Politics

/

ArcaMax

Robin Abcarian: Republicans fearing a midterm rout revive Islamophobia as political strategy

Robin Abcarian, Los Angeles Times on

Published in Op Eds

Boy, it's been a struggle whipping up ugly racist sentiment since President Donald Trump "closed" the border last year. No more stories about immigrant caravans marching ominously north to steal our jobs and rape our women. No more tall tales of Haitian gangs eating the cats, eating the dogs.

Sure, immigrants might still be "poisoning the blood" of our country, as the president claimed numerous times during his 2024 campaign. But with so many violent deportations and the killing of two white American citizens protesting them, that rhetoric has lost some of its glow.

What we need are some fresh scapegoats. Who can white people blame now for their woes?

Hey, I know! How about Muslims?

The election of New York City's first Muslim mayor, a democratic socialist, along with Trump's poorly thought-out war on Iran, has given the bigots in his party a new bogeyman:

"The enemy is inside the gates," wrote Alabama Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville, who juxtaposed an image of the Sept. 11 terror attacks with a photo of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani on X.

"Muslims don't belong in American society," wrote Tennessee Republican Rep. Andy Ogles, who called for their expulsion from the United States.

"We need more Islamophobia, not less," wrote Florida Republican Rep. Randy Fine. "Fear of Islam is rational."

A Georgia state senator's campaign video urged voters to "Keep Georgia sharia free."

Republican leaders, far from condemning the rhetoric, revel in it.

At a moment when it appears that Republicans might be subject to — in President Obama's memorable description of his own midterm losses — a shellacking come November, it would seem the party is getting desperate. And so it falls back on a tried-and-true playbook: Creating fear about non-white members of certain religions, backgrounds or ethnicities, or gay people or trans people, to help goose Republican voter turnout. It's the "Southern strategy" updated for our times.

(Democrats, by contrast, are turned on by the thought of taxing billionaires.)

The idea that the country is being overrun or undermined by "others" is a tired but effective trope used by authoritarian governments all over the world. Or, in the case of the United States, a would-be authoritarian government.

The latest annual report from the Varieties of Democracy Institute at Sweden's University of Gothenburg finds that Democratic backsliding is happening in about a quarter of the world's countries, and is happening at an alarming rate in the U.S.

The speed with which American democracy is currently dismantled "is unprecedented in modern history," says the report, citing Trump's "rapid and aggressive concentration of powers in the presidency." For the first time in more than 50 years, the report says, the U.S. has lost its long-term status as a liberal democracy.

In fact, the report says, it took Trump only a year to accomplish what it took the democratically elected, authoritarian leaders of India (Narendra Modi), Hungary (Viktor Orbán) and Turkey (Recep Tayyip Erdoğan) years to accomplish. (You can think of those as illiberal democracies — combo meals of democratically elected leaders who curtail civil liberties, ignore constitutional limits and undermine democratic institutions like the independent judiciary and free press. Sound familiar?)

 

Racial fearmongering has been used by politicians for centuries, but only in the last 30 years has the phenomenon been given a name: "replacement theory."

In simple terms, replacement theory — a conspiracy theory, not a reality — describes the belief that white people lose out as people of color or other disadvantaged groups gain. In his new book, "Chain of Ideas: The Origins of Our Authoritarian Age," historian Ibram X. Kendi, whose 2019 book, "How to Be an Antiracist," was an international bestseller, links the current rise of so many autocratic leaders around the world to their embrace of replacement theory.

The concept rests on the idea, he writes, that "powerful elites are enabling peoples of color to steal the lives, livelihoods, cultures, electoral power and freedom of White people, who now need authoritarian protection." (Echoes of "I alone can fix it.")

I first became aware of this bizarre worldview back in 2017, when white nationalists and neo-Nazis in Charlottesville, Va., chanted, "You will not replace us" and "Jews will not replace us" at the Unite the Right rally, as they protested the planned removal of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, from the University of Virginia.

The term "replacement theory" was brought forth in the early 2010s by a French white nationalist, Renaud Camus, and rests on a foundation as thin as a layer of pastry in a Napoleon.

In 1996, Camus, a writer and would-be politician, was in the south of France, writing a visitors guide for the Hérault region, whose most well known city is Montpellier. Visiting villages in the area, Camus said he noticed that "all these North African women with veils" had suddenly replaced the original inhabitants, and concluded that a great replacement (of white, French people) was underway. As Thomas Chatterton Williams wrote in a 2017 New Yorker profile of Camus, "He became obsessed with the diminishing ethnic purity of Western Europe."

Kendi writes that while the region had indeed changed dramatically, Camus was wrong about why: "Its population had roughly doubled in the last half of the 20th century, driven largely by domestic migration from other parts of the country and retired people moving to the region."

And bien sûr there were North African immigrants; after all, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria are all former French colonies. And yet, the African immigrants, while distinguished by their dress and skin color, were, writes Kendi, still "relatively rare in Hérault, no more than 4% of the total population."

Replacement theory is, fundamentally, a neo-Nazi ideology. Kendi dubs it "the renovated House of Hitler." In a sort of fill-in-the blank exercise, he contends that white Christians are the new Aryan race. Muslims, immigrants and queer and trans people are "the new Jew." Globalist elites are running the show, instead of "international Jewry." Deportation — or "remigration" — is the new "final solution." And giant warehouses being built by Trump across our country right now to hold immigrant detainees "are the new concentration camp."

This November, American voters have the opportunity to turn this tide, to reject the fearmongering, to embrace our roots as a nation of immigrants and kneecap the would-be dictator who is bent on wrecking democracy from his gilded palace on the Potomac.

Will they take it?

____

Bluesky: @rabcarian

Threads: @rabcarian


©2026 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus

 

Related Channels

The ACLU

ACLU

By The ACLU
Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman

By Amy Goodman
Armstrong Williams

Armstrong Williams

By Armstrong Williams
Austin Bay

Austin Bay

By Austin Bay
Ben Shapiro

Ben Shapiro

By Ben Shapiro
Betsy McCaughey

Betsy McCaughey

By Betsy McCaughey
Bill Press

Bill Press

By Bill Press
Bonnie Jean Feldkamp

Bonnie Jean Feldkamp

By Bonnie Jean Feldkamp
Cal Thomas

Cal Thomas

By Cal Thomas
Clarence Page

Clarence Page

By Clarence Page
Danny Tyree

Danny Tyree

By Danny Tyree
David Harsanyi

David Harsanyi

By David Harsanyi
Debra Saunders

Debra Saunders

By Debra Saunders
Dennis Prager

Dennis Prager

By Dennis Prager
Dick Polman

Dick Polman

By Dick Polman
Erick Erickson

Erick Erickson

By Erick Erickson
Froma Harrop

Froma Harrop

By Froma Harrop
Jacob Sullum

Jacob Sullum

By Jacob Sullum
Jamie Stiehm

Jamie Stiehm

By Jamie Stiehm
Jeff Robbins

Jeff Robbins

By Jeff Robbins
Jessica Johnson

Jessica Johnson

By Jessica Johnson
Jim Hightower

Jim Hightower

By Jim Hightower
Joe Conason

Joe Conason

By Joe Conason
John Stossel

John Stossel

By John Stossel
Josh Hammer

Josh Hammer

By Josh Hammer
Judge Andrew P. Napolitano

Judge Andrew Napolitano

By Judge Andrew P. Napolitano
Laura Hollis

Laura Hollis

By Laura Hollis
Marc Munroe Dion

Marc Munroe Dion

By Marc Munroe Dion
Michael Barone

Michael Barone

By Michael Barone
Mona Charen

Mona Charen

By Mona Charen
Rachel Marsden

Rachel Marsden

By Rachel Marsden
Rich Lowry

Rich Lowry

By Rich Lowry
Robert B. Reich

Robert B. Reich

By Robert B. Reich
Ruben Navarrett Jr.

Ruben Navarrett Jr

By Ruben Navarrett Jr.
Ruth Marcus

Ruth Marcus

By Ruth Marcus
S.E. Cupp

S.E. Cupp

By S.E. Cupp
Salena Zito

Salena Zito

By Salena Zito
Star Parker

Star Parker

By Star Parker
Stephen Moore

Stephen Moore

By Stephen Moore
Susan Estrich

Susan Estrich

By Susan Estrich
Ted Rall

Ted Rall

By Ted Rall
Terence P. Jeffrey

Terence P. Jeffrey

By Terence P. Jeffrey
Tim Graham

Tim Graham

By Tim Graham
Tom Purcell

Tom Purcell

By Tom Purcell
Veronique de Rugy

Veronique de Rugy

By Veronique de Rugy
Victor Joecks

Victor Joecks

By Victor Joecks
Wayne Allyn Root

Wayne Allyn Root

By Wayne Allyn Root

Comics

John Branch Tom Stiglich Margolis and Cox Steve Sack Marshall Ramsey Bob Englehart