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For years, the GOP has capitalized on Martin Luther King, Jr.'s name to reimagine itself as a party of diversity and inclusion.

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Invoking King

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted January 16, 2006.


For years, the GOP has capitalized on Martin Luther King, Jr.'s name to reimagine itself as a party of diversity and inclusion.
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The Republicans' love fest with Martin Luther King, Jr., grows deeper every year.

It started with President Reagan. Reagan did everything he could to scuttle the King national holiday bill but signed it only after it was clear that the bill would pass with or without his backing. Reagan could have easily vetoed the bill, even though he knew Congress would likely override him. That would have curried favor with unreconstructed white bigots and King-haters, and enhanced Reagan's reputation as a man that could not be bullied into signing a bill he didn't believe in. Despite his deep doubts, in the end, Reagan may have felt that King was worthy of the honor.

Peter Robinson, the speechwriter who drafted Reagan's address at the bill-signing ceremony, said the words and sentiments he inserted in Reagan's speech -- "dignity," "equality," "liberty," "democracy," " freedom," and " fulfilling the promise of America" -- were things that Reagan could easily understand, despite the political gulf between the men. Reagan dug deep into his own fundamental beliefs and values to ultimately come to grips with King's fight and the value of King's life.

Reagan did something else that showed a true sensitivity toward King. Coretta Scott King -- MLK, Jr.'s widow -- was stung by Reagan's quip, a month before he signed the bill, about King being a possible Communist sympathizer. He quietly called her and apologized. At a King observance the year after the holiday was officially celebrated in 1986, Reagan seemed to speak from the heart when he denounced racial bigotry and discrimination.

The battle over the King bill, both within the GOP and within Reagan himself, gave another glimpse into the conflicting political thinking in the GOP regarding the importance of King in future plans. Reagan's successor, Bush Sr., understood that the GOP had to shave off the cruder edges of its divisive racial rhetoric and adopt a softer approach to racial issues in order to bump up GOP support among black voters and succeed in grooming a new breed of black leaders to embrace conservative politics.

If he were alive, King would almost certainly oppose GOP economic policies, which squeeze the poor. Yet he's still black America's authentic hero and the ideal choice to accomplish the GOP's goal of attracting more blacks -- a goal that's sputtered in the wake of the heat Bush took post-Katrina. Still, there is much in King's background and social philosophy that Republicans have repackaged to suit their aims.

For two decades before the King holiday flap, he fascinated Republican presidents and conservatives. Eisenhower and Nixon flattered, cajoled and wooed King to get his support for their mild civil rights legislation and to put a damper on protests in the South. He was the one civil rights leader that the GOP might gingerly court to score political points with black voters. In a perverse, backhanded way, Nixon, Reagan and Bush Sr. owed much of their political success to King. The civil rights movement fueled the white backlash that transformed the Republican Party in the South from a political nonentity into a political behemoth. More then any other civil rights leader, King was the emblem of that movement.

The GOP also capitalized on King's name to reimagine itself as the party of diversity and inclusion. Bush Jr. moved shrewdly to adopt King's mantle: In January 2004, he placed a wreath on King's tomb on the official celebration of his birth. He has hailed King in public messages on this holiday every year.

To defend their opposition to race-based programs, conservatives have grabbed at the famous line in King's 1963 "I Have A Dream" speech, when he called on Americans to judge individuals by the content of their characters, not the color of their skins. This is not a total distortion. While King continually demanded that government do more to aid black poor, and he likely would have been an advocate of affirmative action, he also demanded that the black poor do more to help themselves. In numerous speeches, he stressed personal responsibility, self-help, strong families, and religious values as goals that blacks should strive to attain. King's solution to many of the big-ticket race and class problems that plague America was a conflicting mix of idealism and hard-nosed pragmatism.

Republican presidents have invoked King's name for good reason. He is still the man that evokes nostalgia, passion and instant identification in the fight for racial justice and equality in America. And Republican conservatives still tout him as a man that might have stood with them on certain issues. They'll do it again this holiday.

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Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is the author of "The Crisis in Black and Black"(Middle Passage Press).

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Dr. King
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jan 16, 2006 3:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I had a realization this morning that should have knocked me off of my feet (Fortunately I was sitting down at the time so injury was minimal). Next year, June 25, 2007 will mark the point when Dr. Martin Luther King will have been dead longer than he was alive - Seventy-seven years, two months and twenty days. On an anniversary such as this, I can't help but ponder all of these little facts, trivial as they might be. And yet it does lead one two the inescapable conclusion that we've had an awful long time to ponder the meaning of Dr. Kings life. What have we learned in thirty eight years?

At this moment in our history a half-witted junta is in power due to the fact that almost six years ago they removed from the voting rolls of the state of Florida the very people whom the good doctor dedicated his life to helping. This should cause all of us to be outraged. Jim Crow is alive and well, kids. He's gotten a face lift and is, at times, hard to recognize but he's out there. He's just gone covert, that's all. The reason you can no longer recognize him is because he's not wearing the white hood any more. How's that for irony?

Bad as things undoubtedly are at this point in our history, I'm beginning to see the light at the end of this depressingly long tunnel. The pendolum is starting to swing ever-so-slightly leftward. Help is on the way. This is what keeps me going....Hope.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
tomdegan@frontiernet.net

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» RE: Dr. King Posted by: Knowmad
» RE: Correction Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: Dr. King Posted by: ALANHESTER
» RE: Dr. King Posted by: timg98376
'M.L. King on the media – M.I.A."
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jan 16, 2006 2:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has anybody noticed that on this anniversary of his death, there is nearly nothing on the "mainstream media" about Martin Luther King? You'd think that one of the greatest champions for civil rights and finest orator this country has ever turned out would warrant a little more attention. (Unless the Powers That Be are hoping we'll all forget the leader of a movement that was once one of the greatest threats to entrenched, self-serving political power in this country.)

It's a disgusting oversight – but all-too-consistant with the tripe we're fed the rest of the year. . .

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Republican neo-cons and King have nothing in common.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jan 16, 2006 7:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Claims to the contrary are the Devil quoting scripture.

Yes, the token African American middle class is larger today than in King's day. But so is the underclass -- much larger. The US has lost its way since the election of Reagan. Class warfare has locked us into a downward spiral.

America's future looks grim, but apparently as long as it's better than most other places in the world, Americans will continue to follow the money.

The writing is on the wall. King's greatness should be even more evident, because it was exactly in times like these that he risked all in the name of justice. Where is today's "Drum Major for Justice"? May Providence grant us again such a leader.

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