Why is Ben Carson unraveling?


By Clarence Lusane

Tribune News Service

We shouldn’t be surprised that the wheels are coming off of the poorly built Ben Carson bus.

The Carson phenomenon has never been about his ideas or experience. For most of his supporters, it is about Carson not being Barack Obama. That’s why seeing his personal story peeled apart is more upsetting to his supporters than the fact that he lacks even the most basic knowledge and skills to lead the country.

It is Carson himself who centralized his life story as the fundamental – possibly only – reason he should be elected commander in chief. He made spectacular claims that he cannot back up. His West Point “scholarship” offer, a supposed near-homicidal stabbing he carried out and his run-in with an armed robber are all uncorroborated, though he has written about and told these stories for years.

Either he knew they were fabrications and embellishments, or, perhaps more disturbingly, he genuinely came to believe his own lies.

It is telling that Carson’s main campaign adviser is the disgraced conservative activist Armstrong Williams, who has had his own struggles with ethics and truth-telling. Williams lost his multiple gigs as a television commentator after it was revealed that he was being paid to promote President George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind policy, a fact he failed to reveal on numerous occasions when he praised the initiative.

Williams, who is African-American and a leading strategist behind the Carson political machine, must have approved Carson’s bizarre rap-song radio ad. Though Carson and his fans tout his lack of interest in race as his most attractive quality, they clearly are not above shameless pandering to try to woo black voters.

They ignore the fact that Carson’s positions on the Confederate flag, Ferguson, Mo., the Black Lives Matter movement and President Obama are wildly out of sync with the views of most African-Americans. Only in some alternative reality can Carson and his campaign assume that his racial pandering, as his conservatives supporters would phrase it, could succeed.

There are dark clouds on the horizon.

Clarence Lusane is the chairman of the political science department at Howard University. He wrote this for Progressive Media Project, a source of liberal commentary on domestic and international issues.