Fauntroy has published several academic books. In 2003, he published
Home Rule or House Rule? Congress and the Erosion of Local Governance in the District of Columbia. In
Home Rule or House Rule?, Fauntroy studies the struggle for self-governance in Washington DC, which is subject to the jurisdiction of the United States Congress under
District of Columbia home rule without having any
voting representation in Congress. The book presents a history of the relationship between the Republican Party and African American voters, from the party's founding through the
New Deal era to the early 2000s, with a particularly in-depth focus on the four decades starting around 1970. Fauntroy demonstrates that the beginnings of African American voters' near-unanimous rejection of the Republican Party, to the extent that regularly only single digit percentages of African American voters cast ballots for the GOP, only began in 1964 with the candidacy of
Barry Goldwater and the ideological clarification of the two major American parties. This was the culmination of a longer trend in which the party identification of African American voters had been steadily shifting towards the Democratic Party for decades, with about two thirds of African American voters supporting the Democratic Party during the New Deal. Fauntroy argues that the movement of African Americans away from the GOP was caused both by the clarification of Republican policy stances that are at odds with the priorities of many African American voters, as well as the Republican Party's usage of racially charged symbolism and rhetoric throughout a series of election campaigns. Fauntroy therefore attributes the very low levels of support for the Republican Party among African American voters both to the GOP's public policy and to its political strategy.
Republicans and the Black Vote was a finalist for the
Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Award in 2007. Fauntroy has been interviewed, or his work has been cited, in media outlets including
The New York Times,
The Washington Post,
Time, and
Newshub. Fauntroy has also appeared frequently on
C-SPAN and
CTV News. Fauntroy has been a regular contributor to
HuffPost, publishing dozens of articles there over more than a decade after 2006. The
United States House of Representatives delegate and Civil Rights leader
Walter Fauntroy is Michael Fauntroy's uncle. ==Selected works==