Joe McCarthy’s Ghost Slithers Again

Right-wing paranoia knows no bounds, as propagandists stoke dark fantasies about President Obama that revive memories of “black helicopters” from the 1990s. But Tea Party favorite, Rep. Allen West reaches back even further to the days of Joe McCarthy, as Bill Moyers and Michael Winship explain.

By Bill Moyers and Michael Winship

We’ve talked at times about George Orwell’s classic novel 1984, and the amnesia that sets in when we flush events down the memory hole, leaving us at the mercy of only what we know today. Sometimes, though, the past comes back to haunt, like a ghost. It happened recently when we saw Congressman Allen West of Florida on the news.

A Republican and Tea Party favorite, he was asked at a local gathering how many of his fellow members of Congress are “card-carrying Marxists or International Socialists.”

The late Sen. Joe McCarthy, R-Wisconsin

He replied, “I believe there’s about 78 to 81 members of the Democrat Party who are members of the Communist Party. It’s called the Congressional Progressive Caucus.”

By now, little of what Allen West says ever surprises. He has called President Obama “a low-level Socialist agitator,” said anyone with an Obama bumper sticker on their car is “a threat to the gene pool” and told liberals like Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi to “get the hell out of the United States of America.” Apparently, he gets his talking points from Fox News, Rush Limbaugh or the discredited right-wing rocker Ted Nugent.

But this time, we shook our heads in disbelief: “78 to 81 Democrats members of the Communist Party?” That’s the moment the memory hole opened up and a ghost slithered into the room. The specter stood there, watching the screen, a snickering smile on its stubbled face. Sure enough, it was the ghost of Senator Joseph McCarthy, the Wisconsin farm boy who grew up to become one of the most contemptible thugs in American politics.

Back in the early1950s, the Cold War had begun and Americans were troubled by the Soviet Union’s rise as an atomic superpower. Looking for a campaign issue, McCarthy seized on fear and ignorance to announce his discovery of a conspiracy within: Communist subversives who had infiltrated the government.

In speech after speech, McCarthy would hold up a list of names of members of the Communist Party he said had burrowed their way into government agencies and colleges and universities. The number he claimed would vary from day to day and when pressed to make his list public, McCarthy would stall or claim he accidentally had thrown it away.

His failure to produce much proof to back his claims never gave him pause, as he employed lies and innuendo with swaggering bravado. McCarthy, wrote historian William Manchester, “realized that he had stumbled upon a brilliant demagogic technique.   Others deplored treachery, McCarthy would speak of traitors.”

And so he did, in a fearsome, reckless crusade that terrorized Washington, destroyed lives and made a shambles of due process.

Millions of Americans lapped it up, but in the end, Joe McCarthy would be done in by the medium that he had used so effectively to spread his poison: television. In 1954, legendary broadcaster Edward R. Murrow bravely exposed McCarthy’s tactics on the CBS program, See It Now.

“This is no time for men who oppose Senator McCarthy’s methods to keep silent,” Murrow declared. “We can deny our heritage and history, but we cannot escape responsibility for the result. There is no way for a citizen of a Republic to abdicate his responsibilities.”

Later that same year, for 36 days on live TV, during Senate hearings on charges McCarthy had made questioning the loyalty of the U.S. Army, we saw the man raw, exposed for the lout and cowardly scoundrel he was. The climactic moment came as the Boston lawyer Joseph Welch, defending the Army, reacted with outrage when McCarthy accused Welch’s young associate Fred Fisher of Communism.

“Let us not assassinate this lad further, Senator,” Welch said as he shook his head in anger and sadness. “You’ve done enough. Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency? If there is a God in heaven it will do neither you nor your cause any good.”

McCarthy never recovered. His tactics had been opposed from the outset by a handful of courageous Republican senators. Now they pressed their case with renewed vigor. One of them, Senator Ralph Flanders of Vermont, introduced a motion to censure Joseph McCarthy. When it eventually passed 67 to 22, McCarthy was finished. He soon disappeared from the front pages. Three years later, he was dead.

All of this came rushing back as Congressman West summoned his foul spirits from the vasty deep. The ghost stepped out of the past.

Like McCarthy, the more Allen West is challenged about his comments, the more he doubles down on them. Now he’s blaming the “corrupt liberal media” for stirring the pot against him a trick for which McCarthy taught the master class. And the congressman’s latest fusillades continue to distort the beliefs and policies of those he smears no surprise there, either.

To help him continue his fight for “the heart and soul” of America he’s asking his supporters for a contribution of $10 or more. There could even be a Super PAC in this with McCarthy’s ghost as its honorary chairman.

Plenty of kindred spirits are there to sign on. Like the author of the book The Grand Jihad, who wrote that whether Obama is Christian or not, “The faith to which Obama actually clings is neocommunism.” Or the blogger who claims Obama is running the country into the ground “by way of the same type of race-baiting and class warfare Communism cannot exist without,” and that his policies are “unbecoming to an American president.”

From there it’s only a short hop to the kind of column that popped up on the right-wing website Newsmax hinting of a possible coup “as a last resort to resolve the ‘Obama problem.’” Military intervention, the author wrote, “is what Obama’s exponentially accelerating agenda for ‘fundamental change’ toward a Marxist state is inviting upon America.” The column was quickly withdrawn but not before the website Talking Points Memo exposed it.

So beware, Congressman West, beware: In the flammable pool of toxic paranoia that passes these days as patriotism in America, a single careless match can light an inferno. You would serve your country well to withdraw your remarks and apologize for them.

But if not, perhaps there are members of your own party, as possessed of conscience and as courageous as that handful of Republicans who took on Joseph McCarthy, who will now abandon fear and throw cold water on your incendiary remarks.

Bill Moyers is managing editor and Michael Winship, senior writing fellow at Demos, is senior writer of the weekly public television program “Moyers & Company.” Comment at BillMoyers.com

5 comments for “Joe McCarthy’s Ghost Slithers Again

  1. elmerfudzie
    May 2, 2012 at 11:01

    Let’s never forget the Hollywood blacklisting that went on. The pain and suffering it brought to good and decent actors, singers and writers. The finger pointing and accusations were pitiless and destructive for everyone. This included McCarthy himself, he ended up eating chunks of butter to sooth a stomach ravaged by alcoholism. If there’s anything productive to glean from these awful experiences it would be to acknowledge the societal benefits from limited uses of a command economy and socialism. For example, President Roosevelt’s Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) or directing the assembly line to product tanks instead of cars during WWII. The CCC educated it’s own citizenry and introduced the uneducated and poor to the beauty and diversity of their own country (something that would have never happened otherwise). It’s time for a second look at FDR’s leadership but I doubt that such a resourceful leader can be found today!

  2. F. G. Sanford
    April 27, 2012 at 23:12

    There’s a website out there called, “The Encyclopedia of American Loons”. Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh and Pat Buchannan are all listed. I’ll have to check whether Congressman West is in there yet. If not, maybe someone should nominate him. Character assassination by insinuation is the stock and trade of these creeps. After all, it might be easy to prove someone IS a communist, but it’s impossible to prove they’re not. There is almost no defense against this sort of skulduggery, except the defense of a vocal opposition to it. Let’s face it, it’s the REPUBLICANS that deregulated corporate finance and commerce, so we now owe MEGABUCKS to the Red Chinese. Walmart is, after all, an outlet for Chinese goods, so they must be communist sympathizers. This all started under that Crypto-communist Nixon, who went to China and sold us out. Then the head of the American Communist Party, Ronald Reagan, passed the deregulation that allowed American manufacturing jobs to be outsourced to China. Next year, China will exceed our Gross Domestic Product, and we have the Republicans to thank for it. See how easy it is? Too bad there’s more truth here than parody.

    • elmerfudzie
      May 3, 2012 at 19:46

      Thanks!, I’ll check into that Encyclopedia of American loons, we all need a good laugh these days!

  3. April 27, 2012 at 19:53

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allen_West_%28politician%29#Iraq_interrogation_incident

    “I know the method I used was not right, but I wanted to take care of my soldiers.”

    Perhaps this is just another instance of, ‘regrettably’, having to use methods that are ‘not right’ in order to take care of … his party?

    ‘Not right’ … and ridiculous. Obama is right-wing, a creeping fascist if anything. A communist! There are people in Florida who pay attention to this fool? Apparently. They are said to have elected him.

  4. Bob Loblaw
    April 27, 2012 at 16:28

    Tea Party Amnesia is why the founding fathers wanted a “limited & weak” government, and why Joe McCarthy was a hero for ridding the US of the “Communist threat”.

    Seriously, he is a modern day hero amongst the Malkin and Coulter set.

    What’s next, the failed coup on FDR was a break against freedom?

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