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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (5677)12/29/2002 2:36:30 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
ucomics.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (5677)1/8/2003 5:08:03 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
GOP and racists? Thick as thieves
Cynthia Tucker

"Bush himself yielded to the expediency of the Southern strategy when he
found himself in a tough primary campaign in South Carolina. Bush boosted his
chances by giving a speech at Bob Jones University, a bastion of ultraconservative
Christianity that not only opposed interracial dating at the time but also espoused a
virulent anti-Catholicism. In so doing, Bush sent a signal to the fergit-hell crowd that
he was on their side."


...............................

" Ashcroft praised Southern Partisan."

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution: 12/15/02]

accessatlanta.com


The spectacle of conservatives scurrying to
denounce Trent Lott has provided comic relief in a
Capitol otherwise obsessed with a dubious war. But
it's hard to take Lott's GOP critics seriously. After
all, he is not the only reactionary in their ranks.

The simple fact is that the modern Republican Party
has built a Southern power base by accommodating
racists.
Lott may become a sacrificial goat -- forced
to give up his assumed position as the next Senate
majority leader -- but that won't change the dirty little
secret that fuels the GOP's Southern juggernaut:

Whenever it is politically expedient, Republicans
cozy up to segregationists, Confederate
sympathizers, anti-immigrationists and other
mossbacks who still resent the civil rights
movement.

As political scientists Earl and Merle Black note in
their book, "The Rise of Southern Republicans," the
ascension of the Republican Party in the South can
be traced to Barry Goldwater, who ran for president
in 1964 on a states' rights platform that rejected
desegregation.

With Goldwater's campaign, they wrote, "the
[Republican] party attracted many racist Southern whites but permanently alienated
African-American voters. . . .
Gradually, a new Southern politics emerged in which
blacks and liberal to moderate whites anchored the Democratic Party while many
conservatives and some moderate whites formed a growing Republican Party that
owed little to Abraham Lincoln but much to Goldwater and even more to [Ronald]
Reagan."

Lott has spent the last several days apologizing for his endorsement of the
segregationist platform from which retiring Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.) ran for
president as a Dixiecrat in 1948. At a party for Thurmond earlier this month, Lott had
reminded his colleagues that his home state of Mississippi had supported
Thurmond's bid.

"We're proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't
have had all these problems over all these years, either," Lott declared.

His apologies notwithstanding, he meant what he said. He had made nearly
identical remarks in 1980, after Thurmond gave a fiery speech in support of Reagan's
presidential bid. Lott also has a long history of association with the Conservative
Citizens Council, an heir of the old segregationist White Citizens' Councils of the
1960s.

But Lott is hardly the only prominent Republican who is comfortable consorting with
bigots. In 1998, John Ashcroft, then a U.S. senator, was interviewed by Southern
Partisan, the last redoubt of secessionism.
Among other quaint views, the magazine
celebrates the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, defends slavery and holds in high
regard Nathan Bedford Forrest, a founder of the Ku Klux Klan.

Ashcroft praised Southern Partisan.

"Your magazine also helps set the record straight. You've got a heritage of doing
that, of defending Southern patriots like Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson and
Jefferson Davis. Traditionalists must do more. I've got to do more. We've all got to
stand up and speak in this respect, or else we'll be taught that these people were
giving their lives, subscribing their sacred fortunes and their honor to some perverted
agenda."

Yet President Bush still nominated Ashcroft as his attorney general, and he was
easily confirmed.


Indeed, Bush himself yielded to the expediency of the Southern strategy when he
found himself in a tough primary campaign in South Carolina. Bush boosted his
chances by giving a speech at Bob Jones University, a bastion of ultraconservative
Christianity that not only opposed interracial dating at the time but also espoused a
virulent anti-Catholicism. In so doing, Bush sent a signal to the fergit-hell crowd that
he was on their side.


As recently as this election season, Georgia's governor-elect, Sonny Perdue, sent a
similar signal by campaigning as the champion of the Confederate battle flag, which
had been exiled by the Democratic incumbent. Thousands of resentful whites threw
their support to Perdue, assuring his victory over incumbent Roy Barnes.

Given the Republican Party's rich tradition of cozying up to bigots, Lott's remarks
are no surprise. And his GOP colleagues' denunciations are no comfort.


accessatlanta.com

Cynthia Tucker is the editorial page editor. Her column appears Sundays and
Wednesdays.



To: Mephisto who wrote (5677)2/12/2003 1:40:07 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Can You Believe They *&^%$# Said That?

"One of our problems was, in the hiring of African Americans, we can't find good conservative
African Americans to work for us. But I've got 20 resumes now."

- Rep. Tom DeLay's answer to diversifying the GOP.

thedailyenron.com