Democrats Court Rural Southern Voters With Stacey Abrams’ State of the Union Response

Stacey Abrams is the first African-American woman to deliver a State of the Union response in the 53-year history of this tradition. Pool response image via AP.

By Sharon Austin, Professor of Political Scieence and Director of the African American Studies Program, University of Florida. First published on The Conversation

In a brief, direct and optimistic speech about fighting immigrant scapegoating, racism and voter suppression, Stacey Abrams celebrated diversity in her Democratic rebuttal to Donald Trump’s divisive 2019 State of the Union address.

“We will create a stronger America together,” she said.

Abrams is the first African-American woman to deliver a State of the Union response in the 53-year history of this tradition. She is the first black woman to be nominated by a major party to run for governor. Before that, she was the first African-American ever to serve as House minority leader in the Georgia General Assembly.

Her State of the Union response has increased speculation that she is a rising political starwith a bright future in the Democratic Party.

By choosing Abrams to give the State of the Union response, Democrats were clearly reaching out to African-Americans and women, a key base for the party.

But Abrams’ speech also spoke to an often-overlooked constituency the Democratic Party may not have even thought about when they picked her. It’s a constituency Abrams has already cultivated: rural Southerners of color.

Abrams campaigned in both urban and rural counties last year, defying the logic of a Democratic Party that tends to court big city voters while leaving rural Americans to be won over by Republicans like Donald Trump.

Stacey Abrams vows to keep fighting for voting rights in a speech, November 16, 2018. (Alyssa Pointer / Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)

Forgotten Southerners

I have been studying minority politics in the South for over 20 years.

The rural South is home to about 90 percent of America’s entire black rural population, and politics in this region have long been defined by black and white polarization. The South was a Democratic stronghold until the civil rights movement, and Democrats know they can’t win national office without winning here.

But the South – both urban and rural – is changing. In recent decades, a large number of Asian and Hispanic immigrants have settled in Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolinaand other southern states, bringing greater demographic and political diversity to this formerly black-and-white region.

Chinese immigrants first came to rural southern areas like the Mississippi Delta after the Civil War, so Asian-Americans have deep roots in the South. But between 2000 and 2010, the population of Asian-Americans in the South grew 69 percent, to over 3.8 million, largely due to the region’s many job opportunities and affordable housing.

The South’s Hispanic population has grown by 70 percent in recent years, surpassing 2.3 million people in 2010, when the last U.S. Census was taken. Many of these individuals have settled in rural communities, filling agricultural and other jobs and sending their children to public school.

Racial and ethnic minorities now make up over 20 percent of the entire rural population in 10 southern states, from Florida to Virginia.

Are Democrats Really Ready For A Nap? 5 Possible Reasons The Clinton Campaign Is Lethargic

Hands down #HillaryMen is our favorite website tracking the daily ups and downs of the Hillary Clinton campaign. As AOC dances fast to get back on track with our Hillary Clinton coverage, we share last week’s:

Gut Check: How To Stay Calm and Confident in the Turbulence of Hillary’s Campaign HillaryMen.com

1. Every National Campaign Is A Challenge

2. The Gender Obstacle Is Very Real

3. False Assumptions Lead Voters Astray

4. Resisting the Impulse to Second Guess Campaign Strategy

5. The Formidable Skill of Hillary Attackers

6. Success Depends on Adopting Accurate Assumptions

7. The Battle for Equality, Fairness and Justice

Are Democrats Really Ready For A Nap?

5 Reasons Clinton’s Campaign Is in the Doldrums Bloomberg View

Francis Wilkinson offers challenging insights into reasons why the Clinton campaign isn’t so exciting to Democrats. Guess what? If Wilkinson is right, it’s not ALL Hillary’s Fault.

1. Democrats aren’t ‘ravenous for power’ and steamed up as they were for the 2008 election, when the policies of George W. Bush left many Democrats infuriated for change.

2. Clinton’s staff isn’t desperate for the Presidencybecause many in the campaign’s upper echelon have already tasted victory in the campaigns of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.

3. Not every Democrat is fond the the Clintons and the reality that top Dems are always defending them.

4. Democrats generally don’t pick their front runners this early. They are true to form in making Hillary sweat.

5. Like it or not, Hillary’s rather dull, and everyone needs to take that reality check.

Wilkinson fills in lots of background on these 5 reasons. Read on at Bloomberg View.

Hillary Sept 14 Headlines

Hillary Clinton had a right to delete personal emails says US justice department The Guardian

Poll: Hillary Clinton’s support falls by 21 points as Donald Trump gains, poll shows Politico

Biden to Court Black Caucus Politico

Battleground Tracker: Sanders Surges in IA, NH; Clinton up in SC CBS News

In Church Hillary Learns to Be Nicer to the Press ABC News

Hillary Clinton Backer Casey Wasserman Says Joe Biden Candidacy for President ‘Good for Everybody’ NBC Southern Ca

Hillary Clinton: Consistent, Tough, and Effective Leadership to Counter Threats from Iran HillaryClinton.com

What Hillary Clinton Can Learn From Jeremy Corbyn Buzzfeed News

Jeremy Corbyn Defends Lack of Women In Top Jobs In His Shadow Cabinet Buzzfeed News

Why Are Women Ditching Hillary The Daily Beast