White men are coming out, but not in the way you might think.
Before more than 190,000 men joined a “White Dudes for Harris” call on July 29, the common wisdom parroted by the media is that most white men support extreme right causes and candidates. Not so fast.
“We’re taking white men back from the MAGA movement,” Ross Morales Rocketto, a cofounder of White Dudes for Harris, declared at the start of a three-hour telethon that raised more than $4 million for Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign. “By our silence, we white men have allowed white nationalists to speak for us.”
That white men organized — as white men — is among the many notable shifts in the 2024 presidential campaign since VP Harris became the Democrats’ presumptive nominee. For decades, white men’s activism and engagement in progressive causes has been consistently under the radar, obscured by extreme right wing men’s organizations, from the Proud Boys to the Aryan Brotherhood.
For decades, white men’s silence has perpetuated the belief that virtually all white men feel aggrieved, are anti feminist, JD Vance mini-mes. The truth, however, is that, for the last 50 years, there has been a growing cohort of men supporting women’s efforts to achieve gender equality — from supporting women’s reproductive rights to decrying domestic violence.
Critics have used the labels of a “pro-feminist” or “anti-sexist” men’s movement to try and marginalize us. Yet, the cultural shifts in recent decades — from men showing up in droves at the Women’s March in 2017, supporting the #MeToo movement and promoting engaged fathering — paint a different picture than the one the mainstream media has been relying on. It’s past time for them to dig a lot deeper, do the analysis and recognize the history.