Parry writes: "Since the days of Richard Nixon's 'Southern strategy,' the Republican Party has wooed angry whites with coded messages designed to play to racial prejudices - and that pattern has come back strong in Campaign 2012 as the GOP seeks to rid the White House of a black Democrat."
'Southern Strategy' beneficiary Richard Nixon gives his trademark salute at a California rally just before the 1968 election. (photo: Dirck Halstead/UT Center for American History)
Fleecing the Angry Whites
10 January 12
Subtly and not so subtly, Republican presidential contenders are playing the race card again, hoping to win over the votes of angry whites by implicitly blaming the shrinking of the middle-class on preferential treatment of blacks and other minorities, reports Robert Parry.
ince the days of Richard Nixon's "Southern strategy," the Republican Party has wooed angry whites with coded messages designed to play to racial prejudices - and that pattern has come back strong in Campaign 2012 as the GOP seeks to rid the White House of a black Democrat.
Usually, the dog whistle comes in appeals to "states' rights" and allusions to "welfare queens," but sometimes the implicit becomes explicit, as occurred when former Sen. Rick Santorum blurted out, "I don't want to make black people's lives better by giving them somebody else's money. I want to give them the opportunity to go out and earn the money."
This comment was directed to white Republicans in Iowa, some of whom nodded knowingly, receiving the message that President Barack Obama wanted to take their hard-earned money and give it to shiftless blacks. It's a message as old as time in America and it apparently helped boost Santorum into a virtual tie with GOP front-runner Mitt Romney.
However, Santorum quickly came to regret his caught-on-video frankness, realizing that many Americans find such blatant appeals to racial prejudice offensive. So, he proceeded to lie about what he actually said, claiming absurdly that he never said "black people" - that he "started to say a word" and then "sort of mumbled it and changed my thought."
The word, in Santorum's revisionist tale, had come out something like "blah," not "black." Yet why the government would be so determined to give "other people's money" to "blah people" was not explained. Perhaps so the "blah people" could buy snazzier wardrobes or snappier cars to make them less "blah."
Thus, Santorum hoped he could have it both ways. The white racist voters in Iowa and in other states could hear that the ex-Pennsylvania senator wasn't going to use government programs "to make black people's lives better," while non-racists were supposed to believe that he simply stammered out a word that sounded like "black," but was really "blah."
Not to be outdone, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich went beyond his usual disparaging of "food stamps" by adding a reference to the NAACP, in case some slow-witted whites didn't get the racially tinged "food stamps" message. After all, many struggling whites also rely on food-assistance programs, indeed a much higher number than blacks.
Evil Guv-mint
These crude appeals to racial bigotry - often framed as a well-meaning desire to help blacks by ending their "dependency" on government help - fits, too, into the broader right-wing narrative, that the federal government and its do-gooder programs are what's holding America back.
If only Washington got out of the way - along with its regulations, its taxes on the rich and its social safety net - then the entrepreneurial spirit of America would be revived and prosperity would spread from sea to shining sea, the right-wing message goes.
This message resonates with many Americans, especially whites, because it panders to their rose-colored personal mythologies that they and their parents climbed the economic ladder solely due to their hard work and grit. It's always an easy sell for politicians to flatter people by saying "you made it on your own."
Yet, for the vast majority of Americans, the reality is quite different. Especially after the Great Depression of the 1930s, the federal government took the lead in creating the social and economic framework that undergirded the nation's later success.
Even right-wing icon Dick Cheney has acknowledged that the New Deal lifted his family from economic hardship into the middle-class - and contributed to his own renowned personal confidence, which he ironically has put to use dismantling the New Deal.[See Consortiumnews.com’s "Dick Cheney: Son of the New Deal."]
Government activism also wasn't a deviation from the Founders' "originalist" intent, as the Right would have you believe. Decisive action by a strong central government to protect the nation's interests was precisely what the drafters of the Constitution had in mind.
The driving goal of the Constitutional Convention in 1787 was to create a vibrant federal system that could address national problems and make the new country competitive with - and invulnerable to - the then-stronger nation-states of Europe.
Contrary to Tea Party ideology, the Constitution was not about embracing states' rights. Instead, the Constitution eradicated states' sovereignty which had existed under the Articles of Confederation. The Constitution asserted the sovereignty of "we the people of the United States" and the national Republic, with the states relegated to a secondary status.
To understand what happened, all you have to do is examine the Articles of Confederation, which governed the new country from 1777 to 1787, in comparison with the Constitution, or read even popular histories of the Constitutional Convention like Miracle at Philadelphia by Catherine Drinker Bowen.
Gen. George Washington despised the notion of "state sovereignty," which the states had cited during the Revolutionary War and afterwards as an excuse not to contribute promised funds to the Continental Army. "Thirteen sovereignties," Washington wrote, "pulling against each other, and all tugging at the foederal head, will soon bring ruin to the whole."
It is true that some Revolutionary War leaders, such as Virginia's Patrick Henry, ardently opposed the Constitution, but they did so because they saw it as an infringement on states' rights. In other words, both proponents and opponents recognized what the Constitution's drafters were doing: creating a strong central government.
The Constitution, which was ratified by the 13 states in 1788, represented the most dramatic shift of power from the states to the national government in U.S. history.
Lost Battles
Still, ratification of the Constitution did not stop proponents of states' rights from resisting federal authority, especially in the slave-owning South.
But the battles over what the Constitution intended - including President Andrew Jackson's facing down the Nullificationists in the 1830s, President Abraham Lincoln's defense of the Union in the Civil War, and the desegregation of the South in the 1950s and 1960s - were ultimately settled in favor of national sovereignty. Federal law prevailed over states' rights.
Having lost those historic fights, the Right latched onto a new strategy: to confuse the American people by rewriting the nation's founding history. The Right's influential politicians and pundits began claiming that the drafters of the Constitution were opposed to a strong federal government and were big advocates of states' rights.
For instance, last year on the campaign trail, Gov. Rick Perry, R-Texas, declared, "Our Founding Fathers never meant for Washington, D.C. to be the fount of all wisdom. As a matter of fact they were very much afraid of that because they'd just had this experience with this far-away government that had centralized thought process and planning and what have you, and then it was actually the reason that we fought the revolution in the 16th century was to get away from that kind of onerous crown if you will."
Besides being 200 years off on when the Revolutionary War was fought, Perry had the larger point wrong, too. The Founders - at least those who drafted the Constitution - saw the gravest danger to the new country coming from disunity. They viewed a vibrant central government as a way to protect the young Republic from renewed encroachments from Europe's monarchies, which otherwise could turn one state or one region against another.
The Tea Party's revisionist history of the Founding also has required a gross exaggeration of the Tenth Amendment's significance. It states: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively or to the people."
While references to the Tenth Amendment draw cheers from today's Tea Party crowds, its wording must be compared to the Confederation's Article II, which says: "Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power, jurisdiction, and right, which is not by this Confederation expressly delegated."
In other words, the Constitution flipped the balance, stripping the states of their "sovereignty, freedom, and independence," while granting broad powers to the national government, including over interstate commerce. The Tenth Amendment was essentially a sop to the anti-federalists, added three years after the Constitution was ratified.
The New Deal
The Founders' "originalist" vision of a strong central government was vindicated in the 1930s when President Franklin Roosevelt led a national effort to recover from the Great Depression, which had been caused largely by lightly regulated "free-market economics."
Roosevelt's strategy, which involved large-scale development programs for modernizing the nation, such as the Tennessee Valley Authority providing electrification for much of the rural South, was carried forward by subsequent presidents, Republican as well as Democrat, through the post-World War II years.
President Dwight Eisenhower initiated the Interstate Highway project which improved the national transportation system; President John F. Kennedy launched the space program which achieved major technological breakthroughs; President Lyndon Johnson pushed medical programs and research that aided later pharmaceutical advances; and even the "failed" presidencies of the 1970s - Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter - focused the United States on environmental safeguards and energy self-sufficiency.
During this era - from the 1930s into the 1970s - millions of Americans were lifted into the middle-class and others grew rich from exploiting the innovations that government projects made possible.
All companies benefited from the U.S. transportation infrastructure; many piggybacked onto the technological breakthroughs in electronics; the drug industry exploited taxpayer-funded research in the development of new medicines. It turned out that government could create jobs, especially through alliances with the private sector.
Indeed, it is fair to say that the great American middle-class was largely the creation of the federal government - from the New Deal, which guaranteed labor rights and created Social Security, to the GI Bill which sent World War II veterans to college, to more recent developments such as the creation of the Internet and GPS devices.
It was not until Ronald Reagan's presidency in the 1980s that the political dynamic shifted. As Reagan declared that "government is the problem," the role of Washington in the lives of Americans was demonized. Many middle-class Americans forgot how much they and their families had benefited from actions of the federal government.
The myth of self-reliance proved seductive. The government was recast as an instrument for helping the lazy at the expense of the productive. Through subtle and not-so-subtle messaging, white Americans were told that the government was hurting them to help undeserving blacks and other minorities.
Government regulations were redefined as meaningless red tape that penalized important innovations, such as the exotic "financial instruments" that Wall Street was devising to "revolutionize" the banking industry. The thinking was that the government just had to get out of the way and let industry "self-regulate."
It followed, too, that Reagan's economic theories, such as "supply-side economics," would evolve into gospel on the Right. Since the beloved Reagan more than halved the top marginal tax rates on the rich - so they could invest in "supply-side" production and thus create more jobs - many conservatives embraced this notion with religious zeal.
Today, Gingrich boasts about his role in helping to formulate and enact "supply-side economics" - despite the fact that it has proved a crushing failure, as the American super-rich do little to create American jobs with their extra wealth. Indeed, U.S. corporations are sitting on trillions of dollars in capital because of a lack of consumer demand.
That lack of consumer demand has resulted from the decline in the American middle-class over the past few decades as Reaganomics has increasingly transformed U.S. society into one of extreme wealth and widespread want. In other words, the shrinking middle-class is proof that "supply-side" economics doesn't work, even as Republicans keep promoting it.
But the now-undeniable damage to the American middle-class - inflicted largely by right-wing ideology - creates a political problem for Republicans. Many voters may be hesitant to double-down on a bad bet.
So, it is perhaps not surprising that some of the current crop of GOP presidential candidates have turned again to more and more blatant appeals to racial prejudice. After all, racism is the primeval "wedge issue."
In this sour economic climate, more racist messaging - like Santorum's opposition to giving money to "blah people" and Gingrich's endless allusions to "food stamps" - can be expected as the Republican primary season rolls on.
For more on related topics, see Robert Parry's "Lost History," "Secrecy & Privilege" and "Neck Deep," now available in a three-book set for the discount price of only $29. For details, click here.
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, "Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush," was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two previous books, "Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq" and "Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth'" are also available there.
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For White Republicans anyone who isn't a White Republican is the 'Other" and there is the full scale of prejudice.
Uber-xenophobia.
Oh really? This is just a southern problem? Santorum played the issue in Iowa. I don't think Iowa was in the Confederacy. Please, please, correct me if I'm wrong. If memory serves, Brown vs. Board of Education involved a racist school board in Topeka, Kansas, not one in Tampa, Florida. And Kansas didn't secede either, right? But if it makes all you Yanks think it's okay to label this an exclusively southern problem, well, go right ahead. That's been your thinking all of my life.
Next, I expect to read rounded out insults directed at Robert Perry and his "lack of knowledge" for disagreeing with their sources, even if his information is historically accurate.
Reppublicans are a hate mongering group. They seem to hate anything that really puts forth a true Christian agenda. Love and hope for your fellow man.
Jesus' teachings get no traction from the religious Right.
The real astonishing fact is that they have always gotten away with it. Most mass media is owned by republican-minded people so they are not likely to expose this fact. And the very people the republicans hope to attract are not really bright enough or self critical enough to see when they are being motivated by hate (esp. race hate) and fear.
Santorum's commnent was transparently the Reagan racism -- turning white against blacks with the suggestion that blacks get more welfare than whites. It was a lie and it was disgusting. But it was standard republican operation procedures, as Parry shows so well.
The big lie is that since the Republicans support businesses, their policies improve the economic well being of the entire nation.
Among other weaknesses in this line of thinking is that by allowing businesses to make the rules, the businesses will be profitable. And profitable business will create jobs.
What really occurs is that when business drives the rules, short term profitability is the best goal. Labor becomes a disposable commodity so that investing in training and paying good salaries are not in the interest of short term profits.
Racism can and is used as another tool to drive short term profits as well. Social stability, upward mobility, and market competition are all forces that drive toward long term profitability. And of course when business makes the rules and short term profit runs the business, the money industry own the business. (See Bain Capitol for an example)
People are being led to blaming the victims for the economic problems, and when it looks like those victims are a different color than White, viola; instant Racism!
The GOP and their Tea Party are all about race. McConnell even stated it publicly when he said his main goal was to make Obama a one term president. And listen to the rhetoric of the other candidates and see it too as they cater to white bigotry.
The GOP needs to disband and start over. While they were originally formed to abolish slavery, they have become a hate-filled group owned and operated by the 1%.
Americans deserve better!
To your statement: "The GOP and their Tea Party are all about race. McConnell even stated it publicly when he said his main goal was to make Obama a one term president." I agree since this is the only time in my memory, where a Minority leader in the Senate, and Majority leaders in the House have agreed and banded together to say NO to any legislation offered by this President. Thus, blocking not only important legislation the President needed to move this country out of the worse economic crisis we've been in since the depression, but also important Presidential appointments. This, over helping the country in it's time of sever need! I have a word for this: Treason! Yet, in this blog I don't hear much protest. Why?
As to this statement you make: "Americans deserve better!" I say, we only deserve what the majority voters vote for!
I hope we vote to show that we deserve the President we have, with the hope of a better future, that through his leadership will surely be ours, and deservedly so! - Suavane
"Every time I see them on TV," George Morris, 77, told the Arizona Republic, "it makes me want to vomit."
Morris, a self-described "ultra-conservative," initially went to Giffords' town hall meeting outside the grocery store in Tucson on Jan. 8, 2011, to complain to his congresswoman, who he says kept voting for liberal causes.
However, before Morris had a chance to speak a gunman later identified as Jared Lee Loughner began shooting. Morris' wife, Dorothy, 76, was one of those killed in the rampage, and Morris was hit in the legs and back. Giffords was shot in the head.
He was angry at Giffords' job performance before the shooting, but now Morris is more convinced that she should be removed from office immediately, according to MSNBC.com.
Also according to the article it noted that he blamed Gifford's husband for the shooting because he did not get Congresswoman Giffords protection when she went into public.
Nixon's Southern strategy was cynically designed to flip Whites in the South to vote Republican, but Ronnie added the economic element to the strategy. Of course, LBJ did predict that the Democrats would lose the South for a generation due to the Civil Rights Act.
While I believe appealing to White Racists is mildly effective, I believe that LBJ was correct and that now that a generation has passed the tactic has lost a lot of its impact. Then again, maybe I'm an optimist.
The Constitution was structured to balance states power with federal power because the framers feared both an overly powerful central government and the inability of squabbling states to develop a prosperous nation. Our nation is federated with certain (but not unlimited) overarching (i.e. trumping) powers delegated to the Federal government. Federation means that the sovereignty of the states remains (read the history carefully!!), but it is not absolute. Neither, however, is Federal power absolute.
This is where we have run into trouble. On one hand, we have people saying that there should be no central control. On the other hand, we have people who want the nation to have only one set of (Federal) rules nation-wide.
Our federal government is obligated to protect ALL citizens rights. That is its primary function. That is where it has failed. Beyond its delegated powers in the Constitution, all power rests with the States and We the People (not They the Corporations).
This -to me at least- is the key phrase in the whole article.
Would you call the current Federal Government "VIBRANT"?
When I first came to the US in the 1970's, for all it's faults in international adventurism and it's attempted demonization of the American Indian Movement there was indeed a feeling of vibrancy and possibility, perhaps as a resultant of the 60's -70's push back by younger and even middle-aged non-conformists and the need to put the shame engendered in the aftermath of the Veitnam debacle behind the populace in the faces of it's leaders.
This impetus even carried over into the early years of Reagan, which is when I remember it starting to die -I was overseas for much of the 80's- but kept in touch anyway.
On returning, I was sadly forced to recognize the mean-spiritedness and inward-looking nature of the country at both national and regional level in so many ways as affected by each region's cultural norm, especially the South, where I spent some time.
I have been an individualist and small-business owner but spent time in the corporate culture as both employee and consultant, and see the "slowness" inculcated by the now-dominant corporate culture in the citizens who cleave to this mentality: Just a thought for discussion.
"States Rights" has become a buzzword for those who oppose civil rights. But there's no doubt many worried at the time that the federal gov't would eventually become too powerful, just as many would today if the US had to give up its sovereignty and weapons to the United Nations.
One of our problems is so much is decided in Washington DC, and much of it by the president. As a result, everyone wants their favorite to be president. With so much at stake, corruption follows, just as it did when Rome became an empire. On our present course, We are no longer a United States; we are a disunited States. I don't see any peaceful way past the divide.
One possible solution would be to decentralize (a la Jefferson) some power back to the states. Let states, under the Constitution, decide issues they can decide, basically domestic ones. That reduces pressure to elect a president who will appoint Supreme Court Justices who will vote this way or that.
It also means we often wouldn't have one rule fits all, the federal government's interpretation. It might mean states could decide the issue of abortion. (Up go the red flags, I know). Would it be so bad if some states banned abortion while others allowed it?
My mother was from Arkansas. Many of her siblings and generations of descendants have remained in that same community for generations. They tend to be ignorant of the most simple things about the world, think that education is elitist, Southern Baptist religion the only way to heaven, and well...generally they are angry whites who feel entitled to condem people of color and "liberal" white cousins like myself. I don't care for the south at all and will not choose to vacation in the southern states from Arizona to south of the Mason Dixon.I get the creeps just thinking about it.
1) To be fair to the Founders, and particularly some of the opponents to the Constitution, it should be pointed out that some of the opposition was based upon a belief that the Constitution didn't go far enough to protect individual rights--hence, the virtual immediate adoption of the Bill of Rights.
2) It always distresses me to see this whole race issue dressed up as a Southern problem. It's simply too easy to do this, in spite of years of efforts to so. Any fair examination of the history of race in this country will show otherwise. If you believe otherwise, ask yourself why there was not a single African-American major league baseball player until...what was it? 1948? '49? At which time every major league team was in a state which fought against the Confederacy? Why was that?
3) I use every reasonable opportunity I can find, including this one, to tout a book which I wish everyone I knew would read: "When Affirmative Action was White," by Ira Katznelson. 'Nuff said.
The Anti-Federalists felt that the Consitution didn't address the concerns of individuals or provide any rights or recourse. The constitution alone is just a formal design for governement. It says nothing about individual rights. Representatives from the religious colonies who attended the Constitutional Convention threatened not to ratify the constitution unless it came with individual guarantees. Sectarian interests were concerned that a secular government might interfere with religion and secularists feard that religion would dictate to government. Hence, 1st Amendment.
Anti-Federalists had cause to fear the guarantees weren't enough. The 5th Amendment contains an "unless" and because congress is charged with making the rules of "due process" in common law there is room for denying rights.
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