on the Independence Party line. Thus, they
have tried to influence McKay to undermine the dynamic Dr. Fulani’s
demonstrated ability to provide other viable options for Black voters.
Clinton and Spitzer are petrified that Black people, whom
the Democrats have long taken for granted, may continue to bypass Democratic
candidates in favor of those who run as independents. And nobody would be
hurt more than the wannabe president (Clinton) and the wannabe governor
(Spitzer).
As a result, Fulani says, MacKay and white upstate
Independence Party leaders attempted to dilute the strength of downstate Black
members through a resolution to dissolve the heavily Black local organizations
in the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens, placing them in receivership. In the wake of
the resolution, Fulani and the party chairs in the three counties initiated
legal proceedings by filing a Show Cause Order in Brooklyn Supreme Court for an
immediate stay to block implementation of the resolution.
“These actions by Mr. McKay are part of a power grab which
disenfranchises tens of thousands of New York City voters, including in the
minority communities,” Fulani explained. “We stand firm for the principle that
the independent movement will be democratic, diverse and free of major party
control.”
On Feb. 10, a stay blocking implementation of the
resolution was granted by Judge Joseph Levine. On Feb. 16, after hearing
arguments in a courtroom packed with city party members facing
disenfranchisement, the judge reserved his final decision until later.
In a recent appearance on “Inside City Hall” on NY1, Fulani
called McKay’s actions “a direct and illegal power grab within the party
organization which violates the party rules and the Constitution of the United
States.” She added that it was “a move to make the Independence Party an
all-white party and a move against the Black community.”
Joining Fulani on the program was Atty. Harry Kresky, who
resigned as counsel to the party after he was not consulted prior to the
resolution being presented to the executive committee. Kresky called the
resolution “blatantly illegal and contrary to the rules.”
And the New York Post is, well, the Post. Ugh!
Its anti-Fulani editorial rhetoric remains reprehensible. This is how the
paper’s Feb. 13 hatchet-job began:
“Slowly but surely, and not necessarily for the purest of
motives, New York’s Independence Party is severing its ties to extremist
hatemonger Lenora Fulani, who exercised almost dictatorial control over its
affairs for more than a decade.
“Party officials recently voted to disband their own
leadership structure in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx, saying Fulani has been
running them like a cult.
“That still leaves her in control of the powerful Manhattan
chapter..but there is no denying that Fulani is no longer the political force
she once was, and that she no longer enjoys a stranglehold on the state’s
third-largest party.”
The editorial goes downhill from there. After reading
it, anyone of any political persuasion who retains illusions of fairness and
logical thinking on the part of that newspaper had better get their eyes
checked. In a word, the New York Post sucks!
As an unabashed admirer of Dr. Fulani, I again take strong
exception to the unwarranted public criticism she has been receiving over
comments she made in 1989 regarding Jews and the state of Israel. This is
the underlying reason she and five others were removed from the executive
committee of the Independence Party last September.
At that time, Fulani said to the party’s state committee:
“I am not an anti-Semite. Anti-Semites hate Jews. I’ve spend the
last 25 years working closely with Jewish colleagues and friends. My mentor,
Fred Newman, is a Jew. Michael Bloomberg, the mayor of New York city,
whose campaign I am vigorously supporting , is a Jew. One of my closest
advisors, Jackie Salit, is a Jew. Many of the volunteers and supporters
of my youth program are Jewish. My record on these partnerships and this
bridge-building is clear cut.”
As Fulani emphasized on NY1, nearly 75,000 votes were cast
for Bloomberg on the Independence Party line on Nov. 8, 2005, a 26 percent
increase over 2001. This included some 47 percent of the city’s Black
voters and was largely due to Fulani’s grassroots efforts, and it scares the
hell out of the Democrats like Hilary Clinton and Eliot Spitzer.
Finally, there is little doubt that the main reason for the
negative press, which, by the way, is not unusual for this brilliant, outspoken
political strategist, is because she is a strong, no-nonsense Black
woman. So strong she makes the city’s political establishment and
lockstep white news media nervous. And that’s the name of that tune.