As Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s controversial campaign rhetoric has ratcheted up, he has been drawing comparisons to former segregationist presidential candidate George Wallace, but does that make Sen. Ted Cruz, who has emerged as his chief rival in the Republican race for the 2016 nomination, the new Richard Nixon?
Let’s take a trip down memory lane. In 1968, Wallace and Nixon were in many ways pursuing the same disaffected voting bloc from the right. Wallace was doing it as a insurrectionist independent candidate, while Nixon was running as the mainstream standard bearer of the Republicans. Both men campaigned on law and order and a kind of restoration of conservative values, but while Wallace was unafraid of embracing racially coded language and imagery, Nixon, who had a considerably more moderate record on race, was careful to pitch his message to the so-called “silent majority.”
When the 1968 results were tallied, they were closer than some might have predicted — in part because Wallace may have siphoned off some of Nixon’s support, particularly in the Deep South. By 1972, when Wallace mounted a presidential campaign as a Democrat, then-President Nixon was determined to hold what have now become stalwart red states. “What he was really worried about was that Wallace would end up running as a third party candidate,” Professor Dan T. Carter, author of “The Politics of Rage: George Wallace, the Origins of the New Conservatism and the Transformation of American Politics” told MSNBC on Wednesday. He employed what has been popularly known as the “Southern strategy,” which he had begun to pursue in earnest in ’68, which translated to making tacit racial appeals to the region’s white voters with an emphasis on “state’s rights.” Nixon won in a landslide in ’72 and carried every single Southern state — most of which have remained firmly in the GOP column ever since. According to Carter, Nixon’s victories were due in part to his “house-taming” of Wallace’s rhetoric “making it more respectable while staying safely to the right of any Democrat.”
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Still, Wallace’s ability to influence Nixon’s political strategy was still being felt once the 37th president was already in the White House. When Wallace made the busing desegregation policy a centerpiece of his 1972 campaign, Nixon delivered an Oval Office speech reiterating his opposition to the program, in what may have been an effort to neutralize Wallace’s nascent candidacy. When Wallace was derailed by a would-be assassin’s bullets two months later, Nixon privately decried him as a “Goddamn demagogue”and “a hate monger,” but he never underestimated the former Alabama governor’s political acumen.








