News
Southern Strategy has Bottomed Out
GOP: 'Positive polarization' may have worked at one time, but its divisiveness hurts now.
By RICHARD TAFEL, Commentary, The Los Angeles Times
February 12, 1999
A strategic shift the Republican Party made nearly 30 years ago has
helped to slowly poison its image before the American people, and it may
be the Achilles' heel that brings it down in 2000.
In 1972, the core of President Nixon's reelection campaign was not
break-ins and wire-tapping but rather the "Southern strategy," or as the
Nixon team called it, "positive polarization." It was about winning over
the South by pitting a singled-out minority, such as African Americans,
against a fearful majority, such as angry Southern whites. The key was
to play directly into the hands of bigotry and intolerance, veering away
from the heritage of the party of Lincoln.
This was the same Nixon who had been vice president when President
Eisenhower sent troops into Arkansas and Mississippi to enforce
desegregation orders against the insolent resistance of racist
Democratic governors and police chiefs. Nixon's Faustian reversal
radically changed the GOP, shifting the party's center of gravity and
making intolerance toward minorities of all kinds a hallmark of
Republican strategic thinking.
At first, the "Southern strategy" was a numerical success. Some of
the senior Republican senators at the impeachment trial today are
Southern Democrats wooed into the GOP –Trent Lott of Mississippi, Strom
Thurmond of South Carolina, Jesse Helms of North Carolina and Phil Gramm
of Texas. All have used blatant appeals to intolerance to score
political points throughout their careers.
In the early 1990s, former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke won
the Louisiana GOP gubernatorial nomination and was beaten by Democrat
Edwin Edwards, who was implicated in some shady dealings. The infamous
Bayou bumper sticker that helped Edwards get elected –"Vote for the
Crook, Not the Kook" –speaks volumes on the public mood toward the
impeachment showdown today.
"Positive polarization" has given the party a hateful and
frightening face, ushering in spates of gay-bashing, intolerance toward
legal immigrants and declarations of a "Christian nation," essentially
telling Jews and those outside of fundamentalist Christianity to get
lost. Over the last two general elections, the state GOP in California
has been virtually annihilated. Even Southern voters are clearly moving
on. In the '98 elections, GOP candidates were toppled in Alabama,
Georgia and the Carolinas. But party leadership seems reluctant to hear
the message.
"It should be clear to GOP leaders after this election that the
'Southern strategy' has run its course," says Faye M. Anderson, a
national vice chairman of the New Majority Council, a new Republican
National Committee project aimed at reaching out to minority voters.
Duke is making another go at a GOP nomination, this time for the
House seat Bob Livingston is giving up. Sen. Lott and Rep. Bob Barr
(R-Ga.), meanwhile, have embarrassed the party by speaking before the
Council of Conservative Citizens, the offspring of the old White
Citizens' Councils that took up arms against Eisenhower's federal
troops.
Duke is now calling his past leadership in the American Nazi Party
and the Klan, in effect, "youthful indiscretion" as he prepares to run
this time around on "Christian conservative principles." For his part,
Lott said he had no prior knowledge of the CCC's bigoted agenda. But
when he addressed the CCC in Greensboro, Miss., in 1992, he said: "The
people in this room stand for the right principles and the right
philosophy." Last year, he described homosexuality as a disease similar
to alcoholism and kleptomania.
RNC Chairman Jim Nicholson did the right thing when he denounced
the CCC in strong words and called on South Carolina RNC member Buddy
Witherspoon to resign his CCC membership. Will anyone in the party stick
up for Nicholson and demand Witherspoon's head? Will Lott and other
senior Republicans continue egging on gay bashers and racists without
fear of internal reprisal? How can the GOP rescue itself before it's too
late?
The presidential campaign of 2000 will answer these questions, one
way or another. Recent polls showing both Texas Gov. George W. Bush and
Elizabeth Dole beating Al Gore in a White House match-up indicate that a
rescue of the GOP can only come from outside the congressional party,
now dominated by the sons of the "Southern strategy." A woman running
for president or a man who speaks of "compassionate conservatism," thus
attracting minority voters, hint at new leadership. But the moment they
or any promising candidate bows to intolerance, watch those numbers – and
the GOP's prospects – deservedly sink like a stone.
Richard Tafel Is Executive Director of Log Cabin Republicans, a national gay Republican organization.