In 2008, Barack Obama flipped the script on more than three decades of conventional wisdom when he openly embraced hip-hop - a genre typically viewed as politically radioactive because of its frequently controversial themes and anti- establishment ethos - in his campaign. Equally remarkable was the extent to which hip-hop artists and activists, often highly skeptical of national politicians, embraced him in return. As a result, for the first time it appeared we were witnessing a burgeoning relationship between hip-hop and national politics.
As we approach the 2016 election, however, this relationship is all but gone. Ironically, Obama - often called the first "hip-hop president" - largely is to blame.
This is especially disappointing in light of Obama's 2008 run for office, when he encouraged artists such as Jay Z and Sean "Diddy" Combs to campaign for him, referenced rap music in his interviews and speeches, played rap at his events and openly contemplated a space for hip-hop in an Obama White House. In one of the lasting images of the campaign, Obama stood in front of an audience in Raleigh, North Carolina, and referenced Jay Z's 2003 track "Dirt Off Your Shoulder" to raucous applause. In that moment, voters had every reason to believe that hip-hop indeed would have a seat at the table in an Obama administration.
Rappers certainly seemed to believe it. By summer 2008, when Obama emerged as the Democratic front-runner, we heard a barrage of songs from artists such as Nas, Jay Z, Common, Ludacris, Lil Wayne, will.i.am and Young Jeezy that expressed support for Obama. At the same time, a number of performers - including KRS-One, Nas, Busta Rhymes, T.I. and Young Jeezy - publicly declared that they would vote for the first time in a presidential election, a significant and potentially risky gesture for artists who have traditionally followed iconic rap group Public Enemy's militant call to "Fight the Power" rather than join it.
These and other rappers provided the soundtrack for, and undoubtedly helped generate, a radical shift in the electorate that propelled Obama to the White House: Youth voter turnout was the highest it had been in 35 years, and for the first time young black voters went to the polls at a higher rate than whites.