As someone who has lived in both Wessex and the
American South, I can’t help but be struck by certain similarities between the
two. Both are primarily rural and
agricultural regions. Both have
low-status accents that provide a lazy comedic shorthand for ignorance and
backwardness. And both have areas that
have been hurt economically by the loss of their textile industries, whether
it’s the Cotswolds or South Carolina,
where I lived for 6 years.
There is, however, one major
difference in their regionalist traditions.
The main regionalist / Celtic nationalist parties in the Disunited Kingdom are all on the Centre Left. The Southern patriot movement, on the other
hand, is a creature of the fringe far Right.
That master of the political dog whistle, Ronald Reagan, used “states’
rights” as a euphemism for segregation: an extension of Nixon’s Southern
strategy to woo mostly (though not exclusively) Southern racists, who had
abandoned the Democratic Party over the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, into the Republican fold.
The success of this strategy can be seen today in the current popularity
of Donald Trump, who has become the Republican front runner by proposing to
deport Mexican immigrants en masse and to strip American Muslims of their
constitutional rights (though it should be pointed out that Trump leads a very
crowded field, and only enjoys the support of some 25-30% of Republican primary
voters).
As a result of this, support for the right of the federal government to override the will of individual states has become a totem of liberal orthodoxy, and there is no left-of-centre decentralist tradition to speak of. Anyone on the Left supporting states’ rights in a literal, rather than a euphemistic sense, is an aberration: an isolated phenomenon like the handful of monarchists that exist in the USA, in defiance of that country’s entire history.
As a result of this, support for the right of the federal government to override the will of individual states has become a totem of liberal orthodoxy, and there is no left-of-centre decentralist tradition to speak of. Anyone on the Left supporting states’ rights in a literal, rather than a euphemistic sense, is an aberration: an isolated phenomenon like the handful of monarchists that exist in the USA, in defiance of that country’s entire history.
Like Wessex Regionalists and Celtic
nationalists, the Southern patriots identify themselves through the use of a
flag. In this case, they use the battle
flag of the Army of Northern Virginia, commonly (though incorrectly) referred
to as the Confederate Flag. Based on the
Scottish saltire, to reflect the Scots-Irish heritage of many Southerners, it
was incorporated into the state flag of Georgia in 1956, two years after
the Brown v Board of Education court decision that led to the
desegregation of American schools and, since then, has become a symbol of
defiance against Yankee destruction of “traditional Southern values”. The flag was still flying outside the South
Carolina Statehouse in the state capital, Columbia,
when I lived there, but public protests have since forced its removal.
There have been attempts to forge a
Southern identity that isn’t entirely based on racism. Some revisionist historians have suggested
that the “recent unpleasantness” (the tongue-in-cheek way that Southerners
refer to the American Civil War, aka the War of Northern Aggression) wasn’t
really about slavery at all, but about supporting a confederal over a federal
form of government. This seems to be
based on wishful thinking, however, as it completely
ignores the fact that every single Confederate state included a clause in its
constitution protecting the institution of slavery and prohibiting its
abolition.
Demographics in the South are
changing. Whilst de facto segregation
continued long after its de jure abolition, the old racial barriers are
breaking down, and the younger generation are far more accepting of a diversity
of races, religions, nationalities, genders and sexual identities. The current Republican governor of South Carolina, Nikki
Haley, is a woman of Indian extraction, elected by the general public against
stiff opposition from the good ole boy network within the state party. The challenge will be to reflect this new
reality without erasing the South’s identity and heritage altogether.
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