By Jonathan Weisman
Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina opened his presidential candidacy with a story of the nationâs bitter, racist past. It is one that he tells often, of a grandfather forced from school in the third grade to pick cotton in the Jim Crow South.
A rival for the Republican nomination, Nikki Haley, speaks of the loneliness and isolation of growing up in small-town South Carolina as the child of immigrants and part of the only Indian family around. Larry Elder, a conservative commentator and long-shot presidential candidate, talks to all-white audiences about his father, a Pullman porter in the segregated South, who carried tinned fish and crackers in his pockets âbecause he never knew whether heâd be able to get a meal.â
Such biographical details are useful reminders of how far the G.O.P.âs candidates of color have come to reach the pinnacle of national politics, a run for the presidency. But in bolstering their own bootstrap biographies with stories of discrimination, they have put forth views about race that at times appear at odds with their view of the country â often denying the existence of a system of racism in America while describing situations that sound just like it.
âIâm living proof that America is the land of opportunity and not a land of oppression,â Mr. Scott says in a new campaign advertisement running in Iowa, though he has spoken of his grandfatherâs forced illiteracy and his own experiences being pulled over by the police seven times in one year âfor driving a new car.â
The clashing views of the role that race plays in America are a major theme of the 2024 election, underpinning cultural battles over âwokeness.â
Yet behind the debate over structural racism â a codified program of segregation and subjugation that suppressed minority achievement long ago and, many scholars say, has left people of color still struggling â is a secondary debate over the meaning of the stories politicians tell about themselves.
That has sometimes made the discussion of race in this presidential primary awkward but also revealing, and has underscored a central difference between the two parties. Republican candidates of color donât see their pasts in their present, even if the two front-runners in the race for the Republican nomination, Donald J. Trump and Ron DeSantis, are elevating racial grievance to the center of conservative politics, through overt or covert appeals to white anger.
âI know Nikki and Tim â both are brilliant â but for them not to be able to make the logical jump is troubling: Systemic racism is the issue,â said Bakari Sellers, a Democratic political commentator who served with Mr. Scott and Ms. Haley in the South Carolina legislature. âFor them to recount their own experiences but close their eyes to the bigger picture, itâs troubling.â
Mr. Elder, at an April gathering of evangelical Christians in West Des Moines, Iowa, spoke of his father, the Pullman porter who later became a cook in a segregated Marine Corps unit. When he returned from World War II, his father found he could not get a job in the whites-only restaurants of Chattanooga, Tenn., and struggled to find work in Los Angeles because he had no references from Tennessee.
Mr. Elderâs father even asked to cook in Los Angeles restaurants for free, just to get references, and again was refused. He ended up with two jobs scrubbing toilets.
âThere was something called slavery, the K.K.K., Jim Crow â that was codified,â Mr. Elder said in an interview. âOf course there was systemic racism.â
But now?
No, he replied, recalling the election and re-election of a Black president, Barack Obama.
In the early years of the Obama presidency, talk of a post-racial society â where the color of oneâs skin has no bearing on stature or success â was common. But later, an upsurge of white supremacist violence, including the massacre of Black parishioners at a Charleston church in 2015 during Mr. Obamaâs second term, along with the murder of George Floyd in 2020, shattered that idealized post-racial notion for many people of color from all political persuasions.
âThatâs part of the problem with Scott and Haley declaring thereâs no racism,â said Andra Gillespie, a political scientist at Emory University and the author of a book on Mr. Obamaâs symbolism as a Black president. âYou could have argued in 2006 and 2007 that racism was waning. Thatâs a lot less credible today.â
Candidates of color are not the only ones who rely on bootstrap biographies to bolster their appeal. Stories of struggle, impoverished childhoods, working-class roots or ethnic identity are staples for candidates in both parties, from Abraham Lincoln to Joseph R. Biden Jr. to Mr. DeSantis and his âfamily of steelworkers.â But tales of racism and discrimination lend political biographies an added element of authenticity. Mr. Scottâs family story â âfrom cotton to Congressâ â was the subject of his first campaign ad, unveiled last week.
For Republican candidates of color, whose audiences are often almost entirely white, there is another factor, according to strategists: Placing racism safely in the past and trumpeting the racial progress of their own lifetimes relieves todayâs G.O.P. voters from having to confront any racial animosity in their party. That can be a soothing message to Republicans who feel defensive about the partyâs racial makeup and policies.
âTheyâre saying this to make an overwhelmingly white Republican audience feel better about themselves,â said Stuart Stevens, a former Republican consultant who guided the partyâs 2012 presidential nominee, Mitt Romney. âItâs a variation, oddly enough, of victim politics. People accuse you of being racist? âThatâs unfair. Vote for me, therefore youâll prove youâre not racist.ââ
Under Mr. Trump, the Republican Party accommodated white nationalists in its ranks and embraced once-taboo ideas like replacement theory.
A Haley campaign spokeswoman, Chaney Denton, said: âIn Nikki Haleyâs experience, America is not a racist country, and sheâs proud to say it. Thatâs fact, not strategy.â She added that âthe only people who seem bothered by thatâ are âliberal race baiters.â
At an event on Wednesday morning sponsored by the news site Axios, Mr. Scott was pressed to describe racism that he had recently experienced, to which he had a ready response: being pulled over by police officers more than 20 times for âdriving while Black,â which he said âweighs heavy on the shoulders.â
âYou find yourself in a position where youâve done nothing wrong, but you are assumed guilty before proven innocent,â Mr. Scott said on Wednesday. But he added, âRacism is embedded in the hearts of individuals.â
Many white Republicans also reject the idea that America is systemically racist.
At a Haley event in February in Iowa, Charles Strange, a retired construction worker from North Liberty, Iowa, was more apt to see systemic issues impeding white people such as himself. âStructural barriers, letâs see,â Mr. Strange said. âHereâs a structural barrier: You got quotas for Blacks for education â a structural barrier for a white person.â
The downplaying of systemic racism by candidates of color fits with the partyâs push to stop the influence of âcritical race theoryâ in how American history is taught and to defund programs that advance diversity in public colleges.
Mr. DeSantis, who joined the presidential race last week, recently signed a law eliminating diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in higher education and paring back what he called âwokeâ academic programs. The Florida Department of Education blocked high schools in January from teaching an advanced placement course on African American studies, part of what the governor called an effort to combat âindoctrinationâ by the left. Elsewhere, Republican-led state and local governments are rewriting textbooks and ridding public libraries of stark racial lessons from the nationâs past.
âOf all the threats, there is this national loathing that has taken over our country, where people are saying America is bad or itâs rotten or itâs racist,â Ms. Haley told an Iowa crowd earlier this year. âI was the first minority female governor in the country. I am telling you America is not a racist country. Itâs a blessed country.â
Many Republican voters and local officials agree.
âIâm not more racist than any Democrat, but they like to label and push that against us,â Gloria Mazza, the Republican chairwoman in Polk County, Iowa, said at a Scott event in West Des Moines.
But Black audiences, even Republican ones, are far less receptive. Such difficulties for the party were on display recently for another Republican candidate of color, the entrepreneur and author Vivek Ramaswamy.
Mr. Ramaswamy held a town-hall meeting on May 19 on the South Side of Chicago, ostensibly to discuss the migrant crisis that has divided the city. He often talks of his feelings of isolation as the son of Indian immigrants growing up in suburban Cincinnati, but says that the experience made him stronger, not a victim. He has also made eliminating affirmative action a central plank of a candidacy that centers on a critique of identity politics.
But Black voters made clear they believed strongly that systemic issues, past and present, were holding them back. The discussion kept shifting from immigration to reparations for Black Americans, mass incarceration, disinvestment in Black neighborhoods and easily accessible, high-powered weaponry promoted by the firearms industry.
âThereâs all the money in the world to incarcerate us, and nothing to integrate us back into society,â Tyrone F. Muhammad, founder of the group Ex-Cons for Community and Social Change, said while looking straight at Mr. Ramaswamy, a fabulously wealthy investor. Mr. Muhammad added, âThere are too many billionaires and millionaires in this country for it to look the way it looks.â
Then Cornel Darden Jr. of the Southland Black Chamber of Commerce & Industry stood to confront Mr. Ramaswamy on affirmative action. âThose laws have been in place for 70 years,â Dr. Darden said, âand weâre going to defend them.â
After months of telling largely white audiences America is not a racist society, Mr. Ramaswamy acknowledged bigotry and said race-based preferences were exacerbating it.
âI do think anti-Black racism is on the rise in America today,â Mr. Ramaswamy said. âI donât want to throw kerosene on that.â