Is this a "race card" issue?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Reba

Retired Terp
Premium Member
Joined
Jun 8, 2004
Messages
54,899
Reaction score
1,518
Democrats criticize Haley's checking of 'white' on voter registration application
By Yvonne Wenger
ywenger@postandcourier.com
Friday, July 29, 2011

COLUMBIA -- What box should Gov. Nikki Haley check when it comes to her race?

The South Carolina Democratic Party tried Thursday to make Haley out as a liar for checking "white" as her race on her 2001 Lexington County voter registration application.

But the application had no specific option for "Indian." Her options were "white, black/African-American, Asian, Hispanic, Native American or other."

The governor stayed silent on the matter, although her allies accused the Democrats of the lowest-grade politics: race-baiting. Haley, the daughter of Indian immigrants, has never emphasized herself as South Carolina's first female and minority governor and the country's second Indian-American governor, but it has earned enormous national notoriety.

Todd Shaw, a political science professor at the University of South Carolina and an expert on African-American studies, said deciding what box to fit a person in is a very Southern concept. To him, race is a matter of self-identification, or allowing a person to check the boxes that may apply.

"I always expect political parties to be political," Shaw said. "I think what is just as interesting is that it draws all of us into the fight: 'This is what we really understand this person to be.' Are you who I say you are or who society says you are?"

Dick Harpootlian, the Democratic Party chairman, said whether Haley listed her race as white or not doesn't matter to him. The point is, he said, that the governor has a pattern of twisting the truth.

"Haley has been appearing on television interviews where she calls herself a minority -- when it suits her," Harpootlian said. "When she registers to vote, she says she is white. She has developed a pattern of saying whatever is beneficial to her at the moment..."

Chris Whitmire, spokesman for the State Election Commission, said he knows of no state election law or a definition by the agency for the term "white."

The commission doesn't attempt to verify a person's race, but that data is used by U.S. Department of Justice to enforce fair voting practices. Collecting the information is a requirement of state law, Whitmire said. If a person checks "other," he or she is asked to specify.

The Merriam Webster dictionary defines "Caucasian" as the "characteristic of a race of humankind native to Europe, North Africa, and southwest Asia and classified according to physical features -- used especially in referring to persons of European descent having usually light skin pigmentation."

Shaw, the USC professor, said a person from southern Asia, where India is located, may more often check the box Asian than white. The issue has been the subject of many studies.

"The governor has the right to project herself however she chooses," Shaw said, noting that her decision may have been politically motivated.

Declaring oneself as white could have political advantages, Shaw said. For example, studies show people are pre-disposed to thinking about President Barack Obama more favorably when he is identified as being multi-racial or bi-racial than black. "Race does matter," he said. "There are advantages and disadvantages."

Haley's voter registration card, first obtained by the Democratic Party, is a public record. The 2001 card was the only one on file in the Lexington County voter registration office, according to the party. The voter registration office in her home county of Bamberg did not have an application on file for her.

It is not clear if Haley had declared her race differently on any earlier voter registration applications.

Democrats criticize Haley's checking of 'white' on voter registration application | The Post and Courier, Charleston SC - News, Sports, Entertainment
 
Last edited:
Well, the question is how is she being perceived by most people? She looks fairly white and I am sure is percieved as "white" by most people.

Obama isn't... he's perceived as black even though he's biracial. He has enough black characteristics that he is percieved as "black."
 
People from India are not of a single race or ethnicity, so there is no "Indian" race. "Indian" is a nationality.

http://www.webindia123.com/india/people/people.htm

I think the reason why there isn't such a race issue over there has to do with the face that race is a relatively recent concept and India is quite ancient. Any trouble that they have have with each other would prolly be more on ethnic or religious grounds than on racial grounds.

Whites as a group can be split up into ethnics - and not all ethics get along with each other. All I have to do is think of the Irish vs British though I have to admit religion played a part too. Then there's French vs Germans.. I think you get my drift.
 
What about picking "other" for her race?
 
If she's white, why should she pick "other?"

Indian isn't a race.

It really doesnt matter to me. I have known friends from the Middle East put "other". No biggie.
 
If she's white, why should she pick "other?"

Indian isn't a race.

I was going to say it's an ethnicity but when I thought about it, i think ti's closer
to Hispanics because Hispanics can be o any racial background and ethnicities.
 
some people may feel they are more of white than Indian :dunno:
 
and the name... Governor Nikki Haley.... I would never thought that person would be Indian cuz that name sounds more Caucasian. interesting.

Indian last name is impossible for me to pronounce... it's something like Bhatnagar or Mukopadhyay :dizzy:
 
and the name... Governor Nikki Haley.... I would never thought that person would be Indian cuz that name sounds more Caucasian. interesting.

Indian last name is impossible for me to pronounce... it's something like Bhatnagar or Mukopadhyay :dizzy:

:lol:
 
and the name... Governor Nikki Haley.... I would never thought that person would be Indian cuz that name sounds more Caucasian. interesting.

Indian last name is impossible for me to pronounce... it's something like Bhatnagar or Mukopadhyay :dizzy:

My son's 1st speech therapist was Indian. Her name was Prateeba Srinvansin. I figured if we could ever get him to the point that he could say her name, we'd have it made.:lol:
 
My son's 1st speech therapist was Indian. Her name was Prateeba Srinvansin. I figured if we could ever get him to the point that he could say her name, we'd have it made.:lol:

I'm as dumbfounded as puggy

images
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top