
"Playing the race card" is anidiomatic phrase that refers to the exploitation by someone of eitherracist oranti-racist attitudes in the audience in order to gain an advantage.[1][2][3] It constitutes an accusation ofbad faith directed at the person or persons raising concerns as regards racism.[4] Critics of the term argue that it has been utilized to silence public discourse aroundracial disparities and undermineanti-racist initiatives.[5][6][7]
The phrase is generally used by people to allege that someone has deliberately and falsely accused another person or group of people of being a racist in order to gain some sort of advantage.[4][8] An example of this use of the term occurred during theO. J. Simpson murder case, when critics accused the defense of "playing the race card",[9] in presentingMark Fuhrman's past as reasons to draw his credibility as a witness into question.
The RepublicanSouthern Strategy has been characterised as an early example of exploiting racist sentiments for political mobilization and exaggerating the threat of the civil rights movement. Consequently, this strategy facilitated the transformation of the Southern states from a Democratic to Republican political stronghold.[10][11][12]
Stanford Law School professorRichard Thompson Ford has argued that the race card can be played independently of the person making the claim, or the race in question. An example cited was theHillary Clinton campaign's assertion thatBarack Obama won the2008 Democratic primary inSouth Carolina owing to the disproportionate number of black registered Democrats in the state, implying more racism in the general population.[13]
George Dei,et al., in the bookPlaying the Race Card,[14] argue that the term itself is arhetorical device used in an effort to devalue and minimize claims of racism.
The phrase has been used to describe racist mobilisations by politicians, as for example with the campaign to electPeter Griffiths, theConservative Party candidate forSmethwick in the1964 UK general election. However, the term was only applied to describe this situation in the 1980s.[15]
In February 2008, Group Chief Editor Wong Chun Wai ofThe Star wrote, just before theMalaysia general election came, there is an unusual degree of tolerance and flexibility in matters of race, language and religion as politicians try to woo the people. "Also, there are those who still continue to play the race card, in this age and time. At their party conferences each year, they play to the gallery by projecting themselves as the communal heroes. But during the general election, they shamelessly become the true Malaysian leaders we dream of. They greet their voters inMalay,English,Mandarin andTamil; and if they can speak all these languages fluently, they would do so."[16]
In August 2006, theSingapore Institute of International Affairs wrote that Malaysia politicianKhairy Jamaluddin "played the race card" by stirring up theMalays and theChinese Malaysian community. Responding to criticisms and demands for an apology, Khairy said his remarks were misunderstood and he "will not apologize" as he was acting only "in defense of the Malays and his party" and that "if we truly fight for our race, one should not apologize".[17]