“The elites are out to get you and your hard-earned pay.” “We’re spending too much on protecting foreign nations and not enough defending our own borders against immigrant invaders.” “China is taking your job and will soon take over your phone.” We are consistently fed this type of “rightwing populism” –– sticking up for the working man against an array of villains: coastal elites, liberal media and foreign boogeymen - but replete with seamy audience flattery, xenophobic and anti-Semitic dogwhistles and confusing, ever-shifting definitions of what exactly constitutes “the elite” and “the media.”
With the rise and eventual presidency of Donald Trump there’s been no shortage of pontificating and reporting about the appeal of “rightwing populism” but one aspect worth dissecting is the way in which wealthy Republican-funded media deliberately seeks to win over confused and sometimes lefty media consumers with a clever mix of faux class warfare, vague appeals to post-partisanship and piggybacking off legitimate discontent with the Democratic party to sow nihilism and suppress voter turnout.
From Jacksonian "Producerism" to Trump’s fake anti-imperialism to the shameless grifts of today’s billionaire-backed hucksters like JD Vance, the right has long tried to soap box about the beleaguered working man and rail against the mysterious - often urban, black, brown or Jewish - authors of his pain and suffering.
In this episode, Part Two of our two-part episode on right-wing populism, we dissect three more tropes of "right-wing populism," detailing the ways the Republican messaging apparatuses seek to rebrand their stale platform every 10 years with a new, tweaked version of warmed over John Bircherism.
Our guest is Poor People's Campaign co-chair Reverend Dr. Liz Theoharis.
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Reverend Dr. Liz Theoharis is co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival alongside the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II. She is the Director of the Kairos Center for Religions, Rights, and Social Justice at Union Theological Seminary. She has spent the past two decades organizing amongst the poor in the United States, working with grassroots organizations like the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, the Vermont Workers Center, Domestic Workers United, the United Workers Association, the National Union of the Homeless, and the Kensington Welfare Rights Union. An ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church (USA), she is also the author of Always with Us?: What Jesus Really Said about the Poor.
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Have We Entered America’s Third Era of Reconstruction?
Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis | June 23, 2018 | The Nation
Waking the Sleeping Giant: Poor and Low-Income Voters in the 2020 Elections
Shailly Gupta Barnes | October 2021 | The Poor People's Campaign
Andrew Jackson, America’s Original Anti-Establishment Candidate
Harry Watson | March 31, 2016 | Smithsonian Magazine
David Sessions | August 7, 2019 | Jacobin
Why Right-Wing “Populism” Is A Fraud
Nathan J. Robinson | September 7, 2018 | Current Affairs
Trump’s Phony Populism Rests on One Big Lie
Jay Michaelson | July 31, 2017 | The Daily Beast
The Ulterior Motives of the Anti-War Right
Osita Nwanevu | January 10, 2020 | The New Republic
Trump the anti-war president was always a myth
Michael Galant | January 20, 2021 | Responsible Statecraft
Donald Trump’s Not Anti-War, He Just Wants the U.S. Military to Focus on Stealing Oil
Robert Mackey | September 14, 2016 | The Intercept
Why Trump’s Antiwar Message Resonates with White America
J. D. Vance | April 4, 2016 | The New York Times
Lee Fang | April 9, 2009 | ThinkProgress
Republican ‘populism’ is a fraud
E. J. Dionne, Jr. | December 30, 2020 | The Washington Post
Tea Party Avoids Divisive Social Issues
Kate Zernike | March 12, 2010 | The New York Times
Creating a Moral Movement for Our Time
Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II and Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis | August 8, 2018 | The Nation
The John Birch Society Is Back
John Savage | July 16, 2017 | Politico
The John Birch Society is still influencing American politics, 60 years after its founding
Christopher Towler | December 6, 2018 | The Conversation
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For a full transcript of this episode, go here.
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John
2021-11-17 15:34:19 +0000 UTCJohn
2021-11-11 19:47:44 +0000 UTC