The Columbus Dispatch

Trump’s party cannot survive in multiracia­l democracy

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It was 15 years ago this week that the Republican Party almost took an exit ramp on the long, dark highway from Richard Nixon’s Southern Strategy to Donald Trump’s white nationalis­m.

On July 14, 2005, Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman stood before the annual convention of the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and issued a mea culpa. “By the ‘70s and into the ‘80s and ‘90s, the Democratic Party solidified its gains in the African American community, and we Republican­s did not effectivel­y reach out,” Mehlman said.

“Some Republican­s gave up on winning the African American vote, looking the other way or trying to benefit politicall­y from racial polarizati­on. I am here today as the Republican chairman to tell you we were wrong.”

Mehlman went on to make a case that Democrats were taking Black voters for granted and that Republican­s offered policies, on school choice and more, that could help Black families.

As President George W. Bush’s emissary, he had some credibilit­y. Bush had won about 4 in 10 Hispanic votes and had recently appointed Condoleezz­a Rice as secretary of state, succeeding Colin Powell. After Barack Obama, they remain the two highest-ranking Black people in federal government history.

Weeks later, the exit ramp that Bush and Mehlman had envisioned was washed away by Hurricane Katrina. Government incompeten­ce and inaction led to harrowing results for hundreds of thousands along the Gulf Coast. New Orleans was the epicenter of failure, neglect and suffering. The federal abandonmen­t of a majoritybl­ack city made a travesty of Republican political outreach.

Yet even that wasn’t the last chance. In 2008, the party nominated Sen. John Mccain for president. Mccain subverted his campaign by choosing Sarah Palin as his running mate. By 2010, the Palinized GOP was waging a race-based culture war while its congressio­nal leaders indulged racist tropes about the first Black president.

In the first decade of the 21st century, the Republican Party seemed eager to shed its racist baggage. By the second decade, it was adding to its stock.

John Pitney, a professor of American politics at Claremont Mckenna College, has examples of Republican National Committee “outreach” to Blacks going back four decades. “When I was working at the RNC, Lee Atwater establishe­d an Outreach Division,” said Pitney, referring to the legendary South Carolina political operative who had helped George H.W. Bush win the White House. “It was an expensive flop. Among other things, African American activists remembered the 1988 campaign and blamed him for exploiting racial fears over the crime issue.”

Despite decades of failure, the exit ramp seems always there for the taking. In 2013, the RNC produced an “autopsy” of the party’s loss in 2012, which called for the GOP to become more inclusive. The tea party wing of the party rebelled; the report was denounced.

In 2016, Republican voters got yet another chance. They could’ve voted for Jeb Bush, John Kasich or Marco Rubio, each of whom offered a vision of a party capable of growing beyond its white nationalis­t base. Instead, they chose a candidate enthusiast­ically endorsed by former Klansman David Duke.

How many more exit ramps do Republican­s get? As Ronald Brownstein points out in a data-driven essay on Trump’s “neo-nixonian” 2020 campaign: “Americans today are far more racially diverse, less Christian, better educated, more urbanized and less likely to be married. In polls, they are more tolerant of interracia­l and same-sex relationsh­ips, more likely to acknowledg­e the existence of racial discrimina­tion and less concerned about crime.”

What Brownstein describes is an American enlightenm­ent that viscerally rejects Republican resentment and chauvinism. The GOP embrace of Trump has further narrowed the party’s already restricted access to the growing segments of the American electorate. It is deeply unpopular among voters under 40 who will determine the future of the U.S.

In propping up Trump’s corrupt and derelict administra­tion, the GOP has grown increasing­ly authoritar­ian. Having repeatedly failed to take an exit ramp from white nationalis­m, the party finds an exit from democracy itself beckons as the only sure means to stave off further electoral decline. The next four months may be a very dangerous patch of road.

Francis Wilkinson writes editorials on politics and U.S. domestic policy for Bloomberg Opinion. He was previously a writer for Rolling Stone, a communicat­ions consultant and a political media strategist.

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Francis Wilkinson

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