The term “race hustler” — or “race pimp” — has historically been used as a slur against Black civil rights activists by people accusing them of speaking about race-related issues for their personal, political or financial benefit.
Such language has become popular among some conservative bigots who want to silence discussions about racism.
Over the past few weeks, though, I’ve been thinking about how “race hustling” perfectly describes the behavior of people at the forefront of today’s conservative movement. It certainly describes Donald Trump, who launched his 2016 presidential campaign with a racist diatribe about Mexican immigrants. But we’ve seen multiple examples of this recently with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, country music singer Jason Aldean and conspiratorial Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani.
Let’s take a look back, shall we?
In DeSantis’ case, we’ve seen race hustling in his administration’s efforts to whitewash the history of slavery. His support of Florida’s new educational standards, which require schools to teach that slavery sometimes came with a personal upside for enslaved people, underscores his eagerness to traffic in versions of history that appeal to many white conservatives. He has publicly attacked Black officials who disagree with this warped worldview, and the crux of his political identity — touting so-called anti-wokeness — is staked in similar anti-Black revisionist history.
DeSantis is using racial bigotry for his political benefit. This, my friends, is true race hustling.
DeSantis: As president, I recognize that the woke mind virus represents a war on the truth so we will wage a war on the woke. We will fight the woke in education, we will fight the woke in corporations, we will fight the woke in the halls of congress. pic.twitter.com/8bd7eQSDgM
— Acyn (@Acyn) June 3, 2023
Aldean is in a similar boat. As I wrote earlier this week, his video for “Try That in a Small Town,” which appears to promote racial violence, is essentially bigot bait. It’s a poppy, formulaic insult to quality country music as it seeks to capitalize on white nationalist symbolism — and maybe a little bloodlust as well.
And conservatives have been eating it up, to Aldean’s delight. Singing a twangy tune at the site of an infamous lynching has carried the artist near the top of the Billboard charts. And Aldean’s framing of the backlash to his video as an effort to cancel him — which has made many conservatives even more resolute in supporting him — seems to me like a blatant effort to cash in on their racial angst.
Again, more race hustling.
And then there’s Giuliani, who just this week admitted to lying about two Black election workers in Georgia — Ruby Freeman and her daughter Shaye Moss — whom he claimed tried to defraud Trump out of a 2020 election victory in the state. These lies were at the heart of Trump’s 2020 election denialism, which Team Trump allegedly used to raise millions of dollars.
Pimpin’ ain’t easy, as the saying goes … unless your base is Republican voters.








