There are, of course, moral
drawbacks to this strategy, but there are also political drawbacks that could
appear not just in the primaries, but also in the general election. In the
primaries, the Clinton
campaign's resort to the race card--however fleeting--coupled with Obama's
victory, should lead to increased black turnout and support for Obama in the coming primaries. Many of these
primaries take place in states with significant African American populations. In
the 2004 Democratic primaries, for instance, blacks comprised 47 percent of Georgia voters, 35 percent of voters in Maryland, 23 percent in Tennessee,
21 percent in Texas, 33 percent in Virginia, 20 percent in New York,
15 percent in Missouri, 14 percent in Ohio, and 8 percent in California.
It's fair to assume that
black turnout will increase over 2004, and at a rate higher than white or
Latino turnout. In South Carolina
this year, black turnout went from 47 percent to 55 percent of the electorate--a
17 percent increase. At that rate, black turnout could make up over 50 percent
in Georgia, over 40 percent
in Maryland, and almost 25 percent of the electorate
in New York. If
Obama wins 80 percent of the black vote, as he did in South
Carolina, then Clinton
could have difficulty winning primaries in these states.
That's certainly true in Georgia (a February 5 primary state), and in Virginia (February 12). Using
South Carolina as a guide, blacks in Georgia can be
expected to make up about 55 percent of
the primary electorate. If Obama wins 80 percent of this vote, he'll need to
win less than 15 percent of the white and Hispanic vote to carry the state. That
may be why the Clinton
campaign has been running few ads there.