Charles Ogletree Touts 3-Party System
/African Americans must explore
alternatives to the current two-party system if they hope to gain more
political clout, Climenko Professor of Law Charles J. Ogletree said
last night. In a speech at the John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum titled
“African Americans & 21st Century Politics: Time for
Reconstruction?”, Ogletree made a case for the formation of a third
party to rival the existing Republican and Democratic parties because,
he said, both groups have neglected issues affecting African Americans.
Ogletree, who called himself an “eternal optimist,” began his talk by
revealing that, when he agreed to speak at the Forum several months
ago, he had hoped to give an “upbeat, encouraging analysis of the John
Kerry presidency.” But instead of attacking President George W. Bush,
Ogletree suggested that the best way to move forward is to analyze how
blacks have achieved political success in the past. “I think it’s time
to...use the Reconstruction model to think about a third effort,” he
said. According to Ogletree, the period after the Civil War known as
Reconstruction is best known for the struggle for suffrage and other
political rights for blacks. “It also is well known for its failure to
fulfill the promise of equality made to African Americans,” he said.
Ogletree praised Sen. Barack Obama D-Ill.—a graduate of Harvard Law
School and Ogletree’s former student—for his leadership in the
Democratic party. [more]