On February 28, 1854, a small group of abolitionists met in a tiny church in Ripon, Wisconsin, to discuss their efforts to oppose slavery. After hours of discussion, the group dubbed themselves Republicans, and the party of Lincoln was formed. Their main cause? Abolishing slavery, and establishing that all men could truly be equal.
On the party’s 159th birthday, the fight for racial equality no longer seems important to the Republican party, especially when a law protecting voting rights is dismissed (by a Republican-backed Supreme Court Justice) as a “racial entitlement.”
Somewhere along the way, the party of Lincoln has become the party of Limbaugh, but how did it happen?
Ironically, the civil rights era of the 1960’s may have been the turning point: as Democrats embraced the movement, Southern white Democrats fled the party. Only a few years later, Richard Nixon used his Southern strategy to swoop them up, and in the elections since then, many of those states crystallized into red states, especially in the deep south. Krystal Ball says “fear-mongering” and racial code words have been a key part of the party’s strategy to win.
Of course, that strategy hasn’t been winning so much anymore.








