Tea Party Nationalism

By Benjamin Todd Jealous, President and CEO of the NAACP
http://www.teapartynationalism.com/

We know the majority of Tea Party supporters are
sincere, principled people of good will. That is why
the NAACP-an organization that has worked to expose and
combat racism in all its forms for more than 100 years-
is thankful Devin Burghart, Leonard Zeskind and the
Institute for Research & Education on Human Rights
prepared this report that exposes the links between
certain Tea Party factions and acknowledged racist hate
groups in the United States. These links should give
all patriotic Americans pause.

I hope the leadership and members of the Tea Party
movement will read this report and take additional
steps to distance themselves from those Tea Party
leaders who espouse racist ideas, advocate violence, or
are formally affiliated with white supremacist
organizations. In our effort to strengthen our
democracy and ensure rights for all, it is important
that we have a reasoned political debate without the
use of epithets, the threat of violence, or the
resurrection of long discredited racial hierarchies.

This July, delegates to the 101st NAACP National
Convention unanimously passed a resolution condemning
outspoken racist elements within the Tea Party, and
called upon Tea Party leaders to repudiate those in
their ranks who use white supremacist language in their
signs and speeches, and those Tea Party leaders who
would subvert their own movement by spreading racism.

The resolution came after a year of high-profile media
coverage of racial slurs and images at

Tea Party marches around the country. In March, members
of the Congressional Black Caucus reported that racial
epithets were hurled at them as they passed by a
Washington, DC health care protest. Civil rights legend
John Lewis was called the "n-word" in the incident
while others in the crowd used ugly anti-gay slurs to
describe Congressman Barney Frank, a long-time NAACP
supporter and the nation's first openly gay member of
Congress. Local NAACP members reported similar
racially-charged incidents at local Tea Party rallies.

At first, the resolution sparked defensive, misleading
public responses from the usual corners. First, Tea
Party leaders denied our claims were valid. Then Fox
News repeatedly circulated the false claim that we were
calling the Tea Party itself racist. Then their
commentators and other media personalities said the Tea
Party was too loosely configured to police itself.

Local NAACP volunteers and staff members around the
country were barraged by angry phone calls and death
threats.

Yet, amid the threats and denials, something remarkable
began to happen: Tea Party leaders began to quietly
take steps toward actively policing explicitly racist
activity within their ranks.

Before the end of July, the Tea Party Federation had
expelled Mark Williams, then-president of the powerful
and politically-connected Tea Party Express for his
most-recent racially offensive public statements, a
move they had previously refused to make. The move was
significant for three reasons: 1) it proved wrong those
national leaders and news personalities who said the
Tea Party was too loosely configured to insist its
leaders act responsibly, 2) it sparked a rift among Tea
Party leadership between those who are tolerant of
racist rhetoric and those who would stand against it,
and 3) it showed our resolution was having an impact.
Soon after, Montana conservative Tim Ravndal was fired
as head of the Big Sky Tea Party Association after
local media published messages posted to his Facebook
account that appeared to advocate violence against gays
and lesbians.

In the midst of all this, Tea Party leaders moved
quickly to take on a communications strategy typical of
corporate crisis public relations. A "Uni-Tea" rally to
promote Tea Party diversity was hastily organized,
while FreedomWorks launched a "Diverse Tea" web
initiative to spotlight pictures of nonwhite Tea
Partiers. There was a Tea Party leadership "race
summit" facilitated by Geraldo Rivera.

In August, Fox News personality and Tea Party icon
Glenn Beck instructed his followers to leave all signs
at home in the lead-up to his rally on the National
Mall to avoid media scrutiny, and has since admonished
Tea Partiers across the nation to "dress normally,"
lest their signs and t-shirts distract from the fiscal
message for which he would prefer the Tea Party be
recognized. In some areas, the response appears to have
spread beyond the Tea Party itself. In September,
former Florida Republican Party Chair Jim Greer made a
surprise public apology for the "racist views" among
some members of his party.

These are welcome first steps. They promote diversity
and acknowledge the inherent perception problem that
plagues the Tea Party: that while many of its leaders
are motivated by common conservative budget and
governance concerns, for too long they have tolerated
others who espouse racism and xenophobia and, in some
instances, are formally associated with organizations
like the Council of Conservative Citizens-the direct
lineal descendant of the White Citizens Council.

This report, from the Institute for Research and
Education on Human Rights, serves as a cautionary
reminder that Mark Williams is not unique within Tea
Party leadesrhip circles and that ties between Tea
Party factions and acknowledged racist groups endure.
It is the most comprehensive research to date into the
Tea Party's scope and emergence onto our political
landscape. I extend my personal thanks to the Institute
for Research & Education on Human Rights for this
research report.

Tea Party Nationalism is a product of the Institute for
Research and Education on Human Rights. Neither the
NAACP nor its leadership was involved in its research
or authorship.

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
Marxism-Thaxis@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to