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Yes, There Is Racism in the Tea Party

NAACP asks the tea party crowd to "repudiate racist acts and bigotry in their ranks or accept responsibility," an the right goes into full freakout mode.
 
Photo Credit: A.M. Stan
 
 
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by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Zaid Jilani, Alex Seitz-Wald, Tanya Somanader

In passing a resolution condemning the racist elements within the Tea Party this week, the NAACP set off a media firestorm over the merits of its charge against the right-wing movement. As the Atlantic's Ta-Nehisi Coates notes, critics bemoaned the resolution as a silly stunt that "heightened division" and implied that racist extremists define the membership of the Tea Party. Such a wholesale charge would certainly be exaggerated and inaccurate, but that was not the charge the NAACP made. "The resolution was amended during the debate to specifically ask the Tea Party itself to repudiate the racist elements and activities of the Tea Party." As NAACP President and CEO Ben Jealous said, "We're simply asking them to repudiate racist acts and bigotry in their ranks or accept responsibility." But instead of acknowledging and disassociating themselves from the more radical actions of their membership, Tea Party leaders have said that racist elements are non existent. In hurling accusations of racism back at the NAACP, Tea Party leaders have wielded a professed desire for colorblindness as a whitewashing tool. But Tea Party members are employing a defense that only perpetuates the racism they are desperately trying to refute.

YES, THERE IS RACISM: Galled by the NAACP's shot across the bow, Tea Party leaders and sympathizers immediately dismissed the charge of racism in the movement as unrepresentative or unfounded. Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin sounded off on Facebook this week, decrying the racism accusation as a "false" and "appalling" insult of which the "patriots of the tea party movement are truly undeserving." Conservative Bishop E.W. Jackson shrugged off the displays of racist tendencies, claiming "people will sometimes say things." He insisted that "the idea that the tea party movement is racist or that it has racist elements that need to be denounced is a nonsensical statement." At this point, the overwhelming evidence of such "radical elements" is enough to discredit any outright dismissal of the NAACP's claim. The North Iowa Tea Party recently launched a billboard that equates President Obama with flagrant racist Adolf Hitler. In April, Tea Party member and New York GOP gubernatorial hopeful Carl Paladino forwarded "racially degrading material" in emails, one of which was posted at the Neo-Nazi Stormfront website. Ironically, the clearest example of endorsed racism was offered by the Tea Party Express chairman and spokesperson Mark Williams. While contending that it's the NAACP that is "bigoted," Williams has made outright bigoted comments, referring to Allah as the "terrorists' monkey God," to a Jewish developer as a "Jewish Uncle Tom," and to Muslims as "semi-human, bipedal primates with no claim to be treated like humans." In responding to the NAACP's charge, he accused the group of being "professional race baiters" who "make more money than any slave trader ever."

THE PURPOSE: The passage of the resolution sparked a deep debate over the NAACP's intentions. Critics quickly decried the resolution as a blanket indictment of all Tea Party members as racist. Conservative African-American activist and GOP nominee for Congress in South Carolina Tim Scott viewed the resolution as "a grave mistake in stereotyping a diverse group of Americans." Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele saw the resolution as "destructive" and an effort to say "the Tea Party movement is racist." But as the Washington Post's E.J. Dionne Jr. pointed out, nothing the NAACP put forward supports that idea. "Its contention is that there are clearly racist strains in the Tea Party and that the movement's leaders and the politicians who profit from its activism should denounce them plainly and unequivocally," he said. Jealous clearly delineated the intention in Kansas City, calling on the Tea Party to "expel the bigots and racists in your ranks or take the responsibility for them and their actions." In his explanation to Dionne, Jealous said that "we have never called the Tea Party racist. We know there are black Tea Party members." The essential point of the resolution was not to erroneously paint Tea Party members as wholesale racists but rather to demand they disassociate with the radicals in their ranks.

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