Abstract

To secure his reelection,PresidentRichardNixon tried to dismantle theNewDeal coalition and form a newRepublican majority; to do so, he attacked the monopolyDemocrats had on racial and ethnic votes.Nixon's racial and ethnic politicking represented a rupture with pastRepublican ignorance of minorities; it was going to be one of his key legacies to his party. This article shows that, driven by consecutively defined electoral goals, his administration systematically favored group‐specific measures over universalistic policies addressing common ethnic claims, and that these measures were accompanied by a divisive rhetoric and implemented in an antagonistic fashion. It argues thatNixon broke his promise to reunite the country, and used racial and ethnic politics as an instrument of electoral engineering rather than as a way to correct legacies of past discriminations.

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