September 5, 2017
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
Democrats and Republicans: Some Reflections on the
Misuse of History and the Use of Ideology
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Friends,
As
something of a historian by training and education, there are a few questions
that always provoke me to no end. While we debate Obamacare, or discuss the
imposition of a fanciful “liberal democracy” across the globe, or argue
furiously about illegal “dreamers,” and while we might delve into the inherent vicissitudes of
what is termed “the conservative movement” (and its failures), at the base of
such discussions are deeper questions, more philosophical, more historical—what
I would call “legacy issues.” And oftentimes assumptions are made or are
disseminated by “conservative apologists” that bear little relationship to
historical reality, and, in fact, fatally debilitate our understanding of it.
Many
of these relate specifically to the conscious creation by the present dominant
(neo) conservative movement of a utilizable past that both justifies their
present practice and fends off criticism from the harder Left that somehow,
because they claim to be “conservative” and presumably defenders of the Constitution
and inherited traditions of the country, they partake in forms of “racism,” as
well as sexism, homophobia, and white supremacy.
Much
of this is motivated by a politics of fear that, I suggest, comes from the fact
that the modern conservative movement, dominated now intellectually as it is by
those whose philosophical and fundamental origin are over on the Marxist and
Trotskyite left, has never freed itself from the Progressivist historical
narrative about racism (bad) and egalitarianism (good), and the inevitable
“movement of history” (always to the Left).
It is as if it possesses a guilty conscience and its spokesmen are
constantly afraid of being “labeled.”
Thus,
even though these so-called “conservatives” presume to offer opposition to the “further
Left” narrative on various economic and political issues, they are equally
possessed by what my friend Dr. Paul Gottfried terms, rightly, a “politics of
guilt,” a social sin which they must continually and defensively expiate. And thus, the rather constant, at times
frantic, self-justification and strenuous efforts by (neo) conservatives to
distinguish themselves from any form or type of perceived “racism.” And,
concurrently, their efforts to paint the modern-day
Democratic Party with the brush of the odious “historically racist” Democratic
Party, and to emphasize the fact that fifty years ago “it was the—mostly
Southern—segregationist Democrats who opposed the Voting Rights and Civil
Rights Bills!” Then follows a long litany of, again, mostly Southern,
Democratic political leaders and statesmen—Senators Harry Byrd (and Robert
Byrd), Richard Russell, and Sam Ervin—which is trotted out to “prove” that the
Democratic Party just a couple of generations ago was the “racist” party, the party that coddled segregationists…and,
yes, that “racist demagogue George Wallace!” Thank goodness, they then add, “we
don’t have that legacy!”
The
underlying assumption here is that it has been the Democrats who incarnate historically
the evils of racism, sexism, homophobia, and white supremacy—and in some ways,
still do—while the clean-as-the-driven-snow Republicans (and [neo] conservatives)
have championed equality, opposed racism, supported the Civil rights
legislation of the 1950s and 1960s…and, by the way, Martin Luther King Jr, was
actually one of them, a dyed-in-the-wool “conservative!”
This
narrative in many respects is fraudulent, does serious damage to the understanding
of our history, and can be reduced to a form of rather crass political
legerdemain, anchored as it is in an acceptance of the Progressivist historical
vision. It enables Republican political gurus such as Karl Rove to embrace the
neo-Reconstructionist and Marxist posturing of viciously anti-Southern
historian Eric Foner, or Sean Hannity to tie in West Virginia’s late US Senator
Robert Byrd—who had many years before been a member of the Ku Klux Klan—to
Hillary Clinton, or connect Arkansas’s Senator J. William Fullbright to Bill
Clinton.
But
it fails to comprehend dramatic historical change and the evolution of
political parties. For much of this nation’s history it was, indeed, the
Democratic Party that was most representative of a traditional, Jeffersonian
“conservatism.” The Republican Party, founded in the 1850s, not only lacked
that essential connection to and understanding of America’s Founding, but in
its War-time president, Abraham Lincoln and succeeding GOP presidents in the
second half of the 19th century, incarnated a vision of the American
republic that, I would argue, was in many respects contrary to the vision of
the Founders. An examination of Lincoln’s views—on statecraft, on the
relationship of the various states to the Federal executive, on his faith in
unchained industrialism, and, indeed, on his view of the Constitution, itself,
offer ample confirmation of this.
Obviously,
political parties and political thinking don’t remain static. And, especially
in the 1930s and beyond, the Democratic Party underwent a transformation. We
should not forget that when Franklin Roosevelt ran for president in 1932, his
platform was actually, in many ways, more conservative than that of Republican
President Herbert Hoover. Only after he entered office did he radically change
his praxis.
At
first, traditional states’ rights conservatives (e.g., leaders like the
Virginia Byrds, Josiah Bailey and Sam Ervin) and the more leftwing New Dealers
co-existed within “the Old Democracy,” if uneasily, up through the 1950s. As
numerous historians have detailed, the civil rights legislation of the 1960s
certainly figured in what would become “the Southern strategy” of inviting
disaffected white Southern voters—part of Nixon’s “silent majority”—into the
Republican Party.
Yet
it would be a major mistake to see “race” as the only causative factor in this process. Indeed, although racial
issues certainly existed, larger questions of social, economic and cultural
dislocation, the break-up of community, and, above all, the legitimate,
well-grounded fear of the loss of local and individual liberties as the Federal
government assumed more power, increasingly more direct authority over how
individuals and families ran their own lives, figured, if not so visibly, even
more significantly.
I
recall a friend of my father, a well-established farmer and one-time state
legislator (the late Democratic State Senator Julian Allsbrook) telling me back
in 1968, “I can deal with black folks voting—I will get their votes; but I
cannot tolerate in any way the Federal government assuming control over
practically every aspect of our social and political lives, and making us the
new slaves!” I think the good senator’s views reflected quite well those of his
fellow Tar Heels.
Making
“race” and “racial issues” the only points of discussion—the only determinants for action and
reaction—in our history, something that both the Left and the
pseudo-conservative Neocons do, leaves out too much that is essential to
understanding our complex past.
This
first became apparent to me when as a young grad student at the University of
Virginia I did research for my MA on the North Carolina Constitutional
Convention of 1835 (and conventions in other Southern states). Given the recent
Nat Turner slave rebellion in Virginia, I expected to find a concentration on
slavery and the need to defend at all cost “the peculiar institution.” But,
rather, I discovered that free blacks with property freeholds had voted in North
Carolina prior to that year (and since the Revolution), and that during the
lengthy convention debates most of the state’s prominent conservatives defended the suffrage of free blacks. For these
leaders, the issue was not so much about race as it was about class and whether
a male elector had the property qualification—and thus the social status within
the community—to exercise the franchise.
There
were, of course, a few voices that in their interventions mentioned the Turner
rebellion, but remarkably, those views were not overpowering and did not
reflect the “white fear” I had been taught by some of my professors to find. In
not one recorded peroration did I detect anything approaching the kind of
severe racial animus we are supposed to discover in the minds and throats of
our ante-bellum ancestors. Even though the convention finally very narrowly
voted to eliminate free black suffrage, it is revealing that even at that date,
fifteen years after the Missouri Compromise, it was, in a sense, class, social
position, and property that still dominated much of the thinking of the
dominant political leadership of North Carolina.
Since
then, in reading about secession and about slavery as the “cause” of the War
Between the States, about the “strange career of Jim Cross,” about the history
of the nation’s two major political parties, and then the essentially ideological
uses to which the fractured and tendentious template of race has been put, it
is apparent that such an approach is fraught with problems. Historians such as
Thomas di Lorenzo, Charles Adams, and others have highlighted the ideological
imbalance and the use to which such “devil terms” as “race” and “racism” have
been placed.
Underlying
the current “conservative” movement’s anxiety—the fear that Republicans
have—about being labeled “racist,” then,
is the acceptance of the debatable historical “fact” that America is all about
race and that nothing else really matters, that severe economic factors, social
and cultural changes, all flow from that single issue.
No;
give me any day the wisdom, intelligence, devotion to the Constitution—and delightful
Southern humor—of a true conservative Democrat, “Senator Sam” Ervin, over the
pea brained globalist fanaticism of a Republican Lindsey Graham, Jeff Flake or
John McCain.
That
latter narrative I am not prepared, philosophically or historically, to accept.
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