By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Last week, the president's lap dog blew his dog whistle.
In case you didn't know, in politics a "dog
whistle" is coded language that has a superficial meaning for everybody,
but also a special resonance for certain constituencies. Using dog whistles
lets politicians deny they meant to say anything nasty, bigoted or
controversial.
Speaking to the National Action Network the day after a
testy but racially irrelevant exchange with Republican members of a House
panel, Attorney General Eric Holder said, "The last five years have been
defined ... by lasting reforms even in the face of unprecedented, unwarranted,
ugly and divisive adversity." He continued: "If you don't believe
that, you look at the way -- forget about me, forget about me. You look at the
way the attorney general of the United States was treated yesterday by a House
committee. ... What attorney general has ever had to deal with that kind of
treatment? What president has ever had to deal with that kind of
treatment?"
Now, bear in mind the audience. The National Action
Network is Al Sharpton's plaything, often providing the shock troops Sharpton
needs for rent-a-mob protests, shakedown operations and MSNBC photo ops. Holder
didn't say criticism of him and Obama is racially motivated, but the notion the
audience (or the media) would take it any other way doesn't pass the laugh
test.
Holder's hypocrisy is stunning given that he once
famously chastised Americans as being "cowards" for not talking
openly about race. Who's the coward now?
For the record, there's nothing special about the rough
time Holder has received. Forget Harry Daugherty of Teapot Dome fame or John
Mitchell, who went to prison. Ed Meese's critics had "Meese Is a Pig"
posters printed up. Janet Reno and John Ashcroft never got cake and ice cream
from opponents.
The best recent comparison is probably Alberto Gonzales,
George W. Bush's second attorney general, because like Holder, he was a fairly
incompetent partisan loyalist with a thin skin. Gonzales was treated brutally
by Democrats. Some even tried to impeach him. I don't recall Gonzales
insinuating that such efforts were anti-Latino.
Holder has deserved all he's gotten. He earned his
contempt of Congress citation by refusing to provide documents on the
disastrous Fast and Furious operation that left an American dead from a gun the
U.S. government put on the street. If anything, Holder deserves more grief,
particularly from a media that seem to have forgotten his efforts to surveil
journalists' phone records and name Fox News' James Rosen an unindicted
co-conspirator in an espionage case.
Even inside the White House, Holder is considered too
political. "Holder substitutes his political judgment for his legal
judgment, and his political judgment isn't very good," says an unnamed
White House official, according to the Washington Post's David Ignatius.
Holder's remarks come at a convenient time. In a widely
discussed New York Magazine essay, Jonathan Chait argues that race relations
have gotten worse under Obama. Chait believes that liberals have become
obsessed with conservative racism as the real explanation for everything
Republicans do. Meanwhile, he says conservatives have cocooned themselves in a
kind of righteous victimhood, where racism is a relevant issue only when
conservatives are falsely accused of it. (It's a fair point that conservatives
should be more conspicuously concerned about racism.)
It is an at times brave and insightful, if not uniformly
persuasive, essay. The Holder episode casts light on one of his arguments.
According to Chait, Obama has steadfastly refused to make race a national
issue, even as the ugly racial conversation has raged. "In almost every
instance when his blackness has come to the center of public events, however,
[Obama] has refused to impute racism to his critics," Chait writes.
That's largely (though not entirely) true about what the
president has said himself. But it is manifestly untrue about what he has
allowed to be said on his behalf. He didn't mind the racial theater
congressional Democrats put on when black congressmen marched through Tea Party
protests to sign Obamacare. One of those congressmen, civil rights hero John
Lewis, gave a stirring speech at the 2012 Democratic Convention and suggested
that a vote for the GOP amounted to "going back" to Jim Crow.
Republican presidents are routinely expected to denounce
outrageous comments by members of their own party, never mind members of their
Cabinet. Not Obama. His feigned aloofness is his exoneration, even as racial
politics get ever more poisonous, thanks in part to his whistling lap dog.
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