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- <text id=91TT2608>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: Bigotry Still Works at Election Time
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 44
- POLITICS
- Why Bigotry Still Works At Election Time
- </hdr><body>
- <p>When politicians rail about crime, welfare or Big Government,
- they are often really talking about race
- </p>
- <p>By Dan Goodgame/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Demagogues don't yell "nigger" or "Jew boy" anymore.
- They've learned better. Just as David Duke shed his Klansman's
- sheets and Nazi uniform for the well-groomed banality of a
- suburban stockbroker, he traded in his bigoted rhetoric for a
- slick new glossary of coded appeals to racial resentment, market
- tested over the past two decades by mainstream conservative
- politicians. When Duke, following Richard Nixon's lead,
- denounces hiring "quotas," many among his white working-class
- supporters hear him saying, The government is going to give your
- jobs to blacks. When Duke, like Ronald Reagan, castigates
- "welfare queens," nobody has to be told what color they are.
- </p>
- <p> John Sununu, the White House chief of staff, observed in
- the course of denouncing Duke on the eve of last Saturday's
- election, "If he succeeds, it will be by appearing to run not
- as a racist." Yet the sad truth is that Duke has been exploiting
- a political style and strategy that Governors, Senators and
- Presidents have been using to win elections since 1968, the year
- Democrat George Wallace demonstrated that white populism,
- stripped of overtly racist language, could attract support
- outside the South.
- </p>
- <p> Disguised race baiting persists in politics for a simple
- reason: it works. "Some of us would like to get beyond this
- business of scaring people and dividing them against blacks,"
- says one of George Bush's closest political advisers, "but it's
- hard to argue against a formula that's seen as successful." The
- tactic has succeeded best in states and districts where the
- minority population is large enough that whites can be made to
- feel threatened by it. When George Brown ran for re-election as
- Tennessee's first black supreme court justice in 1980, he says
- he got more support from white hillbillies who had never met a
- black professional than he did from whites in the Nashville
- area, where, Brown says, "a lot of whites think they know about
- blacks."
- </p>
- <p> Racial tactics can backfire if they are ill-timed or
- overly strident. Many white voters will abandon any candidate
- who they judge has crossed the line into blatant racism. Several
- top political aides, including the late Lee Atwater, counseled
- Bush to sign the civil rights bill passed by Congress last
- year, rather than make an issue of quotas so long before his
- next campaign. "Quotas are a legitimate issue," says one G.O.P.
- strategist, "but I thought it couldn't be sustained for 24
- months without making a mistake. And when you make a mistake on
- this issue, it's a big mistake because it gets you labeled
- racist, and there's nothing more sensitive with our yuppie
- constituency."
- </p>
- <p> While many politicians are accused of employing racial
- euphemisms, all deny guilt. The line between legitimate debate
- and appeals to racism is often fuzzy and turns on the good faith
- and background of the candidate. Candidates rarely play the race
- card as baldly as North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms did in 1990
- in his race against Democrat Harvey Gantt, the black former
- mayor of Charlotte. Helms, who refers to blacks as "Freds" and
- has for decades been hostile to civil rights legislation, was
- eight points behind Gantt three weeks before the election. Then
- he ran an 11th-hour TV ad showing the hands of a white man
- crumpling a rejection slip for a job that had been reserved for
- a "racial quota." Many Republicans as well as Democrats
- denounced the ad for inflaming racial animosity. But it worked:
- Helms came from behind to win, 52% to 48%.
- </p>
- <p> In other cases, however, Republicans as well as
- conservative Democrats protest that many blacks and liberals are
- too quick to cry "racist" at any attempt to discuss explosive,
- racially tinged issues such as welfare, crime and affirmative
- action. "There is no reason for Republicans to be ashamed to
- talk about racial preferences in terms of equal opportunity,"
- says former Republican Party chairman Bill Bennett. "You're
- probably going to get called a racist, but that won't stick if
- you establish credibility on these issues by spending time among
- black people, in schools and on street corners," debating them
- instead of talking about them. Housing Secretary Jack Kemp, who
- spends more time among working-class blacks than any other Bush
- adviser, says that "if you don't have a positive message to
- balance talk of racial quotas, you're going to come across to
- blacks as discriminating."
- </p>
- <p> In the recently published book Chain Reaction, authors
- Thomas and Mary Edsall write that race "is no longer a
- straightforward, morally unambiguous force in American
- politics." Instead, the Edsalls contend, considerations of race
- permeate voter attitudes toward such issues as taxation, equal
- opportunity, public safety and moral values. Racism alone, they
- say, fails to explain why large numbers of white, formerly
- Democratic voters have defected to the G.O.P. Worse yet, from
- the Democratic standpoint, blasting the defectors as bigots
- instead of exploring the complicated reasons for their
- disaffection only angers them. "Democratic liberals' reliance
- on charges of racism guarantees political defeat," the Edsalls
- write, "and...guarantees continued ignorance of the dynamics
- at the core of presidential politics."
- </p>
- <p> Though some Democrats hope Duke will sully the G.O.P. as
- a racist party, Democrats must share the blame for Duke's
- success and the rising national appetite for Duke's scapegoating
- style. Leaders of both parties attribute Duke's appeal to rising
- unemployment, yet as Democratic strategist James Carville, a
- native of Louisiana, observes, it is Democrats who are held most
- responsible for "failing to define ourselves as we traditionally
- have, as the party that defends the interests of working people
- of all races."
- </p>
- <p> Polling and focus-group studies by both parties show that
- working-class voters increasingly believe the system is loaded
- in favor of the rich and the poor, at the expense of the middle.
- "They see that the top of America and the bottom don't operate
- by the same rules as the rest of us," says Elaine Kamarck,
- senior fellow at the Progressive Policy Institute in Washington.
- "The big executives run companies into the ground and give
- themselves big bonuses. The welfare recipients take drugs,
- engage in crime and have babies they can't afford, while the
- legal secretary is scrimping and saving to afford another kid."
- These voters consider both parties to be controlled by wealthy
- campaign contributors but view the Democrats as also beholden
- to other "special interests," including blacks. Many of Duke's
- supporters "don't resent blacks as blacks," says a Republican
- pollster. "They resent them as a special-interest group that
- gets special favors."
- </p>
- <p> Democrats also must share with Republicans the
- responsibility for the barrenness of political debate in which
- Duke has thrived. When the subject is welfare, for example, few
- leaders of either party point out that the major programs for
- the poor constitute about 6% of federal spending--far less
- than the value of corporate tax breaks and other welfare for the
- wealthy. "You can't write off Duke's voters as racists," says
- Tony Snow, the chief White House speechwriter. "Duke is talking
- about things people really care about: high taxes, crummy
- schools, crime-ridden streets, welfare dependency, equal
- opportunity. A lot of politicians aren't talking about these
- things."
- </p>
- <p> Harris Wofford, the liberal Democrat who upset former
- Attorney General Dick Thornburgh for a Senate seat from
- Pennsylvania two weeks ago, understood the impatience of
- working-class voters with Democrats who talk more about the
- agendas of gay and feminist activists than about lunch-box
- economic issues. Wofford avoided that mistake by talking mostly
- about jobs and health insurance. Fred Steeper, a Republican
- pollster who surveyed Louisiana voters before the recent primary
- vote, observes that "Duke is tapping into the same middle-class
- frustration as Wofford"--but in a far more destructive way.
- </p>
- <p> Duke ran for President (on the Populist Party ticket) in
- 1988 and may well do so in 1992 (as a Republican). And although
- most of Bush's political advisers see little threat to the
- President's re-election from the ex-Klansman, some fear he could
- peel away Republican votes as a third-party candidate in the
- general election, as Wallace did to the Democrats in 1968 and
- 1972. If Duke runs, he will surely attack Bush for signing a
- civil rights bill little different from the one he vetoed as a
- "quota bill" in 1990.
- </p>
- <p> Bush believes his racial attitudes are above reproach
- because of the support he has given the United Negro College
- Fund since he was a Yale undergraduate in the 1940s and because
- he has reached out widely to black leaders and spoken at black
- colleges. At the same time, critics observe, Bush opposed the
- 1964 Civil Rights Act. During his 1988 campaign, Bush almost
- never went into black neighborhoods to ask for votes. And his
- campaign relied heavily on TV spots focusing on Willie Horton,
- a black murderer who raped a white woman while on furlough from
- a Massachusetts prison.
- </p>
- <p> Bush has a talent for convincing himself that his motives
- are pure. When he nominated Clarence Thomas to the Supreme
- Court, for example, he was asked whether it mattered to him that
- Thomas was black. "I picked the best man for the job," Bush
- declared, adding that if Thomas happened to be black and
- maintained a black presence on the high court, "so much the
- better." That would seem to be Bush's attitude toward racial
- code. When his campaign harps on Willie Horton, Bush believes
- he is only making a point about crime. If some voters find the
- pitch more persuasive because Horton is black--well, so much
- the better.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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