Thanks, but no thanks: Watts declines CBC invitation

Black Enterprise, July, 1995 by Frank McCoy

Rep. J.C. Watts Jr. of Oklahoma has always set his own agenda. A true believer in individual initiative and personal responsibility, the freshman Republican supports most of the GOP Contract With America. Already separated ideologically from the overwhelmingly Democratic Congressional Black Caucus, Watts is maintaining his physical distance as well. He recently decided not to join the group.

In explaining his decision, Watts cites the small right flank he and Rep. Gary Franks (R-Conn.) hold as the only African American Republicans in Congress. What's the point, Watts asks, of joining a body where they would be outvoted 40-2 on nearly every issue?

Watts, who represents a district that is 69% Democratic and 87% white, insists he was not elected because of the color of his skin or party affiliation. And, he says, it is not his intention to be either pro-CBC or anti-CBC. "That plays right into the hands of the Beltway press that wants to 'cynicize' every issue," says Watts. "They [the press] don't give us [Franks and Watts] the flexibility to say what we want, how we want to. Instead, joining puts us in a very difficult situation where it looks like it's the black Republicans versus the black Democrats." According to a spokesperson, Franks is, and intends to remain, a member of the CBC.

Watts, whose views fall in the moderate-to-conservative spectrum, recently talked about the need for welfare reform. He also discussed the importance of cutting taxes to create new businesses and how his opinion on affirmative action differs from that of other GOPers.

Watts' early life shaped his views on welfare reform. Growing up poor in rural Oklahoma, he watched as his father was forced to work several jobs. Welfare, in its present form, is "galling," he says. "Even a minimum wage job can grow into bigger and better things."

The former realtor and petroleum marketer admits that matching jobs with unskilled recipients will be hard. The answer lies in "over 150 [federal] jobs programs I think need to be in the private sector," he says.

In Watts' view, private sector programs are the key to eradicating poverty. It's up to black communities, he says, to build minority businesses. Watts believes that tax credits and an end to the capital gains tax will spur involvement. Revenue lost from these sources will flow back from new employees. The problem, says Watts, is not "that minority businesses lack ideas; they lack capital--the seed corn for business."

The debate continues on the practicality of the proposed tax cuts to produce jobs and revenue (see "Contract With America: Is the GOP's Contract a Hit on Black America?" June 1995). But not everything Watts says is in lockstep with Newt Gingrich. For example, Watts believes that affirmative action transcends race. "White females have benefited more than anyone," he says.

Watts believes that affirmativeaction programs have bypassed the really disadvantaged, and need to be refined. "I think the CBC and I want the same things for the black community," he says. "The difference is how we get there."

COPYRIGHT 1995 Earl G. Graves Publishing Co., Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning

 

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