Glenn Beck believes the Tea Party is the civil rights movement of our era. He often names African-American figures from the movement like Martin Luther King Jr. when he speaks to Tea Party rallies. He invoked King, Frederick Douglass, and even Gandhi at a rally held Wednesday, where he told the Tea Party Patriots in the audience, “My civil rights will not be trampled” and called on them to fight for freedom.
But the movement that rose up in the wake the election of the nation’s first African-American president has been accused by some critics of attracting racists and using coded language to appeal to racial hostility against the president. The criticism was sometimes based on offensive signs that popped up at Tea Party rallies. But leaders within the movement consistently rejected the claims of racism. A new study is shedding some light on what researchers describe as a “nuanced” relationship between Tea Party supporters and racial animus.
The study published in Race and Social Problems indicates that Tea Party members are not necessarily any more racist than typical white Americans, but that the movement’s supporters are more likely to be, leading the researchers to conclude that, ”what the Tea Party means to its members and what it represents to the large public may, in fact, not be the same thing.”
Morgan Whitaker








