Rep. Tim Scott: I can make 'bigger impact' outside Black Caucus

South Carolina Rep. Tim Scott didn’t join the Congressional Black Caucus because his goal is to impact Americans as a whole, and he sees the Tea Party as a positive force that’s building a better America.

Scott, a delegate to this year’s Republican National Convention and a surrogate for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, was elected to Congress with Tea Party backing in 2010, part of a wave of conservatives swept into power in the aftermath of the fight over health care reform.

He made history as the first black Republican elected to federal office from South Carolina in more than 100 years, and one of only two black Republicans elected from southern states during the midterm elections. The other, Allen West, has made a name for himself with incendiary rhetoric, while Scott has served more quietly, but with more influence, as a member of the House leadership. Both men were elected in districts with few African-American constituents — a fact of life for most black Republicans, who tend to fare better in elections where the voters are overwhelmingly white and conservative.

Scott is unconcerned about the Tea Party’s reputation for racial animus — something many African-Americans believe is directed at them.

“Really, what the Tea Party stood for is a force that wants to make this a better country,” Scott told theGrio, as he arrived in Tampa for the GOP nominating convention.

Scott is in some ways an unconventional black politician. Perhaps because of his constituency, but also his belief in being an American first, and not “the black face of anything,” he didn’t join the Congressional Black Caucus, all but one of whom (West) are Democrats. On a recent conference call with reporters, NAACP president Ben Jealous said Scott had “put up a wall” between himself and the civil rights organization “that even Newt Gingrich hadn’t.”

Scott pays little attention to such accusations. He says he didn’t get to Congress “based on race” — and has always “worked under the concept that we are better together.”

“I felt that if I wanted to make a bigger impact on America as a whole, I could do that without being a member of the Black Caucus.”

Still, Scott calls his relationship with the organization “positive for the most part.” He said he has worked with liberal CBC members on issues like education and literacy, and with fellow South Carolina congressman James Clyburn on matters important to their state.

“You find an issue that you care about, and you work that issue,” he said.

Scott said he is equally unconcerned about polls showing Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney getting little — or in the NBC/Wall Street Journal poll 0 percent — of the black vote versus President Barack Obama in November.

“Ultimately I think the numbers are inconsistent with where black folks will end up voting,” he said. “There’s no doubt that the president has enjoyed strong support in the black community, and I’m sure he will continue to do so, but the truth is that this election year will prove that more black folks are voting for Republicans than the polls will indicate.”

Scott spoke about a range of issues, including the controversy over voter ID laws, which many voting rights advocates believe could disenfranchise millions of black voters. He called those concerns “more political theater than anything.”

“My grandfather is 91 years old, and he has a driver’s license,” Scott said. “At the end of the day, folks throughout the nation need an ID to do just about anything, from getting on a plane to cashing a check … for us to somehow think that voting should be different, it doesn’t match up, especially if you have counties where more than 100 percent of people turn out. I think there might be some voter fraud when more than 100 percent of the voters show up to vote.”

He is equally dismissive of claims that the Romney campaign is race baiting with ads accusing Obama — falsely according to fact checkers — of “gutting the work requirement in welfare reform.”

“I think the Romney campaign has been very much on the message that the economy is awful, the unemployment rate has been over 8 percent for more than 40 months, and that is awful; the unemployment rate for black folks is up over 30 percent since [George W.] Bush left office, and that is awful … home foreclosures for blacks are up by over 25 percent and are high overall and that is awful.”

“The fact of the matter is that what Mitt Romney has done consistently is focus on the issues of the day, which is not a race specific issue,” he added. “It is in fact an issue to build a better, brighter, stronger America, and that is for all of us without any racial delineation or designation, because this is one country.”

As to why his fellow black Americans seem resistant to his political party, Scott isn’t convinced.

“I’m not so sure they’re completely resistant to the Republican Party so much as they have embraced the historic position of voting Democrat,” he said. “If you think about it, in South Carolina in the 1950s, black Americans had to sue to vote in the Democrat primaries. So the issue of race and politics really goes back to the genesis of us trying to figure out how to get into the [political party’s] territory. My assumption is that once we got there, most folks didn’t leave.”

Follow Joy Reid on Twitter at @thereidreport.

Exit mobile version