New
U.S. House GOP Majority Whip Steve Scalise voted against making Martin
Luther King, Jr. Day a state holiday twice while he was in the Louisiana
state legislature. The Republican Congressman, who is under increased
scrutiny for addressing a White Nationalist group in 2002, has spent the
week in damage control mode. Scalise is trying to distance himself from
David Duke and the European-American Unity and Rights Organization
(EURO). However, his voting record to reject accepting the Martin Luther
King holiday will do little to quell suspicions that he is a racist.
In 1999, Scalise cast one of only three votes against establishing the holiday. In 2004, he was just one of six lawmakers to vote down a bill to make MLK day a state holiday. 90 lawmakerssupported the measure.
Scalise continues to deny that he had any knowledge of EURO’s white
supremacist ideology, though one would think the name itself provides a
bit of clue.
While
rejecting the Martin Luther King holiday doesn’t necessarily out
Scalise as a hardcore white nationalist, it does suggest that his views
on race are suspect at best. He says he detests hate groups. Then he awkwardly compares a
hate group to the League of Women Voters. That bizarre
comparison reveals how unoffensive he really finds white supremacists.
Or alternatively, it proves that he hates civic minded women who want to
provide information to voters. Either position is indefensible.
Steve
Scalise will continue to try to run from his dubious association with
white nationalists. He may even convince himself that he is “color
blind”. However, his two votes against the Martin Luther King, Jr.
holiday now seem to take on a new significance. At a time when Scalise
is trying to distance himself from white racists, his two votes against
the MLK holiday are coming back to haunt him. As well they should.
Pandering to racists may be smart electoral politics in Metairie,
Louisiana. However, it doesn’t look so good when that politician hits
the national stage. Now that Scalise is under the national spotlight,
his past may undo him politically. His days as Majority Whip may already
be numbered.
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