The Woke Right's Cultural Counterrevolution
How Repurposing Gramsci, the Frankfurt School, and Alinsky’s Tactics by the “Woke Right” Risks Eroding Constitutional Freedoms and Deepening America’s Political Divide
Christopher Rufo and the “woke right”—a “conservative” faction wielding progressive-style cultural strategies—have adopted the tactics of Antonio Gramsci, the Frankfurt School, and Saul Alinsky to combat progressive ideologies like critical race theory (CRT) and DEI. By repurposing Gramsci’s cultural hegemony, the Frankfurt School’s critical deconstruction, and Alinsky’s confrontational organizing, they aim to reclaim institutions and reshape public discourse. While potentially effective in challenging leftist dominance, these tactics are precarious for the U.S. Constitution, threatening free speech, due process, and the checks and balances that safeguard pluralistic governance. Such methods risk undermining the very liberties they claim to defend, echoing the left’s illiberal excesses in a parlous replica.
Gramsci’s concept of cultural hegemony, achieved through a “war of position” and a “long march through the institutions,” underpins Rufo’s strategy as admitted in his recent tweets and messaging of his book, which he describes as “a manifesto for the new right”, “How the Regime Rules”. He targets schools and bureaucracies to dismantle progressive ideologies, forming a conservative “historic bloc” of activists, parents, and media to establish a counter-hegemony. This approach risks violating the First Amendment’s free speech protections. The Constitution thrives on a vibrant marketplace of ideas, but hegemonic pursuits—whether leftist or rightist—threaten this by prioritizing ideological control. Such institutional overreach also strains checks and balances, as legislative haste bypasses judicial scrutiny, weakening the separation of powers.
The broader peril lies in the polarization these tactics fuel. By adopting the left’s zero-sum cultural warfare, Rufo and the woke right threaten the Constitution’s aim to “promote the general Welfare” through civic unity. Their pursuit of hegemony risks authoritarian drift, which curtails rights under the guise of ideological purity. The Constitution’s decentralized structure prevents any ideology from prevailing, yet these tactics could entrench a new orthodoxy as dogmatic as the one they oppose.
Rufo and the woke right’s appropriation of Frankfurt School, Gramsci, and Alinsky tactics in Rufo’s forms a dialectical “right hand path” to the woke left’s cultural dominance, culminating in Aufhebung—dialectical negation. Rufo employs Gramsci’s “war of position” to infiltrate institutions, the Frankfurt School’s critical theory to deconstruct leftist agendas ( e.g. CRT, DEI) as a “culture industry” enforcing progressive orthodoxy, and Alinsky’s “pick the target, freeze it” rule to vilify advocates of leftists programs as elitist. This mirrors the woke left’s tactics, creating a thesis-antithesis clash that escalates cultural warfare, negating both sides’ commitment to open discourse. The resulting Aufhebung risks synthesizing a new, illiberal cultural norm that blends the woke right’s nationalism with the woke left’s progressive dogmatism, discarding constitutional protections for free speech and due process. By fueling mob-driven outrage over reasoned debate, these tactics erode civic discourse, threatening the pluralism essential to constitutional governance and fostering an authoritarian synthesis.
Rufo’s and the woke right’s appropriation of Gramsci, Frankfurt School, and Alinsky tactics is precarious for the U.S. Constitution because it jeopardizes free speech, due process, and checks and balances in pursuit of cultural victory. If we are to preserve cognitive liberty, we must maintain true constitutional fidelity which requires open discourse and principled methods, instead of manipulative strategies that mirror the left for short term operational success. By prioritizing power over principle, these tactics threaten the safeguards of individual liberty and civic stability, challenging us to defend the Constitution’s enduring framework against all forms of ideological excess.
Glossary
• Cultural Hegemony: Antonio Gramsci’s concept describing how a ruling class maintains power by shaping cultural norms and values, securing consent from the governed.
• War of Position: Gramsci’s strategy of gradual cultural and ideological influence to challenge dominant power structures, as opposed to direct confrontation (war of maneuver).
• Historic Bloc: Gramsci’s term for a coalition of social forces (e.g., classes, intellectuals) united by shared ideology to establish or challenge cultural hegemony.
• Organic Intellectuals: Gramsci’s concept of intellectuals who emerge from and represent the interests of a specific social class, articulating its ideology.
• Saul Alinsky: American community organizer and author of Rules for Radicals (1971), advocating tactics like ridicule, polarization, and grassroots organizing to challenge power.
• Frankfurt School: A group of Marxist intellectuals (e.g., Herbert Marcuse, Theodor Adorno) who developed critical theory, analyzing how culture and media perpetuate capitalist dominance.
• Culture Industry: A term coined by Frankfurt School theorists Adorno and Horkheimer, describing how mass media and popular culture standardize and commodify cultural products to reinforce capitalist ideology.
• Critical Theory: A Frankfurt School framework for analyzing power structures and societal inequalities, often through a Marxist lens, to emancipate oppressed groups.
• Critical Race Theory (CRT): An academic framework examining systemic racism in laws and institutions. (My article from 2021: Critical Race Theory: Laying Groundwork For Marxist Style Revolution In America)
• Long March Through the Institutions: A phrase attributed to Rudi Dutschke, inspired by Gramsci, describing the gradual infiltration of cultural and political institutions to effect change.
• New Left: A 1960s–1970s political movement combining Marxist, civil rights, and anti-war activism, emphasizing cultural and social change over traditional class struggle. Rufo targets the New Left’s institutional legacy (e.g., in academia) as a source of progressive ideology.
• Postmodernism: A late-20th-century intellectual movement questioning grand narratives, objective truth, and fixed meanings, often embracing relativism.
• Post-Structuralism: A philosophical movement extending postmodernism, emphasizing the instability of language and power dynamics in shaping knowledge.
• Pluralism: The acceptance of diverse perspectives and ideologies coexisting in society, often associated with liberal democracy.
• Cognitive Liberty: The freedom to think independently and critically, unencumbered by ideological manipulation.
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Courtenay Turner is the host of the The Courtenay Turner Podcast. You can find her works at http://CourtenayTurner.com
Political consultant, and think tank alum, and former documentary film maker, Chris Rufo.
His name alone suggests everybody knows him. Don't think they do.
Good piece.
Rufo uses power, yes, as hierarchy and responsibility is real.
Rufo is also not a social or divine constructivist, but a realist, and is thus not woke.
Rufo may or may not be liberal by your definitions, but in no way is he woke in any way, if woke means "critical constructivist" as it was defined for many years prior.