In July, President Donald Trump attacked the city of Baltimore on Twitter, using barely-coded racist language (“rat and rodent infested,” “disgusting”) to express his dislike for the majority African American city that just happened to be home to Rep. Elijah Cummings, a Black Congressmember and one of Trump’s most powerful political enemies.[1] (Rep. Cummings, Chair of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, died this week.)
It’s hardly the first time Baltimore has come under political attack. Maryland Governor Larry Hogan regularly launches policy-based assaults against his state’s largest urban center, starving its public transit system and schools of necessary funds, then calling the city’s management “an absolute disaster.”[2] In fact, targeting Baltimore is something of a hobby for conservatives across the state, who have fumed against the city for years. By attacking Baltimore, Trump may have been partly responding to Rep. Cummings’ committee investigations into his administration’s malfeasance, but he was also surely aware that his words would reach a growing racist fan base in nearby Maryland counties.
Now, with the rise of White nationalist movements across the country, one Maryland-based conservative politician has even launched a web-based TV show, promoted on Facebook and with content similar to Fox News, called “Super Citizen USA.” At points throughout early episodes, host and former state lawmaker Pat McDonough, who unsuccessfully ran for Baltimore County Executive in 2018, appeared before a giant U.S. flag, applauding Trump’s rallies, repeating Fox News rhetoric about the so-called immigrant crisis, and issuing dire warnings about Leftist political organizers as an enemy within. (A number of early episodes of the show appear to have since been deleted.)
Over the last several years, McDonough has become one advocate of an increasingly vitriolic campaign to stop people from using Section 8 housing vouchers to rent apartments in Baltimore County, the sprawling, majority-White suburbs that wrap around the city’s north and east sides. Addressing White homeowners, McDonough used racist dog-whistles in an extended Facebook post in December 2018: “Get ready to be on the alert in Kingsville, Monkton, Hereford and other inviting areas,” he wrote. “The social engineers believe that these neighborhoods will provide a better life for the disadvantaged, even though there are no jobs, transportation assets or discounted benefits that are in these areas.”[3] An email C4L sent to supporters in early 2019 couched the same warning in the language of “freedom,” claiming, “This so-called ‘source of income’ legislation takes freedom of choice away from neighborhood landlords, threatening them with costly lawsuits and penalties if they refuse to rent through the Section 8 program.”[4] The “freedom” being touted here, of course, is the freedom to discriminate.
McDonough declined interview requests, but emailed a response, reading, “Thank you for reaching out. However, our strategy is broad based, long term in depth and confidential.”[5]
To understand how the Right builds support by “mobilizing resentment,” as late political scientist Jean Hardisty put it, it’s worth examining how an obscure libertarian group in Maryland politics was able to get the usually complacent voters of Baltimore County to call their representatives and sign petitions to try to illegally redline Section 8 voucher holders out of their communities. [6]
It started in 2016, when a fight over a local bill to ban discrimination against Section 8 voucher holders in Baltimore County turned into a display of conservative organizers playing to racist fears among White homeowners. The campaign was headed by a local chapter of the libertarian group Campaign for Liberty (C4L), a national political advocacy group founded by Ron Paul using leftover funds from his failed 2008 presidential run.[7] C4L is best known for opposing taxes, supporting gun rights, and raising money for Rand Paul’s Senate races.[8] Its activist network is relatively modest: C4L keeps its membership lists off the web and many statewide or countywide chapters have only a few hundred Facebook followers. Some chapters have broader support, including Baltimore County, which has over 2,000 followers as of this writing, although that still represents a small minority of the county’s approximately 830,000 residents. The group’s core commitments—zero taxes and gun rights—are relatively unpopular in centrist Maryland, though gaining ground in recent years. C4L rarely works well with other conservative-aligned groups, preferring to stick to their own anti-public spending and anti-tax agendas.
When the Baltimore County Council introduced the anti-discrimination measure, C4L saw a chance to do some damage to Section 8, and began appealing directly to White homeowners’ fears of Black Baltimore residents moving into their neighborhoods. The Baltimore County C4L chapter invoked this narrative in a petition they spread on social media, arguing, “The continued expansion of Section 8 housing in Baltimore County is ruining our communities,” and that, since “Section 8 has been shown to reduce property values,” “This amounts to stealing people’s property.”[9] In addition to helping mobilize locals for their immediate political cause, the strategy also gave C4L an opportunity to add to its base new members from throughout the county who may hold views that are racist or fearful toward low-income African Americans. Indeed, some of these homeowners may have been part of the outmigration of White people from Baltimore City in the 1970s and ‘80s, which increased the suburbs’ population to a third higher than that of the city itself.[10]
The anti-discrimination measure, introduced in July 2016, was intended to bring the county into compliance with federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) requirements, following that agency’s finding that the county had routinely discriminated against Section 8 voucher holders for years. This “Source of Income” or SOI discrimination[11] “is a major problem in the county today,” as Matt Hill, an attorney with The Public Justice Center, a civil rights group, told the Baltimore Sun.[12] “There are many landlords who will deny all vouchers.”
To connect with homeowners at the grassroots level, Baltimore County and other local C4L chapters used Facebook and email lists to organize regular, in-person meetings at local family restaurants and Knights of Columbus halls, promising a welcoming space for residents to air grievances about the imagined influx of city residents that they thought the new law would unleash. (Maryland C4L statewide coordinator Bob Willick did not respond to repeated requests for an interview.)
The Baltimore County Council is composed mostly of Democrats, and then-County Executive, Kevin Kamenetz, a Democrat, embraced the anti-discrimination bill, working hard to secure the votes of fellow councilmembers. Most supported it in theory. But one councilmember showed the Baltimore Sun a thick folder of feedback from constituents, suggesting that opponents were swamping councilmembers with letters, and saying she couldn’t support the bill, “Until she could receive a guarantee that more voucher holders won’t move into her district.”[13] In the end, in late July 2016, with no charismatic leaders, no billboards, and no television commercials, the opposition camp prevailed, and only one of the seven councilmembers voted for the anti-discrimination bill.[14] Half of those councilmembers who voted against it were Democrats, confirming, much as housing discrimination struggles in New York City and California do,[15] that this is not simply a Republican issue.
Kamenetz died in office in May 2018. His elected successor, John Olszewski, recently introduced a compromise version of the same bill, but C4L has already dug itself in to renew the fight.
Resentment Mobilized
Libertarians tend to adhere to a politics of limited government, property rights, and free enterprise—they believe taxes and government at all levels are both wasteful and unnecessary. Though they sometimes support policies that progressives also do, like spending less on a school security guard force, for example, they tend to do so out of a skepticism of public services, not because evidence shows that counseling is more effective than policing when it comes to children.[16] Further, many demonstrate a willingness to divide and vilify groups of people in order to achieve their ends.[17] Libertarian-leaning politicians such as McDonough may not have succeeded in taking formal political power in Baltimore County in 2016, but his camp did manage to weaponize a producerist framework to whip up voters’ resentments against some of those who receive social safety net support.
As political scientists Joseph E. Lowndes and Daniel Martinez HoSang write in their new book, Producers, Parasites, Patriots: Race and the New Right-Wing Politics of Precarity, in the producerist “makers and takers” narrative, some citizens are declared productive members of society, while others are cast as “parasites” feeding off them. Within this narrative, race is often deployed to target and demonize the so-called parasite group, in service of the larger goal of dismantling and destroying the social safety net.[18] In 2016, C4L targeted Section 8 voucher holders as underserving “takers,” much as welfare recipients were attacked during the Clinton years.[19] The culmination of the welfare debates, of course, was the total dismantling of the cash assistance welfare program; one wonders if a similar dismantling of Section 8 housing vouchers is part of C4L’s larger goal. Of course, as McDonough’s chilling Facebook post about “get[ting] ready to be on the alert” suggests, it is also a dangerously hostile tactic that puts people of color’s physical safety at risk.[20] We have seen the catastrophic results of such rhetoric before, in communities where White supremacists have murdered Black and Muslim people (or those trying to defend them), as in Portland, Oregon, and College Park, Maryland, or committed similar violent acts.[21]
Indeed, the pushback against anti-discrimination measures in housing is about maintaining segregated communities. Evidence suggests that where landlords are prohibited from discriminating against Section 8 voucher holders, outcomes improve. A 2011 Columbia University study commissioned by HUD found that where SOI laws were in place, voucher utilization rates went up significantly, meaning that voucher holders were better able to find stable housing.[22] Additionally, the study found that, to a lesser degree, “locational outcomes” also improved, meaning voucher recipients were able to find housing in more advantaged neighborhoods. The study’s author concluded that, where upheld by local statutes, housing voucher programs function at least modestly well to desegregate communities along economic and racial lines.[23]
At the same time, the actual number of housing vouchers per capita in affluent regions such as Baltimore County remains vanishingly small. A 2016 Baltimore Sun article about the Section 8 fight in Baltimore County found that voucher holders represent only about 0.7 percent of the county’s population.[24]
Taken together, this data suggests that C4L’s alarm is vastly overblown, and is characterized by the panic and vitriol that White affluent communities expressed in response to the desegregation laws of the mid-20th Century.[25] It’s enough to make the group’s campaign look like Massive Resistance 2.0—a 21st Century version of the violent anti-integration protests in White communities that followed the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision.[26] And it’s a sobering lesson that the conservative movement’s nationwide infrastructure still has the capacity, funds, and person-power to mobilize individuals’ racist resentments into a grassroots campaign against public policy.
National Launchpad, Localized Infrastructure
After his 2008 presidential campaign failed, Ron Paul, a former Congressmember and libertarian icon, used the leftover funds to start the Campaign for Liberty, a 501(c)(4) group meant to continue developing the grassroots support his campaign had tapped.[27] Today, the network’s web of local and statewide chapters use branding and websites provided by the national group, but it’s unclear how much financial support they get, since the parent organization doesn’t disclose its donors or funding structure to the IRS—a model popularly referred to as “dark money.”[28] While the organization largely stopped doing national campaign work after 2012, its network of chapters remains active, with state and countywide coordinators, online campaigns, and those family restaurant face-to-face meet-ups. In March 2019, Maryland’s statewide C4L chapter held an all-day Liberty Activism training for those wishing to learn organizing skills.[29] According to a Facebook page for the training, only about a dozen people planned to attend and fewer than 100 more listing themselves as “interested”—hardly a conservative army.
Partly that’s because C4L’s Maryland chapter has persistently adhered to a purist libertarian policy agenda—including coming out against all tax schemes, even subsidies and grants aimed at supporting business development[30]—that has hurt them within Republican circles. And the group may overestimate how much hard-right ideology local voters will tolerate. In 2018, Anne Arundel County councilmember Michael Peroutka, who’d been a guest speaker at the Maryland C4L meetings,[31] lost his race as an incumbent because of his association with the League of the South, a neo-confederate, White supremacist group, and with disgraced Alabama judge Roy Moore.[32]
And yet, this is the group that managed to sideline an otherwise popular anti-discrimination bill that might have helped hundreds of Baltimore County residents. Despite C4L’s strategic weaknesses and its inability to form lasting coalitions on the Right,[33] organizers and activists on the Left—especially those within labor and racial and economic justice circles—would do well to pay attention to their tactics and complexities. Although they represent just a sliver of the voting public, they’ve demonstrated their ability to use creative means, as well as to tap into long-held resentments and prejudices, in reaching a broad audience.
Endnotes
[1] Marina Frang, “Trump Escalates Attack On Elijah Cummings With Tweet About Baltimore Burglary,” HuffPost, August 2, 2019, www.huffpost.com/entry/donald-trump-elijah-cummings-twitter-attacks-burglary_n_5d442994e4b0acb57fcb1db0; Donald Trump, Twitter, July 27, 2019, https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1155073965880172544.
[2] “Governor Slams City Schools and Speakers Hit Back,” Baltimore Brew, March 1, 2017, www.baltimorebrew.com/2017/03/01/governor-slams-city-schools-and-speakers-hit-back; Bruce DePuyt, “Transit Advocates Sound Alarm on Possible Budget Cuts,” Maryland Matters, September 6, 2019, https://www.marylandmatters.org/2019/09/06/transit-advocates-sound-alarm-on-possible-budget-cuts/.
[3] Pat McDonough, Facebook post, 2018. Since deleted.
[4] Campaign for Liberty. “Join the Fight: NO SECTION 8 MANDATE!” Stop Johnny O’s Forced Section 8!, 2018, mailchi.mp/marylandliberty/baltcosection8?fbclid=IwAR2AlWelN2ABL7ueIB1OELbnCh7kg6CIKHhu-dgKxibhvm4HoJB2DB2_5QQ.
[5] Pat McDonough, July 7, 2019, email correspondence with the author.
[6] Jean Hardisty, Mobilizing Resentment: Conservative Resurgence from the John Birch Society to the Promise Keeper, Beacon, 2000.
[7] Z. Byron Wolf, “Ron Paul to End Campaign, Launches New Effort,” ABC News, June 12, 2008, https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2008/Story?id=5056019.
[8] Rosie Gray, “The Libertarian Network That Rand Paul Hasn’t Walked Away From And Can’t Totally Control,” BuzzFeed News, February 22, 2015, www.buzzfeednews.com/article/rosiegray/the-libertarian-network-that-rand-paul-hasnt-walked-away-fro; Norm Singleton, “Campaign for Liberty to Congress: Read our lips No New Internet Sales Taxes,” Campaign for Liberty, June 17, 2015, https://donotlink.it/vYkEQ; Norm Singleton, “ Campaign for Liberty Oppose ‘Carried Interest’ Tax,” Campaign for Liberty, September 21, 2017, https://donotlink.it/oGEjx.
[9] Campaign for Liberty, “Petition to Stop Section 8 Expansion in Baltimore County,” 2016, https://archive.fo/Ta30Y.
[10] Jake Flanagin, “White Flight Decimated Baltimore Businesses Long before Rioters Showed Up,” Quartz, June 12, 2019, qz.com/393128/white-flight-decimated-baltimore-businesses-long-before-rioters-showed-up/.
[11] Lance Freeman, The Impact of Source of Income Laws on Voucher Utilization and Locational Outcomes, 2011, www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/freeman_impactlaws_assistedhousingrcr06.pdf.
[12] Pamela Wood, “Baltimore County Weighs Bill to Ban Housing Voucher Discrimination,” Baltimore Sun, July 4, 2016, https://www.baltimoresun.com/maryland/bs-md-co-housing-discrimination-bill-20160704-story.html.
[13] Pamela Wood, “Baltimore County Weighs Bill to Ban Housing Voucher Discrimination,” Baltimore Sun, July 4, 2016, https://www.baltimoresun.com/maryland/bs-md-co-housing-discrimination-bill-20160704-story.html; Pamela Wood, “Baltimore County Council Rejects Housing Anti-Discrimination Bill,” Baltimore Sun, August 1, 2016, https://www.baltimoresun.com/maryland/baltimore-county/bs-md-co-housing-policy-vote-20160801-story.html.
[14] Pamela Wood, “Baltimore County Council Rejects Housing Anti-Discrimination Bill,” Baltimore Sun, August 1, 2016, https://www.baltimoresun.com/maryland/baltimore-county/bs-md-co-housing-policy-vote-20160801-story.html.
[15] Kriston Capps, “Democrats Agree That the Housing Crisis Is a Problem. They Just Don’t Agree on How to Fix It,” Pacific Standard, June 24, 2019, psmag.com/economics/democrats-agree-housing-is-a-problem-but-not-on-how-to-fix-it.
[16] Cecil County Campaign for Liberty, “CCPS Attempts to Use Revisionist History to Validate Prioritizing $2 Million Field House over School Security,” Facebook Watch, 2019, www.facebook.com/CecilLiberty/videos/249233745797212/UzpfSTEwMDAwMjI1Mj….
[17] Gabriel Arana, “Kochs in Pro-Immigrant Clothing,” The Public Eye, Fall 2018, https://www.politicalresearch.org/2018/11/30/kochs-pro-immigrant-clothi….
[18] Daniel Martinez HoSang and Joseph E. Lowndes, Producers, Parasites, Patriots: Race and the New Right-Wing Politics of Precarity, The University of Minnesota Press, 2019.
[19] Vann R Newkirk II, “The Real Lessons From Bill Clinton’s Welfare Reform,” The Atlantic, February 5, 2018, https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/02/welfare-reform-tanf-medicaid-food-stamps/552299/.
[20] Pat McDonough, Facebook post, 2018. Since deleted.
[21] Maxine Bernstein, “Man Accused in MAX Attack Confessed to Stabbing, Said, ‘I’m Happy Now. I’m Happy Now.’” Oregonlive, May 31, 2017, https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/2017/05/man_accused_in_max_attack_cont.html; Jessica Gresko and Alanna Durkin Richer, “Judge Orders School Stabbing Suspect to Remain behind Bars,” Journal Star, Journal Star, May 23, 2017, www.pjstar.com/news/20170522/judge-orders-school-stabbing-suspect-to-re….
[22] Lance Freeman, The Impact of Source of Income Laws on Voucher Utilization and Locational Outcomes, 2011, www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/freeman_impactlaws_assistedhousingrcr06.pdf.
[23] Lance Freeman, The Impact of Source of Income Laws on Voucher Utilization and Locational Outcomes, 2011, p. iii, www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/freeman_impactlaws_assistedhousingrcr06.pdf. “SOI laws appear to have the potential to make a substantial difference in voucher utilization rates and a modest difference in locational outcomes,” write the authors. “Neighborhoods with SOI laws in place show improved utilization rates and better locational outcomes for voucher recipients. Utilization rates increased in the jurisdictions with SOI laws in place compared to those without such laws.”
[24] Pamela Wood, “Baltimore County Weighs Bill to Ban Housing Voucher Discrimination,” Baltimore Sun, July 4, 2016, https://www.baltimoresun.com/maryland/bs-md-co-housing-discrimination-bill-20160704-story.html.
[25] Katy June-Friesen, “Massive Resistance in a Small Town,” HUMANITIES, September/October 2013, Volume 34, Number 5, https://www.neh.gov/humanities/2013/septemberoctober/feature/massive-resistance-in-small-town.
[26] “Massive Resistance,” Equal Justice Initiative, https://segregationinamerica.eji.org/report/massive-resistance.html.
[27] Z. Byron Wolf, “Ron Paul to End Campaign, Launches New Effort,” ABC News, June 12, 2008, https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2008/Story?id=5056019; Michael Beckel, “WHAT IS POLITICAL ‘DARK MONEY’ — AND IS IT BAD?” Center for Public Integrity, January 20, 2016, https://publicintegrity.org/federal-politics/what-is-political-dark-money-and-is-it-bad/.
[28] Joel Gehrke, “Ron Paul Group to Defy IRS,” Washington Examiner, April 15, 2014, www.washingtonexaminer.com/ron-paul-group-to-defy-irs.
[29] Maryland Liberty Activist Training, March 2019, https://archive.fo/hZRap.
[30] Alison Knezevich, “Baltimore County residents speak out on proposed tax increases,” Baltimore Sun, April 30, 2019, https://www.baltimoresun.com/maryland/baltimore-county/bs-md-co-budget-hearing-20190430-story.html.
[31] Institute on the Constitution, “Michael Anthony Peroutka to Speak at Campaign For Liberty on the Federal Reserve,” August 9, 2012, https://www.theamericanview.com/michael-anthony-peroutka-to-speak-on-the-constitutionality-of-the-federal-reserve/.
[32] Chase Cook, “Incumbents Dealt Blow as Peroutka, Smith Defeated in Anne Arundel Races,” Capital Gazette, June 27, 2018, www.capitalgazette.com/news/government/ac-cn-elections-county-council-0….
[33] Councilman David Marks, “Answering the Campaign for Liberty’s Misleading Smear Flyer,” Patch, April 30, 2018, https://patch.com/maryland/perryhall/answering-campaign-libertys-misleading-smear-flyer.