Republicans are waging a propaganda push to hide the racist impact of their efforts to gerrymander congressional districts ahead of next year’s midterm elections.
A couple of weeks back, Rep. Al Green, flanked by fellow members of the Texas Democratic congressional delegation, browbeat members of the media at a news conference. Green’s gripe? That the mainstream press wasn’t, in his view, doing an effective job of conveying the functional racism at play in the Donald Trump-backed gerrymandering effort in Texas, which is deliberately designed to target majority-Black and majority-Latino districts.
Unfortunately, we have grown to the point in this country where you can use racism against people of color, but people of color can’t respond and say, ‘That’s racism.’ If we do, you’re not going to print it. You’re not going to carry it. What you’re going to do is allow the racist statement to prevail. And what we try to do to fight it — by indicating that it IS racist — you allow that to just be words that evaporate into nothingness.
It was a warning that conservatives can obscure the true intent or result of this discriminatory assault on democracy if members of the press won’t plainly depict it as such. And as Republicans spread misinformation over their gerrymandering efforts, it’s hard to argue with him.
The examples are mounting.
Just last week, Harmeet Dhillon, the civil rights-averse head of the DOJ’s civil rights division, claimed during an interview that the racist gerrymandering effort in Texas isn’t truly racist but, instead, an effort to dismantle the “racial spoils” that Democrats have purportedly reaped from laws designed to combat racist gerrymandering. This, of course, is not true. My colleague Hayes Brown recently wrote an excellent op-ed explaining how Texas Republicans are making a mockery of the Voting Rights Act. And, as my former colleague Joy Reid detailed in a recent Substack post, it’s abundantly clear that the Texas GOP’s plan will disenfranchise nonwhite voters — particularly, Black ones.








