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Obama’s second inauguration a mark of progress in its own right

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Now, as Obama enters his second term, those themes are already being replayed.

Ben Jealous, head of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, is as tired of answering the question as I’ve become of asking. Has Obama delivered for the masses of black people who helped put him in office?

Jealous sighs — its meaning clear in the silence:

Isn’t it enough that the man expanded access to health care, dispatched Osama bin Laden and steered the nation through the worst recession in 70 years?

“I’m waiting for the article about the white president who disappointed the white people the most,” Jealous said.

“How come nobody ever asked that question: How did white people feel about Bill Clinton, about George Bush?”

Because a white president has always been perceived to be the leader of all the people.

Obama’s appraisal is muddied by uncertain expectations.

That middle-of-the-road guy we saw on the campaign trail was also fist-bumping, singing Al Green and listening to Common. Surely he would honor his roots, and black folks would have something coming.

Aquil put it more bluntly. “Some of us have issues, this sense of entitlement,” she said. “We’re always looking for the hookup. People thought, ‘We have one in office now. We’re gonna get this or that.’”

Obama has collected high-profile black detractors — academics, politicians, commentators — disappointed that he hasn’t done more to tackle poverty and racial injustice.

“The president owes Black folk. BIG time,” wrote commentator Tavis Smiley in The Huffington Post.

“Other constituencies have gained ground under Obama,” Smiley told me. “But unless something significantly different is about to happen in this second term, the numbers may well indicate that black people did worse under Obama.”

“Black people have had his back,” Smiley said. But other groups seem to have his ear: Latinos on immigration reform. Women on health care. Gays and lesbians on marriage.

Those groups are following a path we trod generations ago, galvanized by Martin Luther King Jr., pounding on the door to end Jim Crow.

But the broad problems impeding black progress today — unemployment, poor education, incarceration — aren’t so focused, so fundamental, as getting permission to sit at the front of a bus or drink from a white-only fountain.

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