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Rep. Steve King wonders how the phrase “white supremacist” became “offensive”

Yes, this is a sitting member of Congress.

Iowa Freedom Summit Features GOP Presidential Hopefuls
Iowa Freedom Summit Features GOP Presidential Hopefuls
Rep. Steve King.
Scott Olson/Getty Images
Zack Beauchamp
Zack Beauchamp is a senior correspondent at Vox, where he covers ideology and challenges to democracy, both at home and abroad. His book on democracy, The Reactionary Spirit, was published 0n July 16. You can purchase it here.

A sitting member of Congress has just more-or-less openly endorsed white supremacism.

“White nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization — how did that language become offensive?” Rep. Steve King (R-IA) said in an interview with the New York Times’s Trip Gabriel published Thursday morning. “Why did I sit in classes teaching me about the merits of our history and our civilization?”

King’s comments are about as clear a commitment to white racial politics as you can get. They weren’t from a private meeting that was recorded, or masked in coded language, but in an on-record interview with the country’s paper of record.

King, who is perhaps the most aggressive advocate for immigration restrictionism in Congress, has never really bothered to hide the racial animus underlying his politics. He has retweeted a neo-Nazi, warned of immigrants with “calves the size of cantaloupes” smuggling drugs across the border, endorsed a white supremacist running for mayor of Toronto, and written that “we can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies.”

But openly musing about how being a “white supremacist” or “white nationalist” shouldn’t be offensive makes the subtext text.

Careful study after careful study after careful study has shown that the rise of Donald Trump as a political figure is the result of a long-running transformation of the Republican party’s voting base in which racially resentful whites became the dominant force. Trump won because he appealed more openly to these sentiments than any Republican had been willing to do for decades.

King was first elected to Congress in 2002, a leading indicator of what the GOP was becoming. Some Republicans and their allies in the conservative press have tried to obfuscate this turn in their party, but King’s continued presence is a living testament to what the party really is. A tiny part of me appreciates his candor.

What these comments do is lay some of the stakes of our current political moment bare. The question in the United States and other countries facing a rise in anti-immigrant right-wing populism is this: Can our most basic norms against racism and bigotry, the ones behind King’s complaint that “white supremacist” has become a dirty phrase, survive? And what happens to our societies if they don’t?

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