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OXFORD, Miss. LAST weeks Republican primary in Tennessee resulted in a comfortable win for Senator Lamar Alexander over his Tea Party-backed challenger, State Assembly Representative Joe Carr. But make no mistake: The Tea Party is on a roll across the South, having mounted major primary challenges in Texas, Mississippi and South Carolina, and knocked out Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia.
The movements success, with its dangerous froth of anti-Washington posturing and barely concealed racial animus, raises an important question for Southern voters: Will they remember their history well enough to reject the siren song of nativism and populism that has won over the region so often before?
We often think of the typical segregationist politician of yore as a genteel member of the white upper crust. But the more common mode was the fiery populist. Names like Thomas E. Watson of Georgia, Pitchfork Ben Tillman of South Carolina and James K. Vardaman and Theodore G. Bilbo of Mississippi may be obscure outside the South, but for most anyone brought up here, they loom large.
In the early 20th century, these men rose on an agrarian revolt against Big Business and government corruption. They used that energy, in turn, to disenfranchise and segregate blacks, whose loyalty to the pro-business Republican Party made them targets of these racist reformers.
full: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/13/opinion/the-south-s-lesson-for-the-tea-party.html
1StrongBlackMan
(31,849 posts)AverageJoe90
(10,745 posts)None of these fellows, outside of perhaps Tom Watson, were ever really against ALL corruption, per se. They were just fine with it happening down South, in fact, when it benefitted them and their benefactors! Really, they only put on a schtick to grab votes from unsuspecting morons, that's all(though it was a schtick that certainly worked.). They never really gave two shits about the people who voted for them, except as a ticket to power.
Honestly, they're almost exactly like today's GOP teabaggers in many ways. The 'Baggers love to play word games and to play to people's fears, and talk a good game, but really, they're just in it for their own sake, no matter how slick some may be. And we ignore this reality at our own peril.