Daily Camera (Boulder)

Haley’s slavery stumble shows dark hole Republican­s are in

- By Issac Bailey

It’s not that Nikki

Haley refused to say slavery was the primary cause of the Civil War (it was) this week in New Hampshire, where her poll numbers have been rising. It’s that she felt compelled to deny the obvious, perhaps convinced her followers and potential supporters couldn’t handle that simple truth. Her non-answer answer illustrate­d the intellectu­al and moral rot at the center of the 21st century version of the Republican Party, and why its problems are far deeper than an unhealthy allegiance to Donald Trump.

The most depressing part of our current political reality is that despite Haley once again revealing herself as a phony on the issue of race, she remains the country’s best hope among Republican candidates to save us from Trump. Haley has never shown courage on the issue, not even when she was being praised nationally for being the governor when that god-forsaken traitorous Confederat­e flag was removed from the Statehouse where it had flown for half a century. Before that, Haley had said little about the flag other than to suggest businesses considerin­g the state didn’t seem repelled by it so it was no biggie.

Haley, Sen. Tim Scott and other Republican­s were shamed into asking for its removal after Dylann Roof massacred nine black people at

Mother Emanuel A.M.E. Church in Charleston. During Haley’s first campaign for governor, she played the role of Confederat­e apologist. It was because of the blood of Roof’s victims — not Haley’s leadership — I got to take my kids to Columbia to see that flag come down.

This week, she was stumped by a softball of a question because she feared answering honestly would hurt her standing among Republican­s. Her fear isn’t illogical. Republican­s have spent the past few years establishi­ng a Lost Cause 2.0, one in which honest and frank discussion about our racial history or present has been presented as an affront to precious white children. They’ve proposed and passed a bevy of laws making it more difficult to teach the truth about how this country came to be. They’ve conjured boogeymen they’ve labeled “CRT” or “DEI” — distorted versions of the real thing — to sell the false idea that white people are under attack. Heck, Trump, lost no support when he dined with a well-known and outspoken white supremacis­t just months ago.

Haley grew up in the same place I did, and at the same time I did. She saw, like I saw, a Republican governor, David Beasley, lose re-election in red South Carolina after saying he had a God-inspired epiphany to oppose the Confederat­e flag. She saw, like I saw, “maverick” John Mccain give into Confederat­e fears while campaignin­g in South Carolina as the GOP nominee in 2008. White fear among the Republican base has only grown since Barack Obama won the presidency that year, which put a black face on the very real demographi­c shift that may mean we might be a majority-minority nation within a couple of decades. When many in the Republican base say “my country,” they mean a country that is primarily white, particular­ly for positions of and power and culturally. For many in that base, the Confederac­y represents bravery and steadfastn­ess, no matter the odds, a red line that must not be crossed.

After all, the South is still a place where white developers have told me they add the word “plantation” to the names of high-end communitie­s because in focus groups their mostly white and rich clientele said it evokes the elegance of “Gone with the Wind” rather than the cries of the enslaved.

That Haley felt compelled to dodge a Civil War question, only to admit the truth a day later after receiving bad press, should surprise no one.

She isn’t a brave leader. Haley is more calculatin­g than courageous, which underscore­s the dark hole we are in.

Issac Bailey is an opinion writer based in the Carolinas.

 ?? EVGENIY MALOLETKA — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Houses are underwater in the flooded town of Oleshky, Ukraine, in June. An AP investigat­ion has found that Russian occupation authoritie­s vastly and deliberate­ly undercount­ed the dead in one of the most devastatin­g chapters of the 22-month war in Ukraine — the flooding that followed the catastroph­ic explosion that destroyed the Kakhovka Dam in the southern Kherson region.
EVGENIY MALOLETKA — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Houses are underwater in the flooded town of Oleshky, Ukraine, in June. An AP investigat­ion has found that Russian occupation authoritie­s vastly and deliberate­ly undercount­ed the dead in one of the most devastatin­g chapters of the 22-month war in Ukraine — the flooding that followed the catastroph­ic explosion that destroyed the Kakhovka Dam in the southern Kherson region.

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