By Francis X. Rocca on 5.15.02 @ 9:34AM
Why has the American press ignorned the ethnicity of Pim Fortuyn's number-two man?
UPDATE (12:06 p.m.): Thanks to the indispensable Instapundit.com, we have just
learned that João Varela was replaced as his party's
"caretaker
leader" late last week. The question remains why he was ignored
as long as he was Pim Fortuyn's number two and heir
presumptive.
Never mind if you don't read Dutch. This article in the Netherlands
newspaper NRC Handelsblad comes with a
picture worth at least a thousand translated words. It's
evidently a profile (I don't read Dutch either) of João
Varela, who at the time of publication was number two on the
electoral list headed by Pim Fortuyn. After the
sociologist-turned-politician was murdered last week, Varela moved
to the top of that list for today's elections.
Why should any of this matter? Because, in the words of David
Warren, Varela is "the first black man ever to be presented as
a candidate for the prime ministry of a European state. And it is
widely thought that the good Queen Beatrix will feel obliged to
create a constitutional crisis by refusing to have tea with him ...
on the grounds that his party is 'racist.'"
You may wonder why I've linked to a Dutch paper and a Canadian
website to introduce this topic. It's not in order to seem
cosmopolitan. Go ahead and do a Google search on Varela and see
what you come up with. The first I ever heard of the man was from
our friend
Mark Steyn, another Canadian, writing in Britain's online
Telegraph.
When I read Steyn's characteristically witty and scathing
column, I was sure that his reference to Varela and the Queen was a
wisecrack. Could I have missed a story so big? I ran a search on
the paper of record and came up with nothing but
this, published last Wednesday. You have to read down to the
16th paragraph to get the story:
"Mr. Fortuyn's death has already had a range of unexpected
consequences. Among them is that his party's ostensible new leader,
João Varela, Mr. Fortuyn's chief deputy, is a black
immigrant from the Cape Verde islands, off the coast of West
Africa. Mr. Varela, 27, is a successful businessman in
Rotterdam.
"He was invited to join the party, a friend said, because Mr.
Fortuyn had become outraged at being called a racist every time he
demanded that new immigration to the crowded Netherlands be
stopped. Another party candidate is Moroccan-born."
The implication is clear: Varela is a token, and so is the
Moroccan. All this on the authority of "a friend." Never mind that
tokens rarely get the top job. Would the New York Times
give such short shrift to a black "first" -- let alone patronize
him in this way -- were he not the candidate of a right-wing
party?
You don't have to approve of Fortuyn and his followers to
recognize an obvious news story. The Times itself leapt at
the "gay-bald-rightist" angle in its
first piece on the professor last March. Yesterday the paper's
op-ed page ran a nuanced
obituary acknowledging that Fortuyn's "politics were not easily
categorized."
So why the near-black out on Varela? Presumably the
Times and the rest of the U.S. press decided that his
candidacy was just a publicity stunt; but if that's their standard,
there are plenty of American politicians they ought to spend much
less ink and air time on.
It hardly matters, of course. There can't be many voters in the
Netherlands who rely on American papers to inform their decisions.
And if Varela wins, or even does better than the "up to 20 percent"
predicted for him, his picture will be all over our front pages
tomorrow morning.
Won't it?
topics:
Business, Constitution, Africa, Immigration