Showing posts with label election. Show all posts
Showing posts with label election. Show all posts

Saturday, October 1, 2016

Donald Trump is Campaigning Like It's 1856

Despite the US Civil War and 160 years of social and technological progress, people's beliefs in some parts of America have not changed since 1856. Donald Trump’s current Presidential campaign platform: anti-immigrant, anti-minority, anti-“elite” nativism – appears to have support in many of the same areas of the US as the “American Party” of 160 years ago.

The “American Party”, who were also known as the “Know-Nothings”, started out as a semi-secret society and were called the “Know-Nothings” because if outsiders asked members about the party, they were supposed to say, “I know nothing.”  The group was made up of white Protestant men who were disturbed by the influx of immigrants during the 1840's and 1850's, especially Catholics, which changed the social landscape of America to something that was new to these nativist Americans - and they didn't like it.  They wanted to Make America Great Again, that is "back to the way it used to be".

Look at these comparative maps showing Trump support in 2016 (areas of strong support in red) and the Know Nothing Presidential Results in 1856 (areas of strong support in yellow):



Of course, in 1856 much of the western part of the US was sparsely inhabited, and the red areas of Oklahoma, South Dakota, eastern Colorado and northern New Mexico were still territories at that time, so they were not included in Presidential elections.

However, there are a number of regions that are surprisingly similar: much of the Old South still supports the ideas the Trump has revived from the Know-Nothings, such as Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama along the Gulf of Mexico.  The Appalachia states of Tennessee and North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky are still strong in their support of those ideas, even Missouri and upstate rural New York follow the same pattern in 2016 as they did in 1856.

Interestingly, South Carolina did not support the Know-Nothings in 1856 and that seems to hold true for Trump 160 years later; it is one of the few areas in the US southeast that is not dark red in the Trump support map.

California in 1856 voted for the Know-Nothings as a backlash against Chinese immigration at that time, there still seems to be support for those ideas in the southwest, although it is more spread out through Arizona, western Oregon, and northern Nevada, perhaps because of Mexican immigration in those areas of the US.

As much as Trump has tried to refer back to the Republican Party as the “party of Lincoln”, it is quite clear that his ideas are actually those of the Know-Nothings. In fact, Abraham Lincoln despised the beliefs of the American Party. In a letter, he wrote:

“I am not a Know-Nothing – that is certain. How could I be? How can any one who abhors the oppression of negroes, be in favor of degrading classes of white people? Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to be pretty rapid. As a nation, we began by declaring that 'all men are created equal.' We now practically read it 'all men are created equal, except negroes.' When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read 'all men are created equals, except negroes and foreigners and Catholics.' When it comes to that I should prefer emigrating to some country where they make no pretense of loving liberty – to Russia, for instance, where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocrisy.” Browne, Francis Fisher (1914). The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln: A Narrative and Descriptive Biography with Pen-pictures and Personal Recollections by Those who Knew Him. Browne & Howell. p. 153.

Possibly the only difference between Trump and the Know-Nothings would be to subsitute Muslims for Catholics. Trump and his supporters seem to fear Muslims for the same reason the Know-Nothings feared Catholics (especially those who had recently emigrated to America): their religious beliefs and loyalties would be opposed to what the American Party saw as national beliefs and loyalties.

There are other similarities between Trump and the Know-Nothings: their popularity increased dramatically, from 50,000 to over 1,000,000 members in only one year as the Whig Party collapsed in 1854. With only the Democratic Party remaining, many people joined the American Party rather than the newly-formed Republican Party. This is similar to Trump’s astonishing rise in popularity since he started his campaign last year, with the post-Tea Party vacuum of leadership of the current Republican Party.

Despite its sudden rise, the American Party also declined quickly.  Millard Fillmore (a former President with the Whig Party) only garnered 23% of the vote in 1856, behind the Democrat and Republican candidates. 

Hopefully, Trump's campaign and ideas will go the way of the American Party: with the election of Abraham Lincoln and rise of the new second party (Republican), as well as internal dissent among the Know-Nothings, their influence and existence were short-lived.  By the 1860 Presidential election, the American Party was all but gone for good.

While racism and intolerance are unfortunately still alive, let's all work toward making sure those beliefs don't win on November 8 by showing the facts of Donald Trump's campaign, his past actions, and his temperament make him unfit for the US Presidency and that all good, thinking, compassionate people will not accept those ideas as representing our society.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Barack Obama makes history

Last night at 1:15 AM Atlantic Standard Time is one of those times of my life that I will probably remember for a long time, one of those "Where were you when it happened?" moments. That was the time of Barack Obama's speech in front of hundreds of thousands of people in Chicago.

Obama became the first black man to be elected president of the United States. I think this really marks a turning point in US history, given that nation's record of slavery and systemic racism against minorities.

Obama's victory makes the old adage that "anyone can become President" ring truer than ever. I think Obama's status as a black man who was not descended from people who were taken in the slave trade made it possible for him to ascend to America's highest office. He was not a direct product of colonial slavery even though he has lived with its after-effects his whole life.

My greatest fear of this election before last night was that the "shadowy men" who have run the US for the past 8 years would somehow rig this election as they have the last two, with voter fraud in 2000 and blatant fear-mongering in 2004. What last night's assembly in Chicago showed me and the rest of the world was that Obama's message resonates with Americans and his quest for the White House would not be denied.

As most people probably feel this morning, I am hopeful for the next 4 years. With Democrats in control of the executive and legislative branches of the government, they can make real progress toward repairing the debauchery of Bush Jr.'s reign.