RAW STORY
A CNN contributor who doesn’t seem to understand how politics have
evolved since the Civil War repeatedly insisted the Ku Klux Klan was a
liberal organization.
Jeffrey Lord, a former associate political director in the Reagan
administration who frequently calls on modern Democratic Party to
apologize for sins committed by historical Democrats, appeared Monday to
discuss a former Ku Klux Klan leader’s backing of Donald Trump, reported Media Matters.
David Duke, the one-time Grand Wizard of the KKK and a one-term
Louisiana state representative, threw his support behind Trump, who has disavowed the endorsement but also said he would need to research white supremacist groups before commenting on them.
“Donald Trump isn’t playing the game, although he certainly denounced
him,” Lord said. “I mean, David Duke is a hardcore leftist. He’s an
anti-Semite.”
Duke served in the Louisiana legislator as a Republican from 1989 to
1992, but he has run long-shot presidential and legislative campaigns as
both a Democrat and Republican.
Lord then argued that the KKK, which was founded by angry former
Confederate soldiers during the Reconstruction era and terrorized blacks
throughout the first half of the 20th Century, was associated with the
Democratic Party.
“The Ku Klux Klan is a function of the left,” Lord said. “It was the
military arm of the Democratic Party. Hello? Donald Trump’s daughter and
son-in-law are Jewish. David Duke is an anti-Semite, for heaven’s
sakes. This is ridiculous.”
Many members of the historical KKK were Democrats, but most
historians and political scientists agree that the Democratic Party of
the late 19th and early 20th centuries bear little resemblance to
today’s Democratic Party.
The long-standing link between the Democratic Party and white
supremacists in the south began unraveling during the 1960s as the
national party became increasingly aligned with the black civil rights
struggle and white southerners began to vote for Republican candidates.
CNN host Margaret Hoover did not correct her guest’s claims, but she
dismissed the KKK as a hate group that was no longer affiliated with any
traditional political party — but Lord wouldn’t hear it.
“It is a racist hate group from the left, and that counts,” Lord
said. “That is important to understand. It is not conservative. It has
nothing to do with conservatism. All of these Klan members who have been
elected to Congress and U.S. Senate and governorships over the years,
supporting Franklin Roosevelt because they like Social Security. Let’s
get our history straight.”
In fact, a recent study showed how the KKK played an active and enduring role in steering southern white voters away from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party.
By 1992, when Duke sought the GOP presidential nomination over party
leaders’ objections, a poll found that even decades after the KKK’s
decline, Republican voting was strongest in southern counties where the
Klan was active in the 1960s.
“The Klan played an active role in encouraging white southerners to
prioritize white supremacy over party loyalty,” the study’s authors
found.
Lord, however, said the controversy would only strengthen Trump’s appeal with some voters.
“This is why — this is exactly the kind of thing why people are
voting for Donald Trump,” Lord said. “Because they think the media is
making something out of nothing. Nothing. This is crazy.”
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