Corporate Press Fails to Trump Bigotry
By Chip Berlet
September 18, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "FAIR"
- The outlandish rhetoric of Republican
presidential wildcard Donald Trump has left many journalists at a
loss for words—words such as bigotry, xenophobia, racism, sexism and
demagoguery.
Some media outlets raised these issues. Yet many
reporters (or perhaps their editors) still seem reluctant to move
past the aphasic and simplistic sports-reporting model, in which
ideological content analysis is renounced.
An example of a typical article is the piece on
Trump’s stump speech by Michael Finnegan and Kurtis Lee in the
Los Angeles Times (9/15/15).
It is well-written, colorful and even includes the obligatory single
sentence from an anti-Trump protester. Yet there is little serious
political or historic context.
One line does note that Trump borrowed from
“Richard Nixon’s polarizing pledge to stand up for the ‘silent
majority’ amid the social upheaval of the 1960s.”
Nixon’s speech, however, concerned support for the Vietnam War.
A more apt comparison would have been Nixon’s “Southern Strategy” to
garner votes from white voters (The Nation,
11/13/12).
Journalists and scholars familiar with the rise of
contemporary right-wing populist political parties and social
movements in Europe, however, recognize that xenophobic,
anti-immigrant and racist rhetoric can lead to acts of violence.
For several years, I have had editors tell me that
the contention that right-wing rhetoric can lead to violence is a
liberal myth. Right-wing media pundits certainly reject this claim.
Yet this is a well-studied chain of events, analyzed by scholars
since the rise of fascism in Europe following World War I and the
Nazi genocide during World War II. So I wrote a survey of the
scholarship as a book chapter titled “Heroes
Know Which Villains to Kill: How Coded Rhetoric Incites Scripted
Violence.” In it, I summarized the consensus:
The leaders of organized political or social
movements sometimes tell their followers that a specific group
of “Others” is plotting to destroy civilized society. History
tells us that if this message is repeated vividly enough, loudly
enough, often enough, and long enough—it is only a matter of
time before the bodies from the named scapegoated groups start
to turn up.
Freedom of speech is not the issue. A free and
open debate is a necessity for democracy. Trump therefore is not
legally culpable for any acts of violence against his named
scapegoats. Trump should be held accountable on a moral basis by the
media for his using the
tools of fear, such as demonization and scapegoating, that put
real people at risk for attacks.
The progressive press has done a better job of
pointing out this ugly potential. Writing for The Nation
(9/14/15),
Julianne Hing argued, “It’s clear that the xenophobia at the core of
Trump’s campaign is resonating, and his antics are already echoing
beyond the campaign trail into both culture and policy.” Hing quotes
Mario Carrillo of the immigrant rights group United We Dream as
saying Trump’s “rhetoric is leading to real-life consequences.”
Many instances of physical attacks are chronicled
in Hing’s article, although motivation is usually unclear. One pair
of attackers did tell police they were directly influenced by
Trump’s rhetoric, according to the Associated Press (9/3/15).
Trump said he does not condone violence. Nonetheless, immigrant
rights activists worry violence will increase.
Adele Stan in the American Prospect (9/9/15)
put it boldly:
What Trump is doing, via the media circus of
which he has appointed himself ringmaster, is making the
articulation of the basest bigotry acceptable in mainstream
outlets, amplifying the many oppressive tropes and stereotypes
of race and gender that already exist in more than adequate
abundance.
The headline for Evan Horowitz’s piece in the
Boston Globe (8/19/15)
claims “Donald Trump Blazes a European Path in American Politics,”
and Horowitz asks, “Does Donald Trump represent the emergence of a
new force in American politics, a right-populist movement that could
reorganize the American” political spectrum? Missing is the fact
that, from President Andrew Jackson in the early 1800s through
George Wallace in the 1970s to Pat Buchanan, there have been
right-wing populist movements in the United States. It is not a
European import.
Part of this confusion over Trump is definitional:
Scholars write entire books trying to map out the contours of
right-wing political and social movements, especially the line
dividing right-wing populism and neofascism. The pre-eminent scholar
in this area, University of Georgia’s Cas Mudde, explained in the
Washington Post (8/26/15):
The key features of the populist radical right
ideology – nativism, authoritarianism, and populism – are not
unrelated to mainstream ideologies and mass attitudes. In fact,
they are best seen as a radicalization of mainstream values.
For many scholars, right-wing populism is
classified as part of the “radical right,” while the term “extreme
right” is reserved for insurgent groups seeking to overturn the
constitutional order.
In his book Populist Radical Right Parties in
Europe, Mudde lists as common “extreme right” features
nationalism, racism, xenophobia, anti-democracy and the strong
state, including a law-and-order approach.
In his Ideology of the Extreme Right, Mudde
wrote:
The terms neo-Nazism and to a lesser extent
neo-fascism are now used exclusively for parties and groups that
explicitly state a desire to restore the Third Reich (in the
case of neo-fascism the Italian Social Republic) or quote
historical
National Socialism (fascism) as their ideological influence.
That’s not Trump. His ideology and rhetoric are
much more comparable to the European populist radical right, akin to
Jean-Marie Le Pen’s National Front, the Danish People’s Party or
Vladimir Zhirinovsky’s Liberal Democratic Party of Russia. All of
them use the common radical right rhetoric of nativism,
authoritarianism and populism.
“Donald Trump Is an Actual Fascist” trumpets the
headline in Salon (7/25/15)
for Conor Lynch’s confused and badly researched article on Trump.
Ignoring the current rise of xenophobic neo-fascist groups in
Europe, Lynch tells us that “fascism died in the mid-20th century.”
Undermining Salon’s headline, Lynch tells
us the “GOP are obviously not fascists, but they share a family
resemblance.” The resemblance, according to Lynch, is explained in
the famous quote attributed to Italy’s fascist dictator during World
War II, Benito Mussolini:
Fascism should more appropriately be called
corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power.
According to Lynch, this “definition may very well
fit the GOP ideology: a kind of corporate fascism.” Alas, the quote
is a hoax, widely circulated on the internet but
debunked years ago. Mussolini never wrote or said anything like
that, since the fake statement refutes Mussolini’s views on fascism.
More complicated is the detailed and erudite
polemic in Truthout (9/15/15)
by Henry A. Giroux, expanded from Tikkun (9/9/15).
In “Political Frauds and the Ghost of Totalitarianism,” Giroux
invokes the theories of world-famous philosopher Hannah Arendt on
totalitarianism. He warns that widespread civic illiteracy in the US
population is more than the media manufacturing “ignorance on an
individual scale”; it is, in fact
producing a nationwide crisis of agency,
memory and thinking itself…a kind of ideological sandstorm in
which reason gives way to emotion, and a willful limitation on
critical thought spreads through the culture as part of a
political project that both infantilizes and depoliticizes the
general public.
According to Giroux, “Donald Trump is not the
singular clown who has injected bizarre and laughable notions into
US politics; he is the canary in the mineshaft warning us that
totalitarianism relies on mass support and feeds on hate, moral
panics” and what Arendt called the “the
frenzied lawfulness of ideological certitude.”
Yet long before the appearance of totalitarianism
in the modern era, the United States saw mass movements that used
force to subjugate or purge the degraded and demonized “Other.” As a
nation, we enforced white Christian nationalism through the genocide
of indigenous peoples and the enslavement and mass murder of black
people for profit. For many decades, immigrants including those who
were Irish, Italian, Polish or Russian were second-class citizens,
not considered “white.” Women had few rights and were treated as the
property of their fathers, then their husbands. Jews were perpetual
outsiders. People with unpopular religious views were shunned and in
some instances killed. Chinese were excluded, Japanese were interned
in camps. Nativist racism periodically has cut a bloody gash through
our body politic, without reliance on totalitarianism.
Trump is not an example of creeping
totalitarianism; he is the white man growing hoarse with bigoted
canards while riding at the forefront of a new nativist movement.
Adele Stan bluntly suggests that to “ask if the rogue Republican’s
surge is good for Democrats is the wrong question.” Instead, we need
to ask what is wrong with America, “that this racist, misogynist,
money-cheating clown should be the frontrunner for the presidential
nomination of one of its two major parties?”
Trump feeds the resentment felt by many people who
are white, male, straight or Christian who feel displaced by
“Others” taking over “their” nation. These people see themselves as
the real producers of value in the United States, and consider the
disparaged “Others” to be parasites. Thus the 2012 campaign of
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney was built around the
clandestine theme of mobilizing the “makers” against the “takers,”
as reported by Eric Schulzke in the Deseret News (9/19/12).
This is called “producerism” by scholars, and it is a central
element of right-wing populism in the United States.
What fuels this sort of bitter backlash movement
now? The late scholar Jean Hardisty of Political Research Associates
argued in 1995 that a
confluence of several historic factors has assisted the success
of the right in the United States:
- a conservative religious revitalization,
- economic contraction and restructuring,
- race resentment and bigotry,
- backlash and social stress, and
- a well-funded network of right-wing
organizations.
“Each of these conditions has existed at previous
times in US history,” wrote Hardisty:
While they usually overlap to some extent,
they also can be seen as distinct, identifiable phenomenon. The
lightning speed of the right’s rise can be explained by the
simultaneous existence of all five factors. Further, in this
period they not only overlap, but reinforce each other. This
mutual reinforcement accounts for the exceptional force of the
current rightward swing.
Scholars Michael Omi and Howard Winant, in
Racial Formation in the United States: From the 1960s to the 1990s,
suggest that this set of circumstances makes many Americans fear the
end of the “American Dream.” This backlash is picking up speed. The
Republican voter base in the Tea Party long ago shifted its
attention away from fiscal restraint toward anti-immigrant
xenophobia, banning abortion and pushing gay people back into the
closet.
Many scholars of fascism and neofascism now
suggest right-wing populism can metamorphosize into these fascistic
totalitarian forms, but they recognize that it seldom does–and that
fascist movements seldom gain state power. Yet the demonization and
scapegoating that accompanies right-wing populism in the United
States is breeding a counter-subversion panic targeting immigrants,
Mexicans, Muslims, feminists, gay people, liberals and leftists.
Planned Parenthood has become a special target to appeal to the
Christian Right.
While racism is not confined to the American
South, a recent study by sociologists Rory McVeigh and David
Cunningham, described on Brandeis Now (12/4/14),
found that a significant predictor of current Republican voting
patterns in the South is the prior existence of a strong chapter of
the Ku Klux Klan in the area in the 1960s. McVeigh writes on the
London School of Economics website (12/17/14)
that although “populist politics appealed to many Southern voters in
earlier times, the Southern Democratic Party was also a key
instrument in the defense of white privilege and racial oppression.”
The passage of federal Civil Rights Act in 1964
propelled many Democratic Party “Dixiecrats” into the Republican
Party, where they now appear at campaign rallies in freebie “gimme
hats” touting Monsanto, Koch brothers fertilizers and Coors beer.
They choose racial privilege over economic security. That’s
What’s the Matter With Kansas. Now this mass base cheers
Trump on while he is
Mobilizing Resentment–the title of Hardisty’s 1999 book
about the rise of right-wing politics in the US.
McVeigh argues that it is shifts in power dynamics
and hierarchies in economic, political and social spheres that
launch the processes in which radical right-wing groups attract
members, and sometimes a mass base large enough to intrude into the
larger society. Using as his analytical example the Klan in the
1920s, McVeigh demonstrates that the right-wing KKK in the 1920s was
composed of white people attempting to defend their relatively more
privileged position in the social, political and economic life of
their communities (E-Extreme,
2-3/10).
According to McVeigh, in his book The Rise of
the Ku Klux Klan: Right-Wing Movements and National Politics,
“the Klan can best be understood as a response to devaluation in the
economic, political and status-based ‘purchasing power’ of the
movement’s constituents.” McVeigh adds that “right-wing movements
often provide individuals with an effective vehicle for preserving
status-based interests as well as political and economic interests.”
During the 1920s, millions of Americans joined the
Klan, turning it into a major electoral force in several states with
an important role in national politics. The tropes of racial threats
posed by people of color as rapists and murderers were glued to the
American psyche even before decades of stories planted by Klan
organizers in their stump speeches for membership, notes Gerald
Horne of the University of Houston, whom I interviewed for the
Washington Spectator (8/1/15)
after Dylann Roof allegedly murdered nine black people in a historic
Charleston, South Carolina, church. Roof told a participant in a
Bible study: “I have to do it. You rape our women and you’re taking
over our country…and you have to go.”
In covering the story, the New York Times (6/22/15)
invented a cowardly phrase, “white primacy,” to describe the
blatantly white supremacist group, the Council of Conservative
Citizens, where Dylann Roof apparently learned this storyline.
On the day of the Republican candidates debate,
the New York Times (9/16/15)
burnished Trump’s rising star, declaring that Trump was starting to:
conform to some of the demands of a
presidential race, making him, in some ways, more of a typical
politician. It suggests that, as much as the Republican
electorate is becoming more comfortable with the idea of Mr.
Trump as its standard-bearer, he is embracing the rituals and
expectations of the role, too.
The Trump candidacy and the shooting in Charleston
are connected thematically by a mobilization to defend white
nationalism while the racial and ethnic face of America changes hue.
The populist right and the extreme right fuel each other. The more
we as a nation ignore this process of nativist demonization, the
more targets will be painted on the backs of our neighbors. History
will record how long these right-wing backlash movements will spread
their virulent rhetorical venom in our nation. But as Arendt
observed, history judges us as individuals as to whether or not we
stood up and spoke out against the banality of evil.
Chip Berlet has written about bigotry for over
40 years, much of it while an analyst at Political Research
Associates. He is co-author with Matthew N. Lyons of
Right-Wing Populism in America: Too Close for Comfort
and has published scholarly articles on the dynamics of
right-wing populism, fascism and totalitarianism. Additional
resources for this article are at
http://www.researchforprogress.us/jump/fair2015.html .