WASHINGTON
(By
E.J. Dionne
Jr.,
Washington Post)
July 17, 2010 — Good for the NAACP.
We need an
honest
conversation
about the
role of race
and racism
in the Tea
Party.
Thanks to a
resolution
passed this
week at the
venerable
organization's
national
convention,
we'll get
it.
The minute
you say
there are
racist
elements in
the Tea
Party —
reflected in
signs at
rallies,
billboards
and speeches
from some of
its major
figures —
the pushback
goes from
cries of
persecution
to charges
that those
who are
criticizing
divisiveness
are
themselves
the
dividers.
So let's
dispense
with the
obvious:
Most of the
opposition
to President
Obama comes
from people
who are
against his
policies,
not his
race. The
Tea Party is
motivated
primarily by
right-wing
ideology,
not by
racism.
But guess
what?
Nothing the
NAACP is
saying
contradicts
this. 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.
Here's what
Ben Jealous,
president
and CEO of
the NAACP,
asked of the
Tea Party
during a
speech at
the civil
rights
group's
convention
in Kansas
City, Mo.:
"Expel the
bigots and
racists in
your ranks
or take the
responsibility
for them and
their
actions. We
will no
longer allow
you to hide
like
cowards."
The NAACP is
doing what
conservatives
have done
for decades
in demanding
that
liberals and
progressives
separate
themselves
from
left-wing
extremists
who trashed
America,
burned flags
and praised
foreign
dictators.
The racists
are the Tea
Party's
flag-burners.
It's fair to
ask the
democratic
left to
condemn
extremism.
It's fair to
ask the same
of the
democratic
right. (Note
the small
"d.")
When I
reached
Jealous by
telephone,
he went out
of his way
to emphasize
that his
group is not
making a
blanket
charge of
racism. "We
have never
called the
Tea Party
racist," he
said. "We
know there
are black
Tea Party
members, and
we want
black people
to feel
comfortable
taking
leadership
positions in
all parties
in this
country."
But speaking
of Tea Party
leaders, he
added:
"We've seen
the signs,
we've heard
the slurs,
and all
we're asking
is for you
to act
responsibly
and say
there's no
space for
bigots in
the Tea
Party."
Sarah Palin
struck back
Tuesday on
her Facebook
page,
declaring
herself
"saddened by
the NAACP's
claim that
patriotic
Americans
who stand up
for the
United
States of
America's
constitutional
rights are
somehow
'racists.' "
That, of
course, is
not what the
NAACP is
saying. She
went on to
refer to
"America's
past
racism," and
identified
herself with
Ronald
Reagan, who
said it was
"a legacy of
evil." And
then Palin
brought the
conversation
back to
herself.
"Having been
on the
receiving
end of a
similar
spurious
charge of
racism," she
said, "I
know how Tea
Party
Americans
feel to be
falsely
accused."
This is a
shameless,
narcissistic
dodge. "Palin
wants to
construct a
false
argument,"
Jealous said
in the
interview. "Palin
wants the
terms of
debate to be
about people
calling her
racist, and
nobody's
calling her
racist." The
NAACP, he
said, is
simply
challenging
her along
with other
Tea Party
leaders to
separate
themselves
cleanly from
"racist
behavior" by
some in the
movement.
"We have
seen what's
happened in
the past
when we let
groups play
'hide the
ball' with
racism in
their
ranks,"
Jealous
said. He's
right, and
it's time
for
mainstream
conservatives
to follow
the
admirable
example of
my Post
colleague
Michael
Gerson, who
recently
deplored
"Tea Party
excess" and
spoke of the
need to
distinguish
"the
injudicious
from the
outrageous."
Let's start
with former
representative
Tom
Tancredo's
speech at a
Tea Party
convention
last
February
that never
got the
attention it
deserved.
The reason
we elected
"Barack
Hussein
Obama,"
Tancredo
said, is
"mostly
because I
think we do
not have a
civics
literacy
test before
people can
vote in this
country." He
was cheered
for this.
Should
anyone be
surprised
that members
of the NAACP
might be
alarmed over
the
suggestion
that we need
"literacy
tests,"
phony
devices once
used to keep
African
Americans
from voting?
Guilt by
association
is wrong,
but it's
legitimate
to insist
that those
who believe
in democracy
and freedom
take
forceful
steps to
disassociate
themselves
from people
in their
movement who
peddle
racism,
intolerance
and fear.
That's what
the NAACP is
asking.
It's your
move, Sarah.