Moore: Whitehouse Should Defend Association With Bailey’s

Russell J. Moore, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Moore: Whitehouse Should Defend Association With Bailey’s

Sheldon Whitehouse
Does the fact that Sheldon Whitehouse, the Junior US Senator from Rhode Island, spends many of his summer vacation days at the Spouting Rock Beach Association (SRBA), also known as Bailey’s Beach Club in Newport, comport with his stark criticism of racism and bigotry?

Whitehouse renounced his membership to the club back in 2006, when he first challenged Lincoln Chafee for the Senate seat he currently holds. But Whitehouse’s wife Sandra is one of the largest shareholders in the club, and the senator spends many of his summer days at the beautiful, Ocean Drive club.

The club reportedly doesn’t have any minority members. That’s a rather interesting tidbit for a Senator so concerned about the harmful impacts of bigotry and racism (as we all should be).

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Of course, that doesn’t mean the people, Whitehouse included, who belong there, are somehow racist or bigoted in some way. Just because someone spends time or belongs to a private club that does not currently have any racial minorities as members doesn’t mean that the member joined the organization for that, or any nefarious reason.

Self Segregation?

The situation might, however, further the conversation about self-segregation in America. We’re lying to ourselves if we don’t admit that it’s an unfortunate fact that we do still segregate ourselves, albeit unconsciously.

The situation also raises serious questions about the rest of the state’s private, expensive, and exclusive clubs. Do clubs like The Alpine in Cranston or Warwick Country Club have significant portions or any minority members? These are all, in my opinion, larger questions raised by the Whitehouse hanging at Bailey’s story.

The Senator has done himself no favors in this story by refusing to comment on or address the issue. By refusing to speak on it, Whitehouse has missed a good opportunity to explain himself or advance the conversation about race in Rhode Island. In other words, it was a missed chance to show some leadership.

As GoLocal reported last week, these sorts of stories and the issues they raise have been in the spotlight previously. “In 1992, President Bill Clinton was chided by the NAACP for golfing at an all-white golf club in Arkansas. In 2006, Senator Edward “Ted” Kennedy severed his ties with the all-male Owl club which he joined while at Harvard University,” GoLocal reported last week.

The In Crowd

In his essay “Self-Reliance”, 19th Century Philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson once famously wrote “Whoso would be a man, must be a nonconformist.” I tend to agree.

Clubs are the epitome of conformity. They tend to have rules and people who like to try to impose them. As the Whitehouse story points out, they’re exclusionary. That could hurt people’s feelings. None of this sounds like much fun.

Can you be a self-proclaimed Progressive Democrat by weekday railing against the insensitivity of the Presidency of Donald Trump by week, and then head to the most exclusive and restrictive club each summer weekend day? Keeping the riff raff out of your club means blocking access to your voters whom you claim to represent in the United States Senate.

Russell J. Moore has worked on both sides of the desk in Rhode Island media, both for newspapers and on political campaigns. Send him an email at [email protected]. Follow him on twitter @russmoore713.

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