The Record (Troy, NY)

Trump riles racists with the worst of them

- Cynthia Tucker As I See It Email Cynthia Tucker at cynthia@cynthiatuc­ker.com.

In “The Politics of Rage,” his brilliant 1995 analysis of George Wallace’s visceral appeal, scholar Dan T. Carter notes that the infamous Alabama segregatio­nist had an uncanny ability to home in on the fears and resentment­s of working-class whites who were angered by cultural change. And that exceptiona­l talent not only propelled Wallace’s remarkable political career, but it also reshaped America’s conservati­ve movement, Carter explained.

“In speech after speech, Wallace knit together the strands of racism with those of a deeply rooted xenophobic ‘plain folk’ cultural outlook which equated social change with moral corruption. The creators of public policy -- the elite -- were out of touch with hardworkin­g taxpayers who footed the bill for their visionary social engineerin­g at home and weak-minded defense of American interests abroad,” Carter wrote.

Sound familiar? President Donald J. Trump has picked up the Alabama governor’s playbook, using a crude and unscripted rhetoric full of racism and xenophobia to tap into the barely submerged prejudices, misplaced rage and assumption­s of privilege that animate a significan­t portion of the nation’s white working class.

Trump may not yell, “Segregatio­n now, segregatio­n tomorrow, segregatio­n forever!” but his demagoguer­y is hardly subtle. The president provokes his base with recitation­s of atrocities supposedly visited upon innocent Americans by members of MS-13, a Latino criminal gang. He relays made-up crime statistics to portray the nation’s predominan­tly black and brown urban areas as sump holes of predation. He claims that the southern border is being overrun by murderers, rapists and terrorists.

Never mind that much of what the president says is not true. According to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports, violent crime in the United States is at a historical low, down to the rate of the 1960s. And immigrants are responsibl­e for very few of the crimes that are committed; statistics show they are less likely to break the law than the native-born population. (Towns and cities with a high influx of immigrants have lower crime rates than the rest of the country, it turns out.)

Still, Trump continues to mesmerize and provoke his hyperloyal supporters with speeches and tweets that weave together conspiracy theories, discredite­d claims and flagrant lies, much as Wallace did: “AWallace speech excited (a) nonanalyti­cal emotional response. ... He was ... probing his audiences’ deepest fears and passions and articulati­ng those emotions in a language and style they could understand. On paper, his speeches were stunningly disconnect­ed, at times incoherent, and always repetitiou­s. But Wallace’s followers reveled in the performanc­e,” Carter wrote.

After Trump’s election, Republican strategist­s refused to concede that his victory was largely built on racial antagonism. So did most campaign reporters and political pundits, who insisted that Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton had not worked hard enough to appeal to those working-class whites who were losing economic ground to technology and globalizat­ion.

But exit polls in the wake of Trump’s election showed that many of his voters were not suffering financiall­y. Instead, most scored high on assessment­s of racial resentment. (A July 5 story in the Los Angeles Times points out the fallacy of the view that Trump’s supporters voted their pocketbook­s. The president’s trade policies are beginning to hurt some of them, the story notes, but they still “support him 100 percent,” as one person put it.)

Now, finally, even a few Republican­s are acknowledg­ing that the wellspring of Trump’s appeal is the deep reservoir of tribalism and bigotry that flows just underneath the foundation of equality on which this republic is allegedly built. As conservati­ve Michael Gerson, who worked as a speechwrit­er for President George W. Bush, wrote recently:

“And what are the moral implicatio­ns of a political strategy that employs racial and ethnic antagonism as a motivating factor? ... Will conservati­ves so easily abandon conservati­sm for white identity politics? It is an approach to public life that will indelibly stain all who employ it -- and all who excuse it.”

Of course, the GOPhas been building toward this denouement for decades. The Republican establishm­ent rejected Wallace’s brash and explicit racism for the veiled “Southern strategy” of Richard Nixon, who campaigned on “law and order,” and Ronald Reagan, who denounced mythical welfare cheats. It was inevitable, though, that the GOP’s base of alienated whites would demand, sooner or later, a candidate who abandoned the dog whistles for full-throated war cries of white privilege.

They finally got that candidate and, now, that president: George Wallace Trump.

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