Thursday, November 20, 2014

Race and Racism Unite the GOP in the South


The book and later the movie "The Help" depicted just how racist the South was in the 1950's.  Sadly, in much of the South, little has really changed.  Things have become much more subtle - at least most of the time - but underneath the surface racism is alive and well.  And the Republican Party has milked it and inflamed it as much as possible in its quest for political power.  Outside of major cities, things can still be pretty frightening if one is black - or gay, for that matter.  Across the Bible Belt, the "godly Christians" truly seem unable to see the common humanity of others if they don't have white skin and subscribed to a toxic fear and hate based form of Christianity.  A column in the New York Times looks at this current reality.  Here are excerpts:
This region [the South] has become so solidly Republican, particularly since President Obama was elected, that there isn’t much left there for the Democratic Party to defend or salvage.

Republican gerrymandering has further weakened Democratic power, even when Democrats vote in high numbers. As Lee Fang wrote this month at Republic Report, “Republican gerrymandering means Democratic voters are packed tightly into single districts, while Republicans are spread out in such a way to translate into the most congressional seats for the G.O.P.”

After the midterms, The Associated Press provided this tally:
“In January, the G.O.P. will control every governor’s office, two U.S. Senate seats, nearly every majority-white congressional district and both state legislative chambers in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas and Texas.”
It is important and relevant that The Associated Press pointed out the racial dichotomy because, in the South, ideology and racial identity are nearly inseparable.

When the coworker had inquired about a neighborhood that included black homeowners, the agent responded, “You don’t want to live there. That’s where the Democrats live.” The co-worker was convinced that “Democrats” was code for “black.”

He may well have been right. Mississippi is among the most racially bifurcated states politically, with one of the highest percentage of black voters in the country. In 2012, 96 percent of blacks voted for the Democratic presidential ticket, according to exit polling data, while 89 percent of whites voted for the Republican ticket.

As Gallup pointed out in March, “Whites have become increasingly Republican, moving from an average 4.1-point Republican advantage under Clinton to an average 9.5-point advantage under Obama.”  And this increasingly homogeneous Southern delegation is likely to wield increased influence . . . 

The degree to which the South remains solidly Republican may well depend on the changing racial composition of Southern states, specifically a rise in their non-white population.

This regional hyper-racialization of our politics has many origins, some historical and some current, but it does not bode well for the future of the country as a whole.

We are self-sorting ourselves into hardened, impenetrable citadels of ideological sameness that harks back to the nation’s darker days.

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