It’s the Racism, Stupid
Its the Racism, Stupid
The GOP establishment cant freak out about Trump now. Its been playing his game for decades, just more artfully.
By Gary Younge
February 11, 2016
Three years ago, as the Republican-led House of Representatives engineered a brief government shutdown, Congressman Marlin Stutzman (R-IN) explained the strategy underpinning the protest. We have to get something out of this, he said. And I dont know what that even is. The shutdown wasnt a tactic so much as a tantrum, an act of collective petulance posing as politicsinexplicable to the outside world, incoherent in its aims, and incandescent in its rage.
The bizarre circus that the GOP presidential primary has become is not a freak occurrence. Regardless of the eventual nominee, the rise of Donald Trump (I would bomb the shit out of [ISIS]), the ascent of Ted Cruz (To God be the glory), and the endurance of Ben Carson (Putin is a one-horse country: oil and energy) do not contradict the general trajectory of the party, but rather confirm it. This fact-free, bigoted populism awash in money and drowning in misanthropy may illustrate the GOP at its most brazen, but its hardly in any way aberrant.
In this regard, Trump is the partys most obvious emissary. His blatant xenophobia emerges from the GOPs half-century of race-baiting since Richard Nixons Southern strategy was first conceived. The initial idea was to woo Southern whites, who were angry about the advances of the civil-rights movement, with coded racial messaging that wouldnt alienate the partys Northern supporters. You have to face the fact that the whole problem is really the blacks, Nixon once explained to his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman. The key is to devise a system that recognizes that while not appearing to. This method was once very effective. Ronald Reagan launched his 1980 campaign at the Neshoba County Fair in Mississippi, not far from where three civil-rights activists had been murdered in 1964, by talking about states rights. George H.W. Bush had his infamous Willie Horton ad in 1988, while Bush Jr. spoke at Bob Jones University in 2000, where interracial dating was banned at the time.
But with white people heading toward minority status and becoming a lower percentage of the voting public every cycle, the message necessarily gets cruderparticularly with the presence of a black president. In the 2012 GOP primaries, former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum told a crowd in Iowa that I dont want to make black peoples lives better by giving them somebody elses money, while Newt Gingrich branded Obama the food-stamp president.
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