The two most important pieces of domestic legislation in my lifetime (I'm 60) were the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Question: Members of which party voted for them in higher proportions, Republicans or Democrats? I suspect only a small slice of Americans knows it was Republicans, and by significant margins.
Eighty-two percent of Senate Republicans voted for the Civil Rights Act, as opposed to 69 percent of Senate Democrats.
Eighty percent of House Republicans voted for it, as opposed to 63 percent of House Democrats.
As for the Voting Rights Act, 97 percent of Senate Republicans voted for it, compared with 73 percent of Democrats.
And 85 percent of House Republicans voted for it, compared with 80 percent of Democrats.
What conclusions or plausible guesses can be extrapolated from such barely recalled votes plus several other bypassed facts? For one, while fully acknowledging the watershed importance of Barack Obama's victory last week, I would argue the United States actually has been equipped and poised to elect an African-American as president for more than just the last few months.
In no way does claiming so downplay just how stunning a moment last week's election was in the history of our nation. And neither does it grant too little credit to President-elect Obama's remarkable political skills, as they would seem to be possibly matched over the last half-century only by those of Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and maybe John F. Kennedy.
The point, rather, is that we have made more racial progress than has been routinely acknowledged, and this has been the case for years. How much progress had we made in terms of presidential politics before Obama's candidacy? I would contend, for instance, that Colin Powell was eminently electable in 2000. In saying so I concede he was too socially moderate to win the Republican nomination and likely too closely identified with Reagan to win the Democratic nomination. But those two nonracial reasons had measurably more to do with blocking his path to the White House than his race ever would have posed. I can't prove this, of course, but I'm confident.