During an interview last Monday with Wolf Blitzer on CNN, Republican vice presidential candidate Mike Pence refused to describe Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke as “deplorable.”
He said, “I’m not in the name-calling business.” Pence continued, “We don’t want his support and we don’t want the support of the people who think like him.”
Following a meeting with House Republican leaders the next day, Pence again refused to describe David Duke as “deplorable.”
This was not an error. Pence’s refusal to call an unapologetic white supremacist such as David Duke “deplorable” is a strategic choice and message.
It is one that David Duke and his ilk heard loud and clear. Duke explained to Buzzfeed that:
It’s good to see an individual like Pence and others start to reject this absolute controlled media. The truth is that the Republican Party in Louisiana — I received the vast majority of Republican votes for United States Senator before and for governor before that in my state. The truth is the Republican Party is big tent. I served in the Republican caucus. I was in the Republican caucus in the legislature. I had a perfect Republican voting record. It’s ridiculous that they attack me because of my involvement in that non-violent Klan four decades ago.
It is true that 2016 is the political year of Donald Trump.
He has dominated the American corporate news media with at least $3 billion in free coverage. Trump is a fascist who has normalized a type of nativist, racist, bigoted, misogynistic and juvenile politics that is usually confined to the margins of the country’s public discourse.
Trump is a political performance artist who is remarkably entertaining: As a reality TV star and student of professional wrestling, Trump is an expert at the staged and spectacular event. His political rallies are “safe spaces” for violence, rage, vitriol and hatred. In all, these events are human zoos and political rodeos for angry white Americans who feel that they have lost “their country” and yearn to “make it great again.”
It is also true that Trump’s candidacy represents a nadir in modern American politics. It is Mike Pence and what is signaled by his refusal to describe Duke as “deplorable,” however, that has the potential to do the most harm to the country in the long term.
Politics is a copycat game. In this game, political entrepreneurs try to gain personal power and influence by leveraging and manipulating the grievances, needs and wants of various groups of people. Trump’s ability to win more votes than any Republican presidential primary candidate in recent American political history demonstrates that there is a ready and eager audience for “old-fashioned” white racism and bigotry.
The assertive influence over Donald Trump and the Republican Party of the alt-right — a moniker that’s really just a rebranding effort for overt white nationalist and white supremacists, which already have an outsized influence over right-wing politics — is an additional reminder that mining white racism has historically resulted in political gold for (white) American politicians.
No comments:
Post a Comment