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Dr. Boyce Watkins, the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and the initiator of the National Conversation on Race, has been a supporter of President Obama but never one scared to call him out when he needs to be. Here he gives his view on what Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. would have thought on Obama’s actions and practices thus far.

The Economy: When it comes to economic issues, Dr. King would likely be in agreement with Dr. Cornel West, who argues that Obama works mostly in support of wealthy bankers on Wall Street. What is most ironic, however, is that many of the Wall Street bankers have almost no respect for the president. Obama hardly has the reputation of an unapologetic capitalist, yet he is labeled as such by many working class Americans. Most significantly, his refusal to even acknowledge the unemployment gap in the African-American community would likely sicken Dr. King, for it represents a betrayal of the trust of millions of African-Americans who’ve loyally supported Obama since the beginning.

 

African-American Issues: I would imagine that when it comes to African-American issues, Dr. King’s opinion would be in line with those of The Rev. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton. While we might not consider these men to be proxies for Dr. King, we must realize that it is a tradition in American media to ridicule and chastise nearly all progressive African-American public fig­ures. In fact, you probably can’t think of one significant Black leader who takes strong stands on controversial issues who hasn’t had his dirty laundry aired to the American public at some point (even Dr. King was very unpopular at the time of his death).

So, given that Jackson and Sharp­ton have presented measured, yet critical support of President Obama, I expect that King might be similar. I do not believe, however, that Dr. King would threaten to cut off Obama’s testicles or compare him to a Black man running from a cop (as Rev. Jackson and Michael Eric Dyson did). Dr. King’s commitment to peaceful progress and respectful strength would likely have continued to the present day.

Social Justice: Dr. King would applaud Obama’s arrival to the White House in the same way he was happy to see John F. Kennedy rise to power. He would expect Obama to keep his       commit­ments to human rights and freedom for Americans everywhere. Obama has not yet fulfilled many of his campaign promises, but it’s likely that his liberal supporters and a Democratic Con­gress will give him plenty of room to get things done.

The bottom line is that Dr. King would support Obama’s presidency and work with him to achieve significant progress. But Dr. King and Barack Obama are very different leaders. Amer­ica would not be ready for a Black (or even a white) president who thinks the way Dr. King did during his lifetime. Dr. King’s commitments were to fairness, protecting the poor, and standing up for the disenfranchised. Unfortunately, those values remain unpopular within the power structure of our current capitalist society.