Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Use of ‘Democrat Party’ label on the rise

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — Two days before the assault on the U.S. Capitol, Pennsylvan­ia state Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin County, said supporters of then-President Donald Trump’s claims of election fraud were basically in a “death match with the Democrat Party.”

A day later, right-wing activist Alan Hostetter, a staunch Trump supporter known for railing against California’s virus-inspired stay-at-home orders, urged rallygoers in Washington to “put the fear of God in the cowards, the traitors, the RINOs [Republican­s In Name Only], the communists of the Democrat Party.”

The shared grammatica­l constructi­on — incorrect use of the noun “Democrat” as an adjective — was far from the most shocking thing about the two men’s statements. But it identified them as members of the same tribe, conservati­ves seeking to define the opposition through demeaning language.

Amid bipartisan calls to dial back extreme partisansh­ip following the insurrecti­on, the intentiona­l misuse of “Democrat” as an adjective remains in nearly universal use among Republican­s. Propelled by conservati­ve media, it has caught on with far-right elements that were energized bythe Trump presidency.

Academics and partisans disagree on the significan­ce of the word play. Is it a harmless political tactic intended to annoy Republican­s’ opponents, or a maliciousl­y subtle vilificati­on of one of America’s two major political parties that further divides the nation?

Thomas Patterson, a political communicat­ion professor at Harvard’s Shorenstei­n Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, said using “Democrat” as an adjective delivers a “little twist” of the knife with each usage because it irritates Democrats, but see sit as little more than that.

“This is,” he said, “just another piece in a big bubbling kettle of animositie­s that are outthere.”

Others disagree. Purposely mispronoun­cing the formal name of the Democratic Party and equating it with political ideas that are not democratic goes beyond mere incivility, said Vanessa Beasley, an associate professor of communicat­ions at Vanderbilt University who studies presidenti­al rhetoric. She said creating shorthand descriptio­ns of people or groups is a way to de humanize them.

Inshort: Language matters. “The idea is to strip it down to that noun and make it into this blur, so that you can say that these are bad people — and my party, the people who are using the term, are going to be the upholders of democracy,” she said. To those who see the discussion as an exercise in political correctnes­s, Susan Benesch, executive director of the Dangerous Speech Project, said to look deeper.

“It’s just two little letters — i and c — added to the end of a word, right?” she said. “But the small difference in the two terms, linguistic­ally or grammatica­lly, does not protect against a large difference in meaning and impact of the language.”

During the “Stop the Steal” rallies that emerged to support Mr. Trump’s allegation­s that the 2020 election was stolen from him, the constructi­on was everywhere. Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel accused “Democrat lawyers and rogue election officials” of “an unpreceden­ted power grab” related to the election. Demonstrat­ors for the president’s baseless cause mirrored her language.

After Republican congress woman Marjorie Taylor Greene, of Georgia, was removed from her House committees for espousing sometimes dangerous conspiracy theories, she tweeted: “In this Democrat tyrannical government, Conservati­ve Republican­s have no say on committees any way.”

Mr. Trump’s lawyers used the constructi­on frequently during his second impeachmen­t trial, following the lead of the former president, who employ edit routinely while in office. During a campaign rally last October in Wiscons in, he explained his thinking.

“You know I always say Democrat. You know why? Because it sounds worse,” Mr. Trump said. “Democrat sounds lousy, but you know what? That’s actually their name, the Democrat Party. Right? The Democrat Party. So I always say Democrat.”

In fact, “Democratic” to describe some version of a U.S. political party has been around since Thomas Jefferson and James Madison formed the Democratic-Republican Party in the 1790s. Modern Democrats are loosely descended from a split of that party.

The precise origins of Republican­s’ truncated phrasing are difficult to pin down, but the Republican National Committee formalized it in a vote ahead of the 1956 presidenti­al election.

Then-spokesman L. Richard Guylay told The New York Times that “Democrat Party” was “a natural,” because it was already in common use among Republican­s and better reflected the “diverse viewpoints” within the opposing party — which the GOP suggested weren’t always representa­tive of small-ddemocrati­c values.

Wisconsin Sen. Joseph McCarthy, who had just led his notorious campaign against alleged communists, Soviet spies and sympathize­rs, was the most notable user of the phrase “Democrat Party” ahead of the vote. The current RNC did not respond to emails and phone mes-sages seeking comment.

The constructi­on was used sparsely in the following decades, but in recent times has spread to become part of con-servatives’ everyday speech.

At the height of last summer’s racial justice protests, the group representi­ng state attorneys general criticized “inaction by Democrat AGs” to support law enforcemen­t. In explaining its rules for cleaning Georgia’s voter rolls, the office of Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said it was following a process started in the 1990s under “a Democrat majority General Assembly and signed into law by a Democrat Governor.” Asked recently what he would think of his former health director running for the U.S. Senate in Ohio, Republican Gov. Mike DeWine responded, “I’m going to stay outof Democrat primaries.”

Using Democrat as a pejorative is now so common that it’s almost jarring to hear a Republican or conservati­ve commentato­r accurately say “Democratic Party.”

Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor said she wishes both parties would abandon their heightened rhetoric toward each other.She spoke out forcefully in September after the Ohio Republican Party maligned a “Democrat common pleas judge” who had ruled against it.The party later apologized.

Her objection was the politiciza­tion of the judiciary, which she has fought against, and not specifical­ly the GOP’s misuse of the word “Democrat.” But in a later interview, she said the language was a reflection of today’s hyperparti­san political environmen­t.

“It’s used as almost like a curse word,” said Justice O’Connor, a Republican. “It’s not being used as a compliment or even for purposes of being a benign identifier. It’s used as a condemnati­on, and that’s not right.”

For their part, Democrats rarely push back, even when the phrase is used in state legislativ­e chambers or on the floor of Congress. It wasn’t always that way.

Then-President George W. Bush departed from his written remarks and used the phrase “Democrat majority” in his 2007 State of the Union address. He was swiftly rebuked and apologized.

“Now look, my diction isn’t all that good,” a rueful Mr. Bush said. “I have been accused of occasional­ly mangling the English language, so I appreciate you inviting the head of the Republic party.”

Mr. Bush’s self-deprecatin­g joke highlighte­d a key issue around Republican­s’ use of “Democrat” as an epithet, says political scientist Michael Cornfield, an associate professor at George Washington University. Democrats don’t have a comparable insult for Republican­s.

“It’s a one-way provocatio­n,” he said.

In the 1950s, Democrats toyed with a tit-for-tat approach in which they would refer to Republican­s as “Publicans,” the widely despised toll collectors of ancient Rome. Republican­s scoffed at the effort, which they rightly noted no one would understand. Republican­s also could turn it around as a way to burnish their brand: In British usage, a publican is someonewho owns a pub.

Meanwhile, “Republic” — without the “a-n” — isn’t derogatory. It’s known as a “God word” in American politics, just as small-d “democratic” is, meaning a revered cultural concept that’s universall­y understood.

The truncated “Democrat,” on the other hand, “rhymes with rat, bureaucrat, kleptocrat, plutocrat,” Mr. Cornfield said. “’Crats’ are bad. So you cansee why they do it.”

David Pepper, a former Democratic Party chairman in Ohio, says Republican­s’ phrasing has “clearly been thought about.” Even so, he doesn’t see trying to erase it as a good use of Democrats’ time as the party seeks to reset the national agenda after fouryears of Mr. Trump.

He said that while President Joe Biden has pledged national unity, “the other side is literally trying to make the other party sound like rodents.”

“To me,” Mr. Pepper said, “that’s absurd and disturbing atthe same time.”

 ?? Julio Cortez/Associated Press ?? State Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin, speaks to supporters of then-President Donald Trump as they demonstrat­e Nov. 7 outside of the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol in Harrisburg. Mr. Mastriano is among those who have used the phrasing “Democrat Party,” which has been adopted by conservati­ve politician­s as a pejorative truncation of the party’s name.
Julio Cortez/Associated Press State Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin, speaks to supporters of then-President Donald Trump as they demonstrat­e Nov. 7 outside of the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol in Harrisburg. Mr. Mastriano is among those who have used the phrasing “Democrat Party,” which has been adopted by conservati­ve politician­s as a pejorative truncation of the party’s name.

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