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When Is Enough Pandering Really Enough?
Chronicles Magazine editorial ^ | October 2020 | Paul Gottfried

Posted on 09/30/2020 6:15:37 PM PDT by Pelham

Having forced myself to listen to most of the Republican National Convention (RNC) orations in late August, I was struck by what my daughter, who had done such work professionally, characterized as the program’s “underlying marketing strategy.” The GOP’s advisers seem to have pitched their message at the demographics among whom Trump has had the least support in the polls, namely suburban, college-educated women, and blacks.

Trump, according to the polls, was losing the former group until recently by about 20 percentage points, and may be winning the votes of no more than 8 percent of blacks. The overall size of his potential black vote, however, is uncertain. According to a Rasmussen Reports poll taken in August, Trump enjoys a favorable rating among 36 percent of blacks.

Presumably, certain demographics are already locked-in for Trump. White Americans living outside of metropolitan areas, particularly ones without the advantage (or handicap) of a college education, are almost certain to vote for the president and his party. The RNC trotted out artisans and farmers to testify to the glories of the Trump presidency, though most of the ones I saw on TV came from Wisconsin, Minnesota, and other battleground states that Trump is trying to win in November.

Least of all do Trump and his advisers seem concerned with holding on to Southern rural populations that will likely vote for the president no matter what he says or does. His connection to these voters may be based largely on the fact that he does not represent the other party, which is the one that blacks have supported by as much as 97 percent in past elections.

Until recently, the Democrats were, of course, the party for which Southern whites voted not just since the Late Unpleasantness, but going all the way back to Thomas Jefferson. Since the 1960s, however, the Democrats have become increasingly identified with the left, while the GOP has become—apparently by an act of divine grace—what the late Senator Jesse Helms called “the American Party.” Southern whites outside of our large cities do not care how far to the right or left GOP candidates are situated. They will vote for anything with an “R” just as blacks will vote for anything with a “D,” as they have since the 1930s.

Given this reality, Republican strategists have decided to go after the votes they need from the other party’s constituents, while naturally assuming their locked-in voters will stay with them. After all, there is nothing on their right that the Deplorables, who voted in Trump against the will of the GOP establishment, could vote for and have any hope of electing.

Moreover, the attacks on Trump coming from the mainstream media and the Never Trumpers allege that the president’s administration is engaging in a far-right coup. On CNN, MSNBC, and the national press, Trump stands for the Ku Klux Klan, Southern segregationists, and Hitler’s Third Reich combined.

While these rants are hardly an endorsement, they do convey the impression that there is no way one could confuse Trump for an employee of the NAACP or Anti-Defamation League. The Trump haters may have performed the unintended service of cementing Trump’s popularity with a large white base, which detests the leftist media and rallies to those whom their enemies hate.

There are two paths the GOP is pursuing to enlarge its tent. The first is to associate its party with progressive causes that would resonate with those demographics the party hopes to reach. In one convention speech after another, Republicans portrayed themselves as feminist warriors against racial prejudice, and heirs to the spiritual legacy of an ideologically updated Abraham Lincoln.

By way of old newsreels and statements of self-proclaimed feminists, the GOP identified itself with the Nineteenth Amendment and most of the consequences of that beneficent act. More problematic was the party’s attempt to draw a distinction between the feminist cause and a woman’s unrestricted right to an abortion. This is an overshadowing issue for the feminist movement, but abortion is also something the party’s largely Christian base categorically rejects.

It was therefore necessary for the GOP to sell a feminism compatible with the “right to life.” It combined an anti-abortion position with fulsome praise for the Nineteenth Amendment and by reminding suburban women that Donald Trump created lots of jobs for them. After being beat over the head with this theme for two days, convention viewers were likely suffering from concussion.

We had speeches by former governor Nikki Haley and Senator Tim Scott, both of South Carolina, on the first night of the convention, causing Fox News anchors to swoon with delight over the GOP’s inclusiveness. Haley, who used to advertise herself as a Southern evangelical of Indian ancestry, appeared repackaged as the proud “brown girl” with Sikh parents. Her father wore a turban and her mother a Sari, she said, and because they settled in a Southern backwater they were subject to discrimination from stereotypical rednecks.

This young Sikh lady prevailed, was elected governor of South Carolina, and then humanely and wisely brought the races together by “removing that divisive symbol,” namely the Confederate Battle Flag, which supposedly caused racial animosity.

Senator Scott also spoke about how he became a United States senator, although his grandfather (like many Southerners white and black) picked cotton and never learned to read.

A problem with these stories in which Southern whites are made to look bad is that this is precisely the demographic responsible for the political victories of Haley and Scott. Although Scott touts his accomplishment as a black Republican elected to the Senate from a onetime Confederate state, 86 percent of his votes came from white voters, and only 14 percent from black ones. Our Sikh victim of bigotry also won her office in South Carolina overwhelmingly with white votes. Salon correctly observed that while Haley’s convention speech insisted “America is not racist,” the rest of her remarks implied exactly the opposite.

Conservative media celebrities like Mark Levin and Glenn Beck have also been in the forefront of those calling General Robert E. Lee and other Confederate leaders “traitors.” Indeed, the emotionally erratic Beck has even compared the Confederacy to Nazi Germany. Meanwhile, the corrupt and harsh post-war Reconstruction era is defended by many of America’s putatively conservative publications.

In an especially bizarre form of virtue-signaling, Chuck Moss, a Republican candidate for local office in Michigan and professed admirer of Russell Kirk, demanded a lady in Metropolitan Detroit remove one of his campaign signs from her lawn. She had a Confederate Battle Flag on her property and Moss grew anxious when he saw his name near such a “divisive symbol.” He not only confiscated this sign but then went on to affirm his loyalty to the Union side and praised one of his ancestors for having participated in Sherman’s March through Georgia.

No restraint is observed by the GOP when it comes to turning Southern whites into the bad guys. The second path pursued by the GOP and its supporters in trying to wrest constituents from the Democrats is to convince Americans that it is their political adversaries, not they, who are the real racists and sexists. By now there is a vast array of Republican media celebrities, including Dinesh D’Souza, Laura Ingraham, Sean Hannity, and Dennis Prager who routinely assure us that the Southern Democrats were always the party of racism, the KKK, slavery, and treason, while the GOP has always stood with women, blacks, and other minorities.

These assertions overlook the obvious fact that parties have changed drastically over the centuries, even if they kept the same names. For those GOP loyalists hungry for this narrative, D’Souza’s The Big Lie: Exposing the Nazi Roots of the American Left is the anachronistic screed par excellence. Anyone who plans to read it should lock his brain in a safety deposit box before plunging in.

It is easy to demonstrate that in the past neither national party conformed to current standards of political correctness. If Democrats once defended slavery, the Republicans were once blatantly nativist and anti-Catholic (unlike Southern Democrats in the antebellum period). Republican abolitionists, as Robert N. Rosen shows in his book The Jewish Confederates, even attacked the Confederacy as a Jewish plot, and inveighed against the Confederate Jewish Secretary of State Judah Benjamin in stridently anti-Semitic statements.

Trump supporters on Fox News have recklessly attacked Joe Biden as “racist” for opposing court-ordered busing to achieve racial integration in the 1970s. Busing mandates were a wildly unpopular example of judicial activism that politicians from both parties turned against, and which never enjoyed majority white or black backing. There was also bipartisan support for the mandatory sentencing legislation that Biden endorsed in 1994; whether this law worked out as well as intended, it is ridiculous for Republicans to scold Biden and his party for having supported this measure. Many Republicans at the time did so, and even more enthusiastically.

Allow me to note that not all speeches delivered at the RNC were forgettable or ludicrous. There were also moving addresses in defense of the right to life, one by a devout nun who had practiced medicine in the Third World. There were pointed attacks by black civic leaders on the corrupt Democratic administrations in predominantly black urban centers. There were also testimonies by policemen who had worked in hostile political environments, and reminders by working people of the financial disasters that a Biden administration would bring them and their families.

Finally, I was moved by the Middle American decency that I discerned in the speech given at Fort McHenry in Baltimore by Vice Present Mike Pence, on the night of Aug. 26. Here was a man of faith who loves his family and his country and who is willing to take the side of “law and order.” I could even stand listening to The Donald’s stem-winder, in which the president made no embarrassing gaffes while offering lots of red meat to many different groups.

Less edifying, however, were the results of the RNC’s sometimes clumsy efforts to enlarge its tent. At times that convention did fit the Democrats’ taunting description of it as an “alternative reality.”


TOPICS: History; Miscellaneous; Society
KEYWORDS: 2020electionbias; blackvoters; chronicles; fakenews; getsitwrong; gottfried; pandering; revisionisthistory
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Paul Gottfried is editor in chief of Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture. He is also the Raffensperger Professor of Humanities Emeritus at Elizabethtown College, where he taught for 25 years, a Guggenheim recipient, and a Yale Ph.D. He is the author of 13 books, most recently Fascism: Career of a Concept and Revisions and Dissents.
1 posted on 09/30/2020 6:15:37 PM PDT by Pelham
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To: Pelham

i have heard upwards of 40% of support in the black community for trump...

and once you’ve gone black...


2 posted on 09/30/2020 6:26:23 PM PDT by teeman8r (Armageddon won't be pretty, but it's not like it's the end of the world or something)
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To: Pelham
If Democrats once defended slavery, the Republicans were once blatantly nativist and anti-Catholic (unlike Southern Democrats in the antebellum period).

Not sure if I can take this guy seriously. Part of the KKK's stated mission included protecting southern culture from Catholics. Though they may have sprung into being post-Civil War, it is hard to believe that it was a sudden inclusion.
3 posted on 09/30/2020 6:27:52 PM PDT by fr_freak
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To: Pelham

“Protect the downside and the upside will take care of itself.” Trump, Art of the Deal


4 posted on 09/30/2020 6:28:20 PM PDT by Raycpa
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To: Pelham

The article kind of dances around the question what becomes of the Republican Party after Trump. Big tent outreach or ideological purity? Somewhere in between or will conservatism have to be reinvented to survive?


5 posted on 09/30/2020 6:32:58 PM PDT by buckalfa (Feed Your Head ! Feed Your Head !)
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To: Pelham

As my dear, departed father would say....”He must be really smart to be that ***damned dumb.”


6 posted on 09/30/2020 6:35:23 PM PDT by jdsteel (Americans are Dreamers too!!!)
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To: Pelham

Dont ask here

Too many idiots here are happy to pander on the basis or race and gender


7 posted on 09/30/2020 6:36:15 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not Averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: Pelham
"...No restraint is observed by the GOP when it comes to turning Southern whites into the bad guys. The second path pursued by the GOP and its supporters in trying to wrest constituents from the Democrats is to convince Americans that it is their political adversaries, not they, who are the real racists and sexists. By now there is a vast array of Republican media celebrities, including Dinesh D’Souza, Laura Ingraham, Sean Hannity, and Dennis Prager who routinely assure us that the Southern Democrats were always the party of racism, the KKK, slavery, and treason, while the GOP has always stood with women, blacks, and other minorities..."

The truth really grates on this Leftist turd. Says it all right there.

It is pretty evident that The Left is, and alway has been, the party of Racism. This piece of crap just wants to rewrite history as the Left has been trying to do since the Roosevelt Administration.

8 posted on 09/30/2020 6:41:03 PM PDT by rlmorel ("Leftism is the plaything of a society with too much time on its hands." - Candace Owens)
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To: Pelham
This piece of crap just wants to rewrite history as the Left has been trying to do since the Roosevelt Administration."

And doing it quite successfully, I might add. If they weren't so despicable, one might admire their success.

9 posted on 09/30/2020 6:42:40 PM PDT by rlmorel ("Leftism is the plaything of a society with too much time on its hands." - Candace Owens)
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To: rlmorel

“The truth really grates on this Leftist turd. Says it all right there.”

You might want to revise that. Paul Gottfried is a paleocon scholar and the author of at least 13 books including 5 histories of conservative thought.


10 posted on 09/30/2020 8:04:19 PM PDT by Pelham (Liberate the Democrats from their Communist occupation)
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To: Pelham

>>Fascism: Career of a Concept and Revisions and Dissents.

Fascinating.

Which nations have active Fascist parties in office?

Which nations have active Communist parties in office?

He needs to stop getting paid to jerk off.


11 posted on 09/30/2020 8:04:28 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Joe Biden- "First thing I'd do is repeal those Trump tax cuts." (May 4th, 2019)l)
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To: rlmorel

>>who routinely assure us that the Southern Democrats were always the party of racism, the KKK,

The Klan was founded as an anti-Republican terrorist group.

Jim Crow laws and poll taxes were created by Democrats.

Systemic Racism? That is the Democrat Party. The one that destroyed the black “nuclear family”.


12 posted on 09/30/2020 8:07:13 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Joe Biden- "First thing I'd do is repeal those Trump tax cuts." (May 4th, 2019)l)
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To: buckalfa

“The article kind of dances around the question what becomes of the Republican Party after Trump”

I don’t think he intended to solve that issue. Gottfried is a paleocon historian and philosopher. He is writing as an observer rather than offering a prediction.


13 posted on 09/30/2020 8:12:34 PM PDT by Pelham (Liberate the Democrats from their Communist occupation)
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To: Pelham

Once you start down that path, it’s never enough, and it never gets you what you’re after. It’s a drug.


14 posted on 09/30/2020 8:17:51 PM PDT by aquila48 (Do not let them make you care! Guilting you is how they control you.)
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To: a fool in paradise

He’s a historian. You evidently aren’t.


15 posted on 09/30/2020 8:20:57 PM PDT by Pelham (Liberate the Democrats from their Communist occupation)
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To: Pelham

Perhaps he can take a closer look at what is happening right under his nose on American colleges and universities... Might as well be indoctrination camps ... Strange the ones doing the teaching never seem to get around to reflecting upon their own results.


16 posted on 09/30/2020 8:32:47 PM PDT by Just mythoughts (Psalm 2. Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing?)
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To: fr_freak

“Part of the KKK’s stated mission included protecting southern culture from Catholics”

There have been three unconnected eras of the KKK.

The 1st Klan was a resistance movement against the 10 year Republican military occupation governments of Reconstruction. It basically ended along with Reconstruction in 1876. That Klan had no interest in anti-Catholicism.

The 2nd era was inspired by the world’s first major motion picture Birth Of A Nation in 1915. It was a combination political and fraternal movement. Popular in the north and west in addition to the south. It was anti-Catholic and along with the WCTU it was largely responsible for passing Prohibition. Corruption and a couple of headline crimes ended it in the late 1920s.

The 3rd era Klan coincided with opposition to the civil rights movement. It doesn’t seem to have any particular concern with Catholicism. The anti-Catholicism of the 2nd era Klan was tied in with opposition to the heavy immigration in the early 1900s.


17 posted on 09/30/2020 8:42:29 PM PDT by Pelham (Liberate the Democrats from their Communist occupation)
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To: Pelham

He spouts falsehoods about Republicans and Democrats.

You believe that bs?


18 posted on 09/30/2020 8:45:34 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Joe Biden- "First thing I'd do is repeal those Trump tax cuts." (May 4th, 2019)l)
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To: Pelham

1947 Democrat Klansman on the Supreme Court hands down anti-Catholic decision against parochial schools

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Black


19 posted on 09/30/2020 8:48:53 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Joe Biden- "First thing I'd do is repeal those Trump tax cuts." (May 4th, 2019)l)
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To: Just mythoughts

Paul Gottfied is 80 years old. He’s not on a campus. And being a paleocon he can hardly be blamed for what colleges taught when he was there.


20 posted on 09/30/2020 8:49:06 PM PDT by Pelham (Liberate the Democrats from their Communist occupation)
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