REUTERS/Allison JoyceTHE NEWS DES MOINES, IA ā On Wednesday afternoon, a few dozen students at Drake University braved near-freezing temperatures to come out and hear Sen. Tim Scottās, R-S.C. talk about how Americaās boundless promise enabled his success as a Black American ā despite the liberals who call him āUncle Timā for saying so. āThis is personal,ā Scott said. āThese people who call themselves progressive are attacking every rung of the ladder that helped me climb. I was the teenager whose spirit would have been crushed by a culture obsessed with identity politics and racial strife.ā That same evening, Scott spoke to a packed room at the Republican Party of Polk Countyās Lincoln Dinner, receiving a polite standing ovation after giving another speech that also focused heavily on anti-wokeness. āIf you wanted to see the blueprint for ruining America, youād have to make sure that in K-12 you have more indoctrination than education,ā Scott said. ā If you want to ruin America, youād have to make sure the kids spend more time on CRT than they do ABC.ā SHELBYāS VIEW Race is at the center of Scottās pitch, and he leaned heavily into his story of coming from a poor Black family that successfully went āfrom cotton to Congress.ā Itās this success ā Americaās collective ability to move past discrimination, and Americansā individual ability to overcome adversity ā that the country should celebrate, Scott argues, rather than wallowing in pessimistic talk of systemic racism. āI am living proof that our Founders were geniuses we should celebrate, not cancel ⦠that we are, indeed, a land of opportunity, not a land of oppression,ā he said in his afternoon speech. But in this cycle, thatās not necessarily going to make Scott ā who is largely viewed to be considering a presidential run ā stand out should he decide to jump into the race, even in his own home state. Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who was also in Iowa the day before, is running on her biography as a ābrown girl growing up in a black-and-white worldā whose rise from a humble immigrant family proves āAmerica is not a racist country.ā And entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, who entered the race on Tuesday, is running on his recent āanti-wokeā activism, which emphasizes patriotism and rugged individualism over claims of victimhood. Scott has some unique assets, though. His rhetoric puts a strong emphasis on faith and optimism and he has a record heās proud of that he sees connecting to these themes, especially tax cuts for āopportunity zonesā to draw businesses to underdeveloped areas. And while heās occasionally criticized Donald Trump for straying into bigotry (as well as Joe Biden), heās largely avoided antagonizing either side in the GOPās ongoing civil war over how to handle the former president. Instead heās stuck to leading by example with years of positive un-Trumpy speeches in front of conservative audiences, where they have often been well-received. His latest remarks were similar, albeit with an especially high number of barbs pointed at the left. Ryan Frederick, a 20-year old Republican studying politics and secondary education at Drake University, told Semafor Scottās āpositiveā message that stressed āweāre not going to start hating our enemiesā stood out to him in the 2024 field. āI think that right now, the Republican Partyās at kind of a fork in the road, with Trump and DeSantis pushing in one way, where theyāre really welcoming in a lot of white supremacists, and a lot of really divisive speech,ā he said. āAnd I think that Sen. Scott takes it in a very different direction, where heās willing to push back against some of those things.ā All of the potential voters I spoke with throughout the day rejected the idea that theyād vote for Scott ā or any minority candidate, for that matter ā based primarily on their skin color or ethnic background. At the same time, they loved to hear him pushing back on āwokeā rhetoric. 41-year-old Nathaniel Gavronsky, who described Scott as his āsecond favorite person in the entirety of the U.S. governmentā (behind Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst), told me that fellow Americans shouldnāt ātell people that because of the way they look or where theyāre from that they have no chance of success.ā |