RangerDave wrote:
Bullpucky. Republican identity politics isn't some belated reaction to decades of Democratic identity politics; it was there from the very beginning. When the Dems embraced Civil Rights in the 60s and the Dems' white, Christian, working and middle class base revolted, the Republicans immediately swooped in and started appealing to that demographic.
The only bullshit here is the idea that some generalized white, middle, working class Democrat demographic revolted. That was true
in the south, particularly those states that voted for Geore Wallace but it was not true of those voters in general. Not even remotely. That's why West Virginia was reliably Democrat until the 2000 election, 35 years after civil rights, just as an example. The Democrats were, at the time of civil rights, still comfortably the party of workers, especially union workers and those voters cared a lot more about that than civil rights. This fantasy that whites ever formed some unified identity group is just that - fantasy. That didn't start becoming true until the 1980s and 1990s. Heck,
Texas went Democrat in 1958 and again in 1976. The entire, South, in fact, when Democrat in 1976 - it was the West that went almost all Republican. Significant portions of the South went Democrat in 1992 and 1996. Apparently, the candidate being from the South matters a lot more than whether he's appealing to who you think he's appealing to.
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Hence Nixon's "Southern Strategy". Ditto with the anti-war, counterculture left and the Republican's corresponding appeal to the "Silent Majority" on the right.
Exactly. "Southern strategy". That was an appeal
to the south, not to whites generally, and those voters were going to go somewhere. Tricking Wallace voters into going Republican was, in the short term, pretty astute. It wasn't like the Republicans were going to even try to reintroduce segregation.
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Over the next decade you get the rise of the Moral Majority and "family values" Republicans, leading to the "Culture Wars" of the 80s and 90s. And that's been the basis of Republican identity politics ever since - an appeal to white, Christian, "real Americans" in the "Heartland" with their supposed monopoly on patriotism and traditional values (as opposed to the limousine liberals and coastal elites with their moral degradation and hatred of all things American). It's a direct line going back to the shift in the parties' respective bases in the 60s and 70s, not a post-1990 frustration with Democratic rhetoric.
Except that it isn't, in large part because "white" and "Christian" aren't even remotely related to each other in that context. The "CHristian" portion of that appeal resonated with a large portion of Hispanics, and it was something many Blacks were sympathetic to, even if it didn't lure them to the Republicans.
Furthermore, that demographic you're complaining about the Republicans appealing to was the one Democrats were targeting as the boogeyman to try to unify everyone else under one banner even if they had contrary views. It was essentially impossible for the Republicans not to appeal to those people - and it's part and parcel of Democrat nonsense to pretend those appeals were something sinister, when the Democrats were just using earlier versions of the "basket of deplorables" argument.
Heck, you just seriously tried to make the argument that whites in general had some unified "revolt" against civil rights, when clearly nothing of the sort happened. This fantasy that the Republicans jumped right on the identity politics bandwagon is precisely that - fantasy. A lot of the voters you think they were appealing to were voting reliably Democrat well into the 1990s. Places like Youngstown, Ohio, were Democrat strongholds less than 2 decades ago. Some of these people are only going Republican now, and it's because they've finally realized the Democrats don't actually care about economic issues or workers any more and haven't in decades; they care about pandering a bit, then turning around to demonize these people to secure the urban areas in the big-electoral-vote urban centers of the largest states.
Apparently, this is what passes for being "informed" among elites these days. Never mind that the inaccuracy of this view can be dispelled with a quick trip to Wikipedia, but nothing can be allowed to challenge the mantra of "racism". Verily, I say unto thee.
RangerDave wrote:
I think you're misunderstanding my point a bit, Taly. I'm not saying that Trump and the Republicans are appealing to racism. I'm saying they're appealing to a particular sense of identity - i.e., white, Southern / Middle American, working / middle class, Christian traditionalist - and that they've been appealing to that identity since the 60s when the Dems stopped appealing to that identity. In short, it's primarily a product of the party realignment that took place in response to Civil Rights and the anti-Vietnam / counterculture movements of the 60s, not to the political correctness overreach of the 90s and 00s.
The problem is that the identity group you're talking about is really very tiny, (the individual pieces are sizable, but the overlap is much smaller than you think) and internally contradictory. "White working class" meant Democrat as, or more, often than Republican until the 1990s. "Christian traditionalist" could mean any racial subgroup; black civil rights leaders were "Christian traditionalist" until just recently and made up entire theologies conveniently suited to the imaginings of their congregations just as well as segregationist preachers might. "Middle America" and "South" have never been the same thing - the rural Midwest, mountain west, and southwest are not culturally the same as the south, nor religiously the same, and have never had the same attitudes towards civil rights. This is why you see the south going Democrat in 1976, 1992, and 1996 - this identity group is only half there - it relies on the overlap of a bunch of smaller, contradictory identities. The left likes to think it's just like "black people" with a "black community", and there is no such unity or commonality at all. The "White America" black leaders like to pretend causes their problems
does not actually exist.
The sense of identity you're talking about
didn't even exist prior to the 1990s. The Republicans could not have "appealed to it since the 1960s" because it did not exist at that time - and don't waste your time trying to pretend it did unless you're going to show me where the Republicans made major appeal to the unions, or unions jumped on board with them. They would
necessarily have had to do that if they were targeting their own identity group rather than just reacting to the identities the Democrats had already staked out. Those voters are going for Trump; they didn't vote for Romney.
I don't tihnk you quite get, either, that I'm not paying the Republicans a compliment here. The Republicans were able to ignore a lot of this until the 1990s by focusing on the Soviet Union. They had no political plan for what to adopt after that, and in many ways still don't, which left them vulnerable to Trump. This is exactly the same situation the Left is in now; it's utterly focused on identity politics, has lost stalwart supporters who finally figured out the Left ceased caring about them, and is terrified of its political sword rusting if people figure out identity politics is nonsense ( and it IS nonsense - people do not pretend to be black to jump on the bandwagon in nations where blacks are actually oppressed ).