Chauncey DeVega

Chauncey DeVega
Location
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Birthday
September 11
Title
A (Sometimes) Respectable Negro
Bio
Editor and Founder of the blog We Are Respectable Negroes He has been a guest on the BBC, Ring of Fire Radio, Ed Schultz, Joshua Holland's Alternet Radio Hour, the Burt Cohen show, and Our Common Ground. His essays have been featured by Salon, Alternet, the New York Daily News, and the Daily Kos. The NY Times, the Daily Beast, the Utne Reader, Washington Monthly, Slate, and the Week (among others) have featured his expert commentary and analysis on race, politics, and popular culture.

MAY 31, 2012 3:48PM

The Genius of Romney's "Obama is a Lazy Negro" Ad

Rate: 23 Flag

Well played Mr. Romney. Very well played indeed.

Mitt Romney's "Barack Obama Isn't Working" campaign is a genius political move. Less clumsy than the infamous Willie Horton ad, it is a more elegant and refined racial appeal for a slightly more civilized "colorblind" age.

As such, Mitt Romney's suggestion that Barack Obama is "not working" deftly draws on a set of stereotypes from the American popular imagination where black people, and black men in particular, are depicted as lazy and not self-sufficient. This is one of the core attributes of what social scientists have termed "symbolic racism."

This stereotype is central to contemporary right-wing political discourse, and can trace its lineage back to the Southern Strategy under Richard Nixon, and through to Ronald Reagan's mobilization of anti-black sentiment with his allusions to "welfare queens" and "strapping young black bucks" who buy steaks with food stamps. As part of this pattern, the 2012 Republican campaign has featured such onerous moments as Rick Santorum's suggesting that black Americans are parasites who live off of white people, as well as Newt Gingrich advising young people of color (because they are especially lazy and pathological) that they should be janitors in order to learn a "work ethic."

The polite and more refined bigotry that drives Romney's "Barack Obama Isn't Working" campaign is more careful than that of his Tea Party GOP brethren. However, it still plays off of the same sentiments and crude racial stereotypes about African Americans. Moreover, Romney's more "polite" racism resonates because it exists in a right-wing imaginary that considers Obama a "Socialist," wallows in birtherism, and has marshaled faux populist zeal in order to mark out clear boundaries of civic belonging where to be a "real" American requires that a person be White.

In all, the right-wing echo chamber is unapologetic in its use of racial stereotypes, mobilization of white racial resentment, and outright race prejudice. Romney can fly above the racist fray, but still benefit from how such attitudes have helped to prep the political battlefield for his success.

Romney's devious narrative about President Obama's lack of success, incompetence, and implied laziness is masterful on a number of levels.

1. The claim that Barack Obama isn't working has a veneer of plausible deniability. Romney claims that the slogan is "historical" in nature, borrowing from Thatcher's anti-Labour campaign in the United Kingdom during the late 1970s. Through this logic, there is no racial animus at work; racism cannot possibly be present in the suggestion that Barack Obama isn't working because the slogan is inspired from events both decades ago, and in another country.

In the United States, and given how the color line has structured American life, operates in the country's collective subconscious, and provides a set of scripts which impact our perceptions of one another, the wellsprings of Romney's slogan are of little importance.

Question: would be an equivalent silence if a politician campaigning for high office suggested that his Jewish rival was cheap? Or that his Asian-American competitor for the same office was devious, sneaky, or untrustworthy? Here, I would suggest that the precarious position of blacks in American society makes them uniquely vulnerable to the use of racial appeals in political discourse.

It is also important to note how language involves both the transmission, reception, and circulation of ideas between a speaker and the audience.The repeated suggestion that a black man "isn't working" signals to deeply held biases that link together the black body, black personhood, and stereotypes about poverty, work ethic, and respectability. A listener, or in this case a voter, does not have to be conscious of how these concepts motivate his or her behavior. As research on racial attitudes and political behavior has repeatedly demonstrated,white voters "get" these racial cues and are quite responsive to them--conservatives and right-leaning independents especially so.  

2.  Any effort to call out Romney's use of racial stereotypes would play into the politics of white racial resentment and white backlash that came in the aftermath of the Civil Rights Movement. The associated and invented language of "the race card" and "reverse racism" are based on a premise that white supremacy is a thing of the past. Since the election of Barack Obama, the right-wing media and other elites have been able to push this narrative even further--white people are now oppressed, and despite all available sociological data that suggests otherwise, anti-white racism is now a plague upon the land. To attack Romney's campaign slogan is to fuel the howls of white victimology.

3. In the age of conservative "colorblindess," racism is defined by intent. This is a function of the personalization of race prejudice wherein racist social structures and institutional arrangements of power are conveniently ignored. Racism is universal. It is no longer a sin unique to white people. Consequently, the intent behind a person's words and deeds trump both the context and consequences of their actions. If Romney were to deny that his ad was "racist"--which Romney would most certainly do--one of the evasions would be that "he did not intend it that way." The same deflection would be flipped around on the critic who pointed out the problematic nature of Romney's appeal to Obama's imagined laziness in order to win over white voters. In keeping with the colorblind/reverse racism script, Mitt Romney would now become a victim, as the act of calling someone a "racist" in post-Civil Rights America is a bigger sin than racism itself.

4. Accidents and coincidence. Mitt Romney's choice of a slogan that leverages one of the most pernicious and deeply rooted stereotypes about black men in American society (next to the myth of the black rapist) is carefully designed and painstakingly chosen. Such a choice is far from happenstance. Romney did not personally select the language "Obama Isn't Working." His consultants (a cadre of psychologists, marketing experts, political advisers, and focus groups) perfected the language, visuals, and narrative of Romney's campaign ad. The way that the campaign mines white animus and stereotypes towards the country's first black president, while skillfully playing along the edge of being an overt racial appeal is a delicately choreographed balancing act:  this grace does not come without much practice and reflection.

Mitt Romney's "Obama Isn't Working" campaign is a smart bomb aimed at white Independents (and other right-leaning fence-sitters) who can be mobilized to vote against Obama by carefully constructed appeals which simultaneously play on racial anxieties, but carefully avoid naked racism. Ultimately, Mitt Romney is vulnerable on many issues such as his gangster capitalist roots, insincerity, aloofness, religion, the Tea Party GOP's failed economic policies and obstructionist behavior, as well as being the flag carrier for a party on the brink of demographic suicide. Romney's flank is also exposed because he is the nominee for a political party that is possessed by Culture Warriors whose views are outside of the American mainstream. These are weaknesses to be exploited.

However, I would suggest that folks not sally forth and engage Romney regarding the racial invective present in his "Obama Isn't Working" campaign theme. To do so, would be to fight on Romney's chosen terrain. Nor would such an engagement offer up many political gains. The cause would be noble; the battle would still be lost.

Once more Mr. Romney, well played, very well played indeed. You are a worthy foe

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Chance, er, Chauncey, there is an elegant and factual riposte to the 'Obama Isn't Working' ad, and that is to point out that only HALF of Obama isn't working, the Negro half, because the other half is Kansan cracker-white, inherited from his mother's side. Since Obama is a mulatto, his supporters can claim that Romney is only half right...wink
I mean, this from a guy who literally believes Joseph Smith talked to god (or was it Moroni?) and that the golden tablets were hidden in upstate New York.

Please.

Nice work / r
OK, so Mitt Romney, silver spoon sucking son of privilege, a man who has had everything in life given to him, is trying to attack the work ethic of Pres. Obama? Well, if the dems cannot provide a quick and easy counter ad then the Obama campaign deserves to lose.
r./
OMG this is such a lie. Obama is the hardest working president in my memory.
Very well written and presented. Haven't had the pleasure of viewing this ad as yet but look forward to seeing it for myself. As they say..."Let the games begin!"
When was the last time Romney did any form of real work? I mean picking up a shovel just to weed the garden, or even mow it? Naw, he's got illegals to do that for him.
Romney -- or more precisely, whoever is responsible for this tag-line and this ad -- is indeed clever, but worthy? I hardly think so. This pustulating pile of crap is right out of the Lee Atwater/Karl Rove cesspool -- uh, playbook.

Some think Rove is a political genius (especially the vermin himself), but for all his small-ball talent at rat-fucking, he doesn't understand the most basic rules of politics. Getting elected is comparatively easy -- especially if you've got lots of money and no conscience; but to maintain political power, eventually you have to govern.

Scamming a life-long loser like Bush the Least into office was no way to achieve Rove's promised and much-ballyhooed Permanent Republican Majority. Indeed, that lasted about as long as the The Thousand-Year Reich.

Sooner or later, political ignorance will be the undoing of most of the intransigent Teapartians who've been swept into office on a wave of anti-incumbent fever fed by economic strains. To cite one example, to trade a polished and capable lifer politician like Richard Lugar for a man who has the balls of a brass monkey and the brain thereof, too, is sheer lunacy.

When voter are through venting their spleen, there's going to be a helluva lot of buyer's remorse, because the Teapartians are almost to a man utterly unprepared and psychologically unfit for office. Politics is the art of compromise, and these crude rubes are surely artless.
Most liberals seem to have no difficulty at all recognizing that their opponents are dirty, filthy, scum-bag, anti-black, anti-women, anti-poor, anti-everything scumbags.

This often - far too often - leads them to forget that them dirty rats are also smart! (At times. When they want to be.)

As you say, "a worthy foe" indeed! Too bad it's all just a show intended to bamboozle the electorate into forgetting that all politicians owe allegiance to the same masters who bought them fair n' square on the political market and own them lock, stock, and barrel.

It's long past the time when changing drivers makes any difference. It doesn't even matter what route is travelled. The destination is fixed; a fascist, theocratic oligarchy.

Laws passed in the last few days allow the government to legally lie to and propagandize Americans in America.

Have fun neighbours! If it gets too hot for ya, don't come up here; we're headed in the same direction - just a little slower.
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...and the kicker is that, if challenged, the Romney campaign can say the word "working" means "succeeding" in this context. You are so right. They paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for that, if not millions.

Lezlie
Great analysis. Some of the best I've read on OS.
You're really right about this because the ad takes attentiveness to follow--the feel is more of an infomercial, made in soft, "this is unfortunate" tones. My mind was looking for the cue as to what they were getting at for some time ... therefore the only thing that stands out is indeed the "Obama isn't working" tag and it has two messages: 1) isn't working as in isn't doing work and 2) isn't working as in this situation isn't working. To me it seems perfectly idiotic but I recognize the depth and subtlety, and you're absolutely right that it will play exactly to those that it is geared toward.

Subtle, snarky and sickening--straight up Romney's alley.
CONGRATULATIONS! THIS POST IS A READERS' PICK (RP)
I wish we could figure out a way to spark a national mass movement to ignore paid political advertising. The vast majority of people do not realize the extent to which they are being manipulated by the "psychologists, marketing experts, political advisers, and focus groups (that) perfected the language, visuals, and narrative" of every campaign ad...even when it does not actually include any verifiable lies.

And even when they distruct political ads, they still pay attention. I was chatting yesterday with a well-to-do middle-aged white couple who was visiting my neighbor from out of town. Everything--I'm not exaggerating--EVERYTHING the woman knew about either of the current candidates for governor came from paid television ads. She knew it was all unreliable information, but all she seemed to lack awareness about any other options available to her to find out the facts. Just so disheartening.
OMG, Chauncey, you've done it again!!!

You have spotted racism where this old white guy never, ever, thought it could have existed – in a political advertisement about protecting intellectual property. What would we do without your deeply penetrating analysis of the racial minutiae that once was so covert that no one but you could detect it?

However, once your interpretation of the 'richness' of the underlying text of this ad is published, then it becomes immediately obvious to all that Romney is labeling Obama as a ‘lazy nigger’. I feel so stupid not to have noticed this overt, pervasive, and obvious racism before.

We owe you a deep debt of gratitude, Chauncey. Thanks for another one of your insightful posts.

I'll get around to rating this later. I am so ashamed of my racial insensitivity to touch the brilliance of this post further at this time.
As always, brilliant. Thank you for laying out the other side's lies, insults and low-brow political machinations. Why this wasn't an EP is beyond my comprehension. R.
As usual, Uncle Chri fails to comprehend how his condescending mockery only reinforces that which he vainly attempts to ridicule, in this case your exposure of thinly-veiled and plausibly deniable racism. In doing so, he also exposes himself as someone who fails to recognize his own racism.
Thanks to READERS PICK for sending me here. I usually try and tune out the Romney ads---you've made me realize why I can't do that. Because ---as you so clearly stated--his strategy is so well played.

I gotta pay more attention. Thank you!
Yeah, pretty hard to call out, fight, counter. Too many Uncle Chri types around. I guess there aren't too many black Uncle Toms any more; instead we got these white Uncle Chri's. (I know that apostrophe is wrong, but sometimes you just gotta put them in some plurals.)
Excellent discussion.

You are right. Romney is a worthy scary foe. In Massachusetts, we did not believe we could wake up one morning and he'd be our governor, but then he was. As we say in Boston. nevah forget!
Gee, Uncle Chri, isn't "nigger" fun to say, especially when you can deny you had any racist intent? That was just you being helpful, wasn't it, since Chauncey forgot to say it himself?

Chauncey, good analysis. Linguistics was my subject in college, so this stuff jumps out at me. There's the concept of "marked" and "unmarked" in linguistics. Those things or people that are marked are outside the norm. Post racial shit aside, it's still "marked" to be a black president. We have not stopped noticing. The same language applied to a white or black president has to be seen within the context of race, whether we like it or not.

We can't make this a post-racial society by proclaiming it to be. Terms like "post-racial" and "the race card," as well as complaints by whites that they were subject to racism because someone of another race did not like them, are all attempts do deny that racism still exists and has power.

Maybe Obama's campaign could confront the racist ad, if they take a page from Republican campaign tactics. Careful analysis would die on the airwaves, but reducing the issue to a simple sound bite could work.