Having defiantly announced my decision to take a vacation
from blogging, I was unable to resist one last post before wrapping things up
and waiting for the taxi tomorrow. For
some days now, I have been brooding about the chaos in the Republican Party,
trying to understand at some deeper level what is happening. I have posted several analyses of the
arithmetic of the primary and caucus nominating process. Now I should like to step back and see
whether I can make sense of the unlikely turns of events.
The American political system was designed by the Framers to
accomplish two structural and procedural ends [I leave to one side the effort
to protect the institution of slavery, an effort that succeeded for three
quarters of a century.] The first, very
much in line with one important strain of 18th century political theorizing,
was to make the pursuit of private interest subserve the public good. This conception of democratic government was
in stark contrast to Rousseau's assertion that true democracy requires that
individuals set aside their private interests and choose instead to aim at the
general good. The second goal of the
Framers was to craft a form of government that required an accommodation of,
and a compromise among, sectional and other interests.
The institution of a Presidency elected by the voters as a
whole, rather than a Prime Ministership selected by the majority party in
Parliament, made coalition politics on the European model almost impossible.
Thus, we have had for most of American history a two party
system, each party being a more or less uneasy coalition of economic, sectional,
racial and other groupings that do not naturally belong together.
When I was a boy, the Democratic Party was a coalition of Southern
white segregationists and Northeastern big-city unions, to mention only the two
most prominent and easily identifiable groupings within the party. The Republican Party was an equally uneasy
coalition of Midwestern isolationist farmers and small businessmen and
Northeastern internationalist big business [then only beginning to be
transformed into true multinational corporations.]
The Civil Rights Movement destroyed the Democratic Party
coalition. Strom Thurmond led the
segregationists out of the Democratic Party, and when Richard Nixon welcomed
them into the Republican Party with the so-called "Southern
Strategy," a fundamental realignment of the parties began. The Solid South became solidly Republican, and
the Republicans in effect gave up on the Northeast and then on the West Coast.
Ronald Reagan completed the realignment by undermining the
unions and peeling off white working class voters, hitherto reliably
Democratic, by appealing to their fear of Negroes and their hostility to the
scorn they felt directed at them by college educated liberals.
Meanwhile, fundamental demographic changes were taking place
in the electorate that elevated the importance of both Black and Hispanic
voters, to the advantage of the Democrats, who welcomed them into their now
firmly anti-segregationist party.
For almost two generations, this realignment worked to the
advantage of the Republicans, leading centrist Democrats like Bill Clinton to
abandon the liberal policies of the Roosevelt-Johnson Democratic Party in a
desperate, and successful, effort to win back the Presidency.
But the uneasy alliance between big business and financial
capitalism with culturally alienated and frightened working class whites was
never a natural fit, and with the end of the post-war boom and exponential rise
in the inequality of income and wealth, the inner contradictions of the Republican
Party, as great as the inner contradictions of the old Democratic Party, became
too stark to paper over.
I believe that we are now seeing the break-up of the
Nixon/Reagan coalition, both in the contest for the Republican Presidential
nomination and in the internal disarray of the Republican caucus in the House
of Representatives.
The immediate questions are, Who will become House Speaker
and Who will win the Presidential nomination?
But a larger and more interesting question is, What new alignment of
forces will emerge from this break-up?
In thinking about this, I begin with a simple fact borne in
upon me [in a different context] by my son, Tobias. The white working class and lower middle
class segment of the Republican coalition consist of a very large number of
people, numbering perhaps in the scores of millions, that is not going to
evaporate or cease to exist. They are
there, they are square, and they are not going away [to parody a famous Gay
chant.]
If the Republican Party splits wide open, as it well may if
Trump wins the nomination, they are certainly not going to seize control of the
Republican Party. There are not enough
of them to do that, I believe [but of course I could be wrong.] Nor are they going to join all those Black
and Brown people in the Democratic Party.
They could attempt a third party, but American history suggests that
that is a losing move.
I have puzzled about this for several days, and one answer
comes to mind. Remember that even in
Presidential election years, only two-thirds of eligible voters actually go the
polls. There are scores of millions of
people -- at least three score, by my quick estimate -- who do not vote. One segment of the Republican Party faction I
have been discussing is White Evangelical Protestants. There have been times when Evangelical
Protestants retreated from national politics, for religious and other
reasons. It seems to me possible [but
only possible, let me emphasize] that if the forces of big business win the struggle
for a splintering Republican Party, a sizeable segment of the losing faction
might simply retreat from the political arena.
The remaining Republican forces would then, almost
certainly, rid themselves of their anti-Black, anti-Hispanic stance, and move
somewhat, but not too much, to the center, becoming, in effect, a modern
twenty-first century arm of established capitalist interests. The Democratic Party would respond by
channeling its inner Bernie, and things would settle down somewhat, but not too
much, to the left of where they are now.
That is the only resolution I can see that makes political
sense within the traditions and structure of American party politics.
6 comments:
How do you think such a shake-up in the GOP might affect State governments - since far more States have Republican legislatures and governors (http://www.vox.com/2015/10/19/9565119/democrats-in-deep-trouble?utm_campaign=mattyglesias&utm_content=chorus&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter )? I like the thought of Evangelicals stepping aside from Federal politics but I can't see the same ever happening at the State level.
I think that the current division within the business wing is between (roughly) the extractive industries (plus low wage/low-income-consumer businesses) on one side and the rest (technology, specialty manufacture, information, etc.). The latter know that a consumer society needs consumers with money. The former are indifferent to that. Some of the latter have effectively defected to the Democratic Party. Here in NC the former (and the social conservatives that they mobilize to advance their agenda) have ascended and are destroying what the latter together with a anomalous supply of progressives built. It will be interesting to see if, for example, the public universities here can be saved before they are totally trashed.
Very perceptive comments. But what about the problem of voter suppression? This seems like a viable alternative for the money interests, especially since the Supreme Court would be more than happy to help out.
I know you won't be blogging for a while, but I thought I'd post this anyway. Interesting case of the trolley problem actually being relevant in real life. (That doesn't mean that it's useful to philosophy though - or that philosophy is useful when dealing with this issue).
http://i100.independent.co.uk/article/why-driverless-cars-might-have-to-be-programmed-to-kill-you--bJxGf8mVHue
Professor, my best wishes go out to you in Paris. The scenes of violence there are harrowing. Daniel
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