The GOP Is Monkeyed Up

 

There comes a point when even the most indulgent listener must doubt whether political figures deserve the benefit of the doubt. Ron DeSantis, that means you.

In what should have been a celebratory interview after his victory in the Republican primary for governor of Florida, DeSantis seemed spooked by the upset win of Democrat Andrew Gillum, the black mayor of Tallahassee. DeSantis called Gillum “charismatic,” and an “articulate spokesman” while also warning that he was too left for Florida. “I watched those Democrats debate,” he said “and none of that is just my cup of tea, but he performed better than the other people there, so we gotta work hard to make sure that we continue Florida going in a good direction.” So far, so good. But then DeSantis added “The last thing we need to do is to monkey this up by trying to embrace a socialist agenda with huge tax increases bankrupting the state.”

He could have said “mess this up.” In our rude era, he could even have said “screw this up.” But he chose the word “monkey.” His spokesman says those taking offense are crazy to imagine that he intended a dog whistle. Maybe that’s true. I hope it is. A couple of years ago, I suspect I would have vehemently insisted that it was so. But I’m no longer so sure. I live in Virginia, where Republicans have actually nominated alt-right friendly Corey Stewart for the U.S. Senate. I’ve seen the Republican Party look down and kick the dirt as President Trump has poked his stick into one sensitive racial issue after another. Picking fights with black NFL players over the national anthem is a dog whistle that all of us can hear. Tarring all immigrants with MS-13, ditto.

Well, Republicans counter, there’s no purchase in criticizing Trump.  See what became of Bob Corker, Jeff Flake, and Mark Sanford? We don’t approve of Trump’s cruel and dehumanizing language, but what good does it do to criticize him? If we speak up, we’ll just be replaced by a Trumpier Republican. Thus does cowardice masquerade as pragmatism.

What if an opportunity arises to make a point about racial harmony that doesn’t even involve Trump? Consider the proposal floated earlier this week by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to rename the Russell Senate Office Building after the late John McCain. You would have thought this was a no brainer. Senator Richard Russell was a segregationist Democrat who helped filibuster civil rights legislation and signed the Southern Manifesto. Here was an opportunity for Republicans to withdraw the honor from a Democrat who didn’t merit it in favor of one of their own, who did.

How did Republican members of the Senate respond? Senator Richard Shelby (R. AL), himself a Democrat until the convenient year of 1994 when Republicans took control of Congress, was sentimental about Russell. “Senator Russell was a well-respected man from the South and up here too,” said Shelby said, adding that he was “a man of his time. If you want to get into that you have to get into George Washington and Thomas Jefferson and all of our — most of our Founding Fathers, maybe with the exception of Hamilton,” he said. “It’s easy to prejudge what they should have done.”

Georgia Senator David Perdue, a Republican mind you, sprang to Russell’s defense in an even more surprising way. “This was an icon in the United States Senate. He was Lyndon Johnson’s close adviser. They did the Great Society together. So, people would criticize Richard Russell for maybe being on the wrong side of the integration movement, but my goodness he turned around and got the school lunch program done. He did that himself.”

Actually, the school lunch program was passed in 1946, long before Russell’s filibuster of the civil rights act. And it wasn’t an act of beneficence by Uncle Sam. It was a way to dispose of the surplus food that other government programs, namely farm subsidies, had created. But never mind the historical error, focus on the fact that a supposedly conservative Republican is praising Lyndon Johnson and the Great Society! Is it any wonder that their budget has exceeded the fondest wishes of Barack Obama?

Great swaths of Republicans are not just biting their tongues about Trump, they are convinced that his white nationalist path is the right one.

Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana didn’t want to insult McCain’s memory, but suggested that they find another way to honor him.

Maybe they will, but do they recognize how they have dishonored themselves?

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  1. Nerina Bellinger Inactive
    Nerina Bellinger
    @NerinaBellinger

    EDISONPARKS (View Comment):

    Gary Robbins (View Comment):

    Mona is right.

    Before jumping to Ron DeSantis’ defense, I strongly urge you to invest 29 seconds and watch, not just listen, to his statement on Fox News. DeSantis was clearly not speaking off the cuff. He was not using a regional idiom. This was a carefully practiced and honed statement. Every word had been picked with care. His cadence clearly showed that he was building up to using the word “monkey” as a verb. It was intentional.

    Shortly after DeSantis’ statement, Fox News issued a rare, on-air rebuke of his remarks, saying “We do not condone this language ….”

    Before defending Ron DeSantis’ practiced and deliberate remarks as an innocent regional idiom, please take the time to watch the statement. He meant to say what he said, and that should be rebuked by all Republicans and Conservatives as having no place in our party and movement.

    Absolutely pathetic.

    With all due respect Gary, more often than not you are a polite well spoken fellow(though often wrong), however your dislike of Trump has evidently allowed you to fall for this absurdly weak Lefty race baiting nonsense.

    Why in God’s name would DeSantis ever purposely use racist language when it’s a such an obvious lose/lose/lose/lose proposition.

    Ron DeSantis is not a stupid man (Yale undergrad, Harvard Law, US Naval Justice School, Iraq War Vet(Bronze Star, Iraq Campaign Medal), Federal Prosecutor, Elected to US Congress since 2012. You look at DeSantis’s entire life’s work and then you look at the motivation and ethics of those accusing DeSantis of racism(including your own) and it’s an easy call for any rational thinker.

    @edisonparks‘s comment just deserves repeating.

    • #361
  2. Bane White Trailer Trash Inactive
    Bane White Trailer Trash
    @Pseudodionysius

    Western Chauvinist (View Comment):

    I guess the Dems are monkeyed up, too.

    https://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiepavlich/2018/08/30/flashback-heres-a-bunch-of-democrats-saying-monkeying-around-n2514415

    I remind the audience at home that I pointed out the significance of Chuck Schumer in the original opinion piece. I stand by that observation. Chuckie is all smiles right now, like The Grinch.

    • #362
  3. Locke On Member
    Locke On
    @LockeOn

    Gary Robbins (View Comment):

    About thirty years ago George Will ran a column about Joe Biden. In a speech on the Senate Floor Biden’s hyperbole got away from him, and in the heat of the moment went one step too far.

    The next day, the Congressional Record had this speech, but the offending sentence was excised.

    Will approved. His point was that in debate, people can get carried away, and that it is appropriate for them to withdraw a blurted statement.

    Unlike the DeSantis quote which was practiced and honed, it is my guess that Mona’s words ran away from her. If she had it to do over again, I bet she would have not included that paragraph.

    As others have pointed out, suggesting that a written work was less thought out than a verbal statement in the heat of the moment has some credibility issues.  But let’s assume, arguendo, that you are right and follow where it leads:

    So Mona, in a fit of pique or heat of passion, blurts out on her keyboard what she really thinks.  Which is indistinguishable from the DNC/Leftist talking point that ‘great swaths’ of Republican voters and supporters are such because they are hidden racists.

    And you supported her and that statement.

    By your own argument, we’re learning more about Mona and you than about DeSantis.

    • #363
  4. Jeff Hawkins Inactive
    Jeff Hawkins
    @JeffHawkins

    Django (View Comment):

    Basil Fawlty (View Comment):

    Gary Robbins (View Comment):

    Theodoric of Freiberg (View Comment):

    Gary Robbins (View Comment):
    Before jumping to Ron DeSantis’ defense, I strongly urge you to invest 29 seconds and watch, not just listen, to his statement on Fox News.

    Do you have a link?

    Here is the link.

    It is at the beginning of the clip.

    “Now we see the racism inherent in the statement!”

    No. We missed the really offensive part. The fool below is upset that DeSantis said Gillum “performed well” in his debates. BTW, the story is at dailycaller.

    To quote the fictional Harry Flashman: “I’ve had about a belly-full of these mealy-mouthed pimps.”

    Kit’s Agent: This is a great script! Look, it’s not Shakespeare, but it…

    Kit: Hey, what did you just say?

    Agent: I said, ‘it’s not Shakespeare’…

    Kit: ‘It’s not Shake… ‘, ‘It’s not Shake… ‘ (to Freddy) Do you hear what he’s doing?

    Freddy: I know he’s doing something, I just can’t put my finger on it. Yeah, yeah, yeah… What’s he doing?

    Kit: Shakespeare, Freddy, Shakespeare!

    Freddy: Shakespeare?

    Kit: Shake a spear! Spearchucker! I’m a spearchucker now!

    • #364
  5. Petty Inactive
    Petty
    @PettyBoozswha

    Gary I watched the clip, thanks for the link. Your position is a little more rational than I thought last night, it was a conscious decision to use that phrase, but I am still willing to give the man the benefit of the doubt. I think he was looking for an alternative to “screw it up” or “F it up” and it just came out “monkey it up.” Was Gary Hart being racist when he took Donna Rice out on the good ship Monkey Business? Long time Florida cracker Charles C.W. Cooke agrees with me in National Review.

    I’d also like to add a comment about an ignored part of Mona’s screed – her slam on Sen. Richard Shelby. If the Kennedy family is still giving out those “Profiles in Courage” awards I think Shelby should be the next nominee. If he hadn’t asked Republicans to put the country before party 23,000 would not have written in a protest candidate. Roy Moore lost by 22,500 votes.

    • #365
  6. Jager Coolidge
    Jager
    @Jager

    At NRO the Editors have a piece up on the Florida election.

    DeSantis was absurdly declared to have resorted to a racist dog whistle (he said we shouldn’t “monkey with” Florida’s success in what was clearly a reference to Gillum’s agenda). 

    https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/08/andrew-gillum-would-be-disaster-florida-governor/

    • #366
  7. Gil Reich Member
    Gil Reich
    @GilReich

    5 Likes on the original post. 5. 364 comments, many with 30+ Likes. I used to love Mona’s writings and podcasts. But she’s followed Jen Rubin, Kristol, Nichols, etc. Please, Ricochet management. Mona can write at any of thousands of outlets that serve up deranged hatred of the deplorables. Maybe let Ricochet just be respectful, civil, center-right discourse?

    • #367
  8. Bane White Trailer Trash Inactive
    Bane White Trailer Trash
    @Pseudodionysius

    This is the type of deranged commentary I get from relatives and in laws for free every summer.

    • #368
  9. Bane White Trailer Trash Inactive
    Bane White Trailer Trash
    @Pseudodionysius

    On Twitter Ben Shapiro and David French appear to be of one mind on this fake controversy.

    • #369
  10. TheSockMonkey Inactive
    TheSockMonkey
    @TheSockMonkey

    Bane White Trailer Trash (View Comment):

    On Twitter Ben Shapiro and David French appear to be of one mind on this fake controversy.

    Collusion! It’s – it’s – French collusion!

    • #370
  11. Gil Reich Member
    Gil Reich
    @GilReich

    Gil Reich (View Comment):

    5 Likes on the original post. 5. 364 comments, many with 30+ Likes. I used to love Mona’s writings and podcasts. But she’s followed Jen Rubin, Kristol, Nichols, etc. Please, Ricochet management. Mona can write at any of thousands of outlets that serve up deranged hatred of the deplorables. Maybe let Ricochet just be respectful, civil, center-right discourse?

    Heh. In 20 minutes my comment on page 13 got more likes than the OP, published almost 23 hours ago. Ricochet management, please consider the opinions of your paying customers. Just asking you to live up to your stated mission. Thanks

    • #371
  12. Petty Inactive
    Petty
    @PettyBoozswha

    Mona is a good Republican, a good writer and a good person. She needs to put down the cello, get out of Washington and talk to some of the deplorables, maybe with someone like Selina Zito; she has a need to know the people she’s caricaturing.

    • #372
  13. Miffed White Male Member
    Miffed White Male
    @MiffedWhiteMale

    Gil Reich (View Comment):

    Gil Reich (View Comment):

    5 Likes on the original post. 5. 364 comments, many with 30+ Likes. I used to love Mona’s writings and podcasts. But she’s followed Jen Rubin, Kristol, Nichols, etc. Please, Ricochet management. Mona can write at any of thousands of outlets that serve up deranged hatred of the deplorables. Maybe let Ricochet just be respectful, civil, center-right discourse?

    Heh. In 20 minutes my comment on page 13 got more likes than the OP, published almost 23 hours ago. Ricochet management, please consider the opinions of your paying customers. Just asking you to live up to your stated mission. Thanks

    Nobody’s forcing you to read her stuff.

     

    • #373
  14. Instugator Thatcher
    Instugator
    @Instugator

    TheSockMonkey (View Comment):

    Bane White Trailer Trash (View Comment):

    On Twitter Ben Shapiro and David French appear to be of one mind on this fake controversy.

    Collusion! It’s – it’s – French collusion!

    The French Connection – how racist.

    • #374
  15. RufusRJones Member
    RufusRJones
    @RufusRJones

    Petty (View Comment):

    Mona is a good Republican, a good writer and a good person. She needs to put down the cello, get out of Washington and talk to some of the deplorables, maybe with someone like Selina Zito, and talk to the people she’s caricaturing.

    The model of government she has in her head is failing. She has to deal with that. 

    • #375
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