Following
the Tea Party phenomenon and watching its recent convention, it
was interesting to see media folks and Tea Party representatives
struggle with the question of why so few blacks were there.� This
is not a new thing, since the philosophical base of the Republican
party has been the Conservative movement for some time and their
conventions have also been lily white.� But the emergence of the
Tea Party phenomenon should cause us to ask how far it is from bona
fide anti-black white nationalists politics striving to enhance
its role in the political system.
The
media has attempted to legitimize the Tea Party movement as a resurgent
mobilization of �the American people� but when you listen to them
say who they are, there are distinct traces of the Republican party
in their approval of �limited, or small government,� �national security,�
opposition to social spending and large deficits and preferences
for tax cuts.� But how much of this is genuinely driven by the fact
that the real source of their mobilization is that the President
of the United States happens to be black?�� Most of all, they identify
as �Americans� and are trying to �take my country back� by taking
over the Republican party to ensure the election of representatives
who will vote to do what they wish.
This
is somewhat strange in light of the fact that at this moment the
Republican party has � with the lock-step of a German soldier �
voted against most of the programs and proposals of the Obama administration.��
Nevertheless, they see some Republicans as favoring the economic
establishment which was the source of the decline of their own economic
fortunes and so this is a populist conservatism that to some extent
is arrayed against institutional conservatism and its Republican
political manifestation.�
This
reminds me somewhat of Ross Perot who led a populist conservative
movement in the 1992 presidential election and won nearly 20% of
the vote for the American Independent Party.� If the nearly 20 million
Perot voters had joined the 39 million Bush voters, Republicans
would have overwhelmed the 45 million Bill Clinton voters.� That
is why there is such a push this time for the Republicans to capture
the Tea Party voters rather than to give them any encouragement
to form a third party.
This
time there is also much confusion about the identity of the Tea
Party voter, and the Ross Perot voter was also feeling deep angst
about economic issues and were especially angry at George H. W.
Bush, feeling that he had sold them out by raising taxes when he
campaigned in 1988 saying: �Read my lips, no new taxes.�� To the
extent that the economic crisis is again at the heart of this mobilization,
it may be also stimulated by the feeling that a black President
is fair game.� So, it�s hard to tell the people who spout white
nationalist slogans and carry signs at Tea Party gatherings that
are dripping with a racists edge from those who truly have policy
differences.� Analyzing the Tea Party convention attendees after
Sara Palin�s speech, I noted that when MSNBC discussed the movement,
David Gergen quickly said that they were conservative, but �not
racist.�
Well,
this opens up can of worms that a friend of mine, Professor Robert
Smith at San Francisco State University and others have addressed,
by researching the relationship between conservatism and racism.�
Smith finds that, with some caveats, there is a strong connection.
In
the 1960s, Mississippi Governor George Wallace could be identified
as a politician whose views were directly opposed to blacks and
their interests, while Republican Barry Goldwater opposed social
policies of that era on the grounds that he was opposed to �big
government.� There is supposed to be a philosophical difference
between them, but on racial questions, I wondered then as I do now
about the real difference.� If you oppose �big government� and support
a narrow frame of limited government that privileges national defense,
domestic security, reduction of taxes, don�t you exclude by definition
the interests of blacks and others for political equality and the
fair distribution of social resources?� I think so.� So the real
difference between segregationist George Wallace and Barry Goldwater
was negligible when it came to race.
Digging
a little deeper, I ran across an academic study by Joseph Bafumi
at Dartmouth College, full of statistics, which found that those
who identified themselves ethnically as �Americans� like many of
the Tea Partiers do were likely to be more anti-black than those
who did not.� They believed that we were spending too much to improve
the condition of blacks and thus, blacks constituted a threat to
their own interests � which is probably why so many whites opposed
Affirmative Action.�� He followed these ethnically described �Americans�
in the Presidential election of 2008 and found that they were more
largely situated in the Southern states and more likely not to vote
for Barack Obama.
The
obverse of this is the self-described �Americans� are now more likely
to oppose Obama�s policies and from what we see of those in the
Tea Party movement, they are more likely to anchor that group in
a white nationalists ethnic and ideological direction.� Basically,
it means that their opposition to Obama on stated policy grounds
cannot be trusted, that they are just as likely to oppose him on
racial grounds, but that their opposition may use policy as proxy
for race.�
Something
of this surfaced in an interview with two women at the recent Tea
Party Convention by CNN.� One of them was a small business owner
who was asked whether she supported Obama�s Stimulus Package.� She
said no and when faced with the interviewer�s comment that the Stimulus
Package had produced funds for the Small Business Administration
to support businesses like hers, she said that she wouldn�t participate
in any case.� This is a key that her opposition to Obama was not
necessarily rooted in his policies because when faced with the fact
that he supported her business, she rejected him anyway.
The
question one has to ask is how far will this revival of radical
conservatism take America.� Because of the growing voting power
of blacks and Hispanics, they may not be able to re-take political
power and if they cannot, what then?� In any case, the message to
the Democratic party is that they must have something to vote for
that matches the energy of Tea Party politics come the elections
of 2010 and 2012.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial
Board member, Dr. Ron Walters, is the Distinguished Leadership Scholar,
Director of the African American Leadership Center and Professor
of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland College
Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity) (University
of Michigan Press). Click here to
contact Dr. Walters. |