DOG WHISTLE
Mother Jones|September/October 2022
One of the biggest cliches in politics is just warping what we hear.
TIM MURPHY
DOG WHISTLE

REPUBLICAN STRATEGIST Lee Atwater is the godfather of the modern political dog whistle. Not because he invented, or even appears to have used, the term-but because in a 1981 interview he offered a concise description.

"By 1968 you can't say '[n-word]'that hurts you, [it] backfires, so you say stuff like, uh, 'forced busing,' 'states' rights,"" Atwater explained. "You're getting so abstract. Now you're talking about 'cutting taxes." 

He was speaking anonymously as a staffer in Ronald Reagan's White House. He was also telling on himself. Atwater got his start working for the archsegregationist Strom Thurmond. Later, as a campaign manager for George H.W.Bush, he would push the Willie Horton ad, which tied Democratic presidential nominee Michael Dukakis to a Black man who committed multiple violent crimes while out on furlough from prison. On the surface, it was just facts. On a different frequency, it was screaming at white voters about a racist trope.

Esta historia es de la edición September/October 2022 de Mother Jones.

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Esta historia es de la edición September/October 2022 de Mother Jones.

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