Kevin M. Kruse Profile picture
Jul 17, 2019 14 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Sure, let's take a look at the Republican Party's stance on the Confederacy today.
For starters, I'm not a "soi-disant historian."

Lots of places call me a historian, in fact -- the institutions that awarded me a BA, MA and PhD in History, the one that employs me as a professor of history, the OAH and AHA too.

Remind me: what are your qualifications again?
Now, luckily, there have been a considerable number of clashes over Confederate monuments, memorials, and symbols in recent years, clashes which have forced the two parties to state their positions clearly.

Let's take a look at who's defending the Confederacy and who isn't.
In my home state of Tennessee, Governor Bill Lee just signed a proclamation honoring Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest.

Yes, state law required it, but Republicans control the state legislature and could repeal it today if they so desired. tennessean.com/story/news/pol…
In Georgia, Democratic Governor Roy Barnes removed the Confederate emblem from the state flag in 2001.

Republican Sonny Perdue, now Trump's Secretary of Agriculture, capitalized on the backlash, campaigned on holding a referendum on the flag change, and won.
In Mississippi, the Confederate emblem is still on the state flag, despite calls from Democrats to remove it.

The polls from 2015 make the partisan lines clear -- about two thirds of Democrats want the Confederate symbol removed, three quarters of Republicans want it preserved.
In South Carolina, Republican Governor Nikki Haley responded to the Charleston massacre by calling for the removal of the Confederate flag at the Capitol.

She succeeded, but the only resistance came from the GOP.

Only 20 state reps voted to preserve the flag: all Republicans.
In North Carolina, Republicans unanimously backed a 2015 law that forbade localities from removing Confederate monuments and Republican Governor Pat McCrory signed it into law.

The new governor, Democrat Roy Cooper, declared his opposition and wants to repeal it.
In Virginia, Confederate monuments were a big issue in the 2017 gubernatorial election. Democrat Ralph Northam called for their removal, Republican Ed Gillespie wanted them preserved.

Democrats tried to repeal a state law defending the monuments, but were blocked by the VA GOP.
In Alabama, Republicans pushed through a similar state law to protect its Confederate monuments -- sponsored by Republican members in each house, signed into law by Republican Governor Kay Ivey.

Here's the vote from the state senate. See a pattern?
In Louisiana, Democratic Mayor Mitch Landrieu of New Orleans and the Democratic members of the city council pushed to take down statues of Confederate generals.

The former governor, Republican Bobby Jindal, wanted to block them.
In Arkansas, Republican legislators tried to enact a similar monument protection bill this year. "Our heritage is under attack," said the Republican sponsor.

It passed the state senate on a party line vote (Republicans for it, Democrats against) but failed to pass the House.
In Texas, the same pattern -- Democrats in cities like Dallas wanted to remove Confederate memorials, but were blocked by a state law against it.

Two months ago, every single Republican in the state senate voted to keep the monuments; every Democrat voted to allow their removal.
As you can see, in every single state of the former Confederacy, Republicans are the ones working today to protect and preserve Confederate icons and imagery, while Democrats are working to remove them.

You don't have to be a historian -- "soi-disant" or real -- to see this.

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More from @KevinMKruse

Oct 10, 2023
Well, I think my time here is done.
This site has gotten steadily worse with every "improvement" Elon has made, but this weekend made it clear that it's no longer a place to get and discuss breaking news.
It's just a cesspool for the worst people on social media and it's getting worse every week.

I've been telling myself for months that the good here outweighs the bad, but I don't believe that anymore.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 23, 2023
There's no better way to announce that you've read literally nothing on the party realignment over civil rights than to ask about congressional delegations.

That's not how realignment happened, and anyone pushing this "rebuttal" is either an idiot or a liar.

But let's dig in!
Again, as I've discussed many times before, the power of sitting congressmen depended entirely on their seniority in the Democratic Party, which held dominant majorities in Congress. That's why they're the lagging indicator in this process.
So let's look at a state, but all the politics of a state, not just the senior southern Democrats determined to hang on to their perks in Congress.

How about Mississippi?
Read 16 tweets
Sep 13, 2023
@CheesedHammer @ericjorgenson8 @flakingbaking @quiltsbypagan @Katb4animals @RickLaManna1 @RepJasonCrow I'm a historian who's worked on this for 25 years, so I could point you to a lot of my published work, starting with my chapter in MYTH AMERICA:

hachettebookgroup.com/titles/kevin-m…
@CheesedHammer @ericjorgenson8 @flakingbaking @quiltsbypagan @Katb4animals @RickLaManna1 @RepJasonCrow But I'm happy to provide some primary sources as well.

Here's some news coverage of Prentiss Walker, the segregationist Republican whose first appearance after winning the election was to speak before Americans for Preservation of the White Race: Image
@CheesedHammer @ericjorgenson8 @flakingbaking @quiltsbypagan @Katb4animals @RickLaManna1 @RepJasonCrow As I've noted here before, Prentiss Walker was an outspoken opponent of civil rights, voted against the Voting Rights Act, and insisted civil rights activists were worse than the Klan:

Read 7 tweets
Aug 29, 2023
This strikes me as a fair diagnosis of a problem, but a wholly impractical solution.
The problem of historical falsehoods that get repeated in the literature is certainly real.

We all have our own stories of learning this the hard way, I'd imagine.
For instance, I long accepted that Ike's 1952 campaign strategy was a "formula" they called K1C2, for "Korea, Corruption, and Communism"

Then I wrote an essay on it & tried to trace the claim to its source, only to find it was all based on one wild distortion that took off.
Read 8 tweets
Aug 10, 2023
The House GOP has been riling up its base by repeatedly insisting it has the goods to get Joe Biden.

This works fine in the short term, but repeatedly overpromising and underdelivering is only going to make the base mad at them, more than anyone else.
You can see this with today's tweets from the Oversight Committee.

It's framed as a huge hit on Biden but once you read it, it's clear the "Biden FAMILY AND ASSOCIATES" framing is a load-bearing beam.

It's a showy announcement meant to suggest much more than is actually there.
But the base doesn't get that -- they're riled up and they expect action.

Action that Republican politicians can't *actually* deliver because they (or at least their very patient legal counsel) understand there's really no there there.
Read 6 tweets
Jul 29, 2023
Any discussion of Florida's effort to replace the original AP standards for African American history with the state's own version should directly compare and contrast the two.

Here's the AP:

Here's Florida: https://t.co/Ygf0RWsNBYapcentral.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/ap-a…
fldoe.org/core/fileparse…
One thing is readily apparent from even a quick comparison between the two standards -- the claims that Florida's standards are "robust" quickly fall apart when you line them up next to the much more substantial program the AP has put together with specific sources and plans.
A lot of attention has been given to the slavery section -- which in Florida is strongly focused on discussing abolitionism while the AP standards are much more direct on the lived experiences for the enslaved -- but for me the 20th century material is more of an issue.
Read 8 tweets

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