Hundreds of President Trump’s supporters were rampaging inside the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 6, as Trump’s eldest, Donald Jr., went on to Twitter belatedly to plead with the mob to avoid violence. “This is wrong and not who we are,” Junior tweeted as noted in this account. “Be peaceful and use your 1st Amendment rights, but don’t start acting like the other side.”
Ten days
later, thousands of National Guardsmen are deployed in the nation’s capital this
weekend in an effort to safeguard President Joe Biden’s inauguration on
Wednesday [Jan. 20] against a recurrence by another pro-Trump mob.
Junior’s
“not who we are” tweet could be understood as referring specifically to his
father’s campaign and presidency or, more broadly, to “who we are” as
Americans. In either case, he was demonstrably incorrect, as seen in Trump’s
conduct as candidate and president and in the long history of white mob
violence in the United States.
Violence and the threat of violence were part
of his father’s campaign from the outset and into his presidency, as seen for
example when Trump urged supporters at a campaign rally in Iowa in January 2016
to “knock the crap” out of any hecklers. Trump went on then, and in later rallies, to
promise to pay legal fees of any supporters who ended up facing charges for assaulting
dissidents.
Junior’s tweet, interpreted more
broadly, was also demonstrably incorrect as a matter of American history. In
fact, white mob violence in aid of white supremacy has been a recurrent pattern
in U.S. history from the slavery era through the post-Civil War Reconstruction
and through the 20th century civil rights movement. In the words of the late 20th
century song, Junior “don’t know much about history.”
Here, then, a refresher: the
post-Civil War Reconstruction suffered its greatest single setback when white
insurrectionists took up arms against the biracial government in majority-black
Grant Parish, Louisiana, on Easter Sunday, April 13, 1873. A white mob attacked
the parish courthouse in the Red River
Valley town of Colfax in an armed shootout with black Republicans barricaded inside
that eventually forced the outnumbered blacks to surrender.
The event is marked by a historical
marker erected in 1951 that describes the Colfax Riot as marking the end of
“carpetbagger misrule” in the South. An estimated 150 blacks were killed in the
episode, many of them execution-style after they had surrendered. Three whites were
killed: their deaths are memorialized in an obelisk that stands outside the courthouse
and praises them for having died while fighting in defense of “white supremacy.”
The
historian Eric Foner, in an interview with the writer Isaac Chotiner in The
New Yorker, saw a parallel between the history of white supremacy violence
during the Reconstruction and the Capitol riot more than a century later. “It’s
not unprecedented that violent racists try to overturn democratic elections,”
Foner remarked, after recalling similar riots that displaced biracial
governments in New Orleans in 1874 and in Wilmington, N.C., in 1898.
The Capitol
riot needs to be understood in the same context, Foner explained in the
interview. “It was not a fly-by-night operation,” Foner said. “ It was not a
misguided group who got a little out of hand or something like that. It was
really an attempt to completely subvert the democratic process by violence.”
The Reconstruction-era white
mobs believed that blacks “were incapable of taking part intelligently in a
democratic government,” according to Foner, and for that reason believed that
they were restoring honest and responsible government by ousting black
officeholders and their carpetbagger allies. Foner, a professor at Columbia
University and author of Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution
1863-1877, recalls in the interview that high school history classes
through the 1960s taught Reconstruction in negative terms consistent with the
white supremacist critique of the era
Foner links Trump’s “birtherism” attack
on Obama’s legitimacy as president to the same philosophy: “straight-out white
supremacy.” Trump “was pushing the idea
that Obama was not really an American and, therefore, could not be president,”
Foner recalled. “The idea that Black people are actually aliens in a certain
way – that they are not truly American, that the only true Americans are white –
that’s been around for a long time in our history.”
Foner’s
narrative in effect forces us to view the Capitol riot through a racial lens.
The mob was not only predominantly white but almost exclusively white, despite
the role of one black Trump supporter in helping organize the event. But just
as in the 19th century, the white mob was trying to prevent the election
of a distinctively biracial government, with a woman of color as vice president
and a racially and ethnically diverse Cabinet.
The
Biden-Harris ticket won the support of more than 90 percent of the nation’s
black and brown voters, according to post-election exit polls. The Biden
victories that Trump’s supporters were challenged including four states –
Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin – where black voters in major
cities were critical in flipping the results from the 2016 election.
Trump
carried the majority of the white vote in 2020, according to exit polls, just
as he had done in 2016. But a majority of the white vote left Trump more than 7
million votes behind Biden in the overall popular vote. Trump, it must be remembered, incited the mob
to march to the Capitol by saying that they needed to “show strength” to reclaim
the country. “You’ll never take back our country with weakness,” Trump said.
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