Newly released tape reveals Ronald Reagan using racist language: 'Those monkeys from those African countries'


President Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office preparing a speech on tax revision on May 24, 1985. 
Scott Stewart, file via AP


  • When Ronald Reagan was governor of California he made racist comments in a 1971 phone call with President Richard Nixon.
  • Reagan was angry at African delegates in the UN for siding against the US in a vote to recognize the People's Republic of China, and he described them as "monkeys."
  • "To see those, those monkeys from those African countries — damn them, they're still uncomfortable wearing shoes!" Reagan said.
  • Reagan's comments prompted laughter from Nixon.
  • The release of this conversation came as President Donald Trump faces backlash over racist tweets he sent about several congresswomen of color and disparaging comments he made toward the city of Baltimore.
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In 1971, Ronald Reagan, then the governor of California, made racist remarks in a phone conversation with former President Richard Nixon as he denigrated UN delegates who sided against the US in a vote to recognize the People's Republic of China.
"Last night, I tell you, to watch that thing on television as I did," Reagan said in newly unearthed tapes published by The Atlantic.
Nixon replied, "Yeah."
And Reagan went on to say, "To see those, those monkeys from those African countries — damn them, they're still uncomfortable wearing shoes!"
That comment, which was excised from the tape when it was originally released in 2000, prompted laughter from Nixon.
Reagan was enraged that members of the Tanzanian delegation began dancing in the General Assembly after a vote to seat a delegation from Beijing instead of Taiwan.
Tim Naftali, a clinical associate professor of history at New York University, is behind the release of the exchange, which was recorded by Nixon.
In the article published Tuesday, Naftali, who directed the Nixon Presidential Library from 2007 to 2011, wrote, "When the National Archives originally released the tape of this conversation, in 2000, the racist portion was apparently withheld to protect Reagan's privacy."
Naftali said a court order stipulated the Nixon tapes be reviewed chronologically, which was completed in 2013. But in 2017 and 2018 the National Archives began a review of the tapes.
Given that Reagan died in 2004, it eliminated the privacy concerns and Naftali last year asked the National Archives to review the conversations between Reagan and Nixon, which released complete versions of these recordings online earlier this month.
Naftali wrote that the exchange between Reagan and Nixon instilled within the latter a "misplaced" anger at African leaders regarding the UN vote on China.

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