In yet another rebuke of what he called “woke supremacy,” Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) denounced “the ’tolerant' left’s intolerance of dissent” by highlighting an example of a Democrat senator who voted against a federal minimum wage hike and, allegedly, subsequently received death threats.
“I’ve been called a member of the ‘coon squad’ for sharing my story and conservative vision for America at the 2020 Republican convention. A former leader of the NAACP called me a ventriloquist puppet. I’ve been called an Uncle Tom and a [racial epithet], among thousands of other insults.”
Saying that he’s “proud to be both a Black man and a Republican,” Scott mentioned his support for initiatives such as securing permanent funding for historically black colleges and universities, fighting for school choice “because poor, and often minority, parents are consistently the ones without choice,” and helping formulate the “Republican tax reform that lowered taxes for single moms, doubled the child tax credit and brought Black unemployment to historic lows.”
He said he’s faced unjustified criticism as a Republican, and argued that members of the “woke” movement will just as viciously attack Democrats who espouse views they don’t support.
“After a recent vote against her fellow Democrats’ attempt to pass a job-killing minimum-wage hike during the pandemic, my friend and colleague Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) received so many death threats that she had to increase security for herself and her partner,” Scott wrote, adding that he, too, has faced death threats.
“A man—a ‘woke’ Black man—is to be sentenced this month for threatening to gut me ‘like a fish’ and blow me away with his rifle,” Scott wrote.
Sinema was one of seven Democrat senators who voted against Sen. Bernie Sanders’s (I-Vt.) procedural vote on a $15 federal minimum wage hike, which was subsequently left out of the recent pandemic relief bill.
Sinema, widely considered one of the most conservative Democrats in the Senate, drew fire from progressives for her vote against the minimum wage hike, with several media outlets running critical op-eds.
“The display went viral, frustrating progressives and activists, who accused her of being all too eager to preserve poverty wages for millions,” Chavez wrote.
Economists have for years hotly debated the issue of raising the minimum wage, with advocates arguing that raising salaries will boost purchasing power and the added spending will lift the economy, while opponents argue it will hurt businesses and lead to higher unemployment.
Sinema has proposed raising the minimum wage to $11 an hour and indexing it at a rate above inflation until it reaches $15.
Defending his “woke supremacy” comment, Scott argued in the op-ed that “woke culture is speeding our country toward ideological and literal segregation,” but he expressed hope that the movement’s chief advocates would put on the brakes.
“We can continue down the path of toxic woke mandates and virtue signaling that themselves create discrimination, segregation, and hate, or we can choose to create equality of opportunity and access to the American Dream for everyone,” he wrote.