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The Governing Cancer of Our Time
David Brooks
FEB. 26, 2016
We live in a big, diverse society. There are essentially two ways to maintain order and get things done in such a society — politics or some form of dictatorship. Either through compromise or brute force. Our founding fathers chose politics.
Politics is an activity in which you recognize the simultaneous existence of different groups, interests and opinions. You try to find some way to balance or reconcile or compromise those interests, or at least a majority of them. You follow a set of rules, enshrined in a constitution or in custom, to help you reach these compromises in a way everybody considers legitimate.
The downside of politics is that people never really get everything they want. It’s messy, limited and no issue is ever really settled. Politics is a muddled activity in which people have to recognize restraints and settle for less than they want. Disappointment is normal.
But that’s sort of the beauty of politics, too. It involves an endless conversation in which we learn about other people and see things from their vantage point and try to balance their needs against our own. Plus, it’s better than the alternative: rule by some authoritarian tyrant who tries to govern by clobbering everyone in his way.
As Bernard Crick wrote in his book, “In Defence of Politics,”
“Politics is a way of ruling divided societies without undue violence.”
Over the past generation we have seen the rise of a group of people who are against politics. These groups — best exemplified by the Tea Party but not exclusive to the right — want to elect people who have no political experience. They want “outsiders.” They delegitimize compromise and deal-making. They’re willing to trample the customs and rules that give legitimacy to legislative decision-making if it helps them gain power.
Ultimately, they don’t recognize other people. They suffer from a form of political narcissism, in which they don’t accept the legitimacy of other interests and opinions. They don’t recognize restraints. They want total victories for themselves and their doctrine.
This antipolitics tendency has had a wretched effect on our democracy. It has led to a series of overlapping downward spirals:
The antipolitics people elect legislators who have no political skills or experience. That incompetence leads to dysfunctional government, which leads to more disgust with government, which leads to a demand for even more outsiders.
The antipolitics people don’t accept that politics is a limited activity. They make soaring promises and raise ridiculous expectations. When those expectations are not met, voters grow cynical and, disgusted, turn even further in the direction of antipolitics.
The antipolitics people refuse compromise and so block the legislative process. The absence of accomplishment destroys public trust. The decline in trust makes deal-making harder.
We’re now at a point where the Senate says it won’t even hold hearings on a presidential Supreme Court nominee, in clear defiance of custom and the Constitution. We’re now at a point in which politicians live in fear if they try to compromise and legislate. We’re now at a point in which normal political conversation has broken down. People feel unheard, which makes them shout even louder, which further destroys conversation.
And in walks Donald Trump. People say that Trump is an unconventional candidate and that he represents a break from politics as usual. That’s not true. Trump is the culmination of the trends we have been seeing for the last 30 years: the desire for outsiders; the bashing style of rhetoric that makes conversation impossible; the decline of coherent political parties; the declining importance of policy; the tendency to fight cultural battles and identity wars through political means.
Trump represents the path the founders rejected. There is a hint of violence undergirding his campaign. There is always a whiff, and sometimes more than a whiff, of “I’d like to punch him in the face.”
I printed out a Times list of the insults Trump has hurled on Twitter. The list took up 33 pages. Trump’s style is bashing and pummeling. Everyone who opposes or disagrees with him is an idiot, a moron or a loser. The implied promise of his campaign is that he will come to Washington and bully his way through.
Trump’s supporters aren’t looking for a political process to address their needs. They are looking for a superhero. As the political scientist Matthew MacWilliams found, the one trait that best predicts whether you’re a Trump supporter is how high you score on tests that measure authoritarianism.
This isn’t just an American phenomenon. Politics is in retreat and authoritarianism is on the rise worldwide. The answer to Trump is politics. It’s acknowledging other people exist. It’s taking pleasure in that difference and hammering out workable arrangements. As Harold Laski put it, “We shall make the basis of our state consent to disagreement. Therein shall we ensure its deepest harmony.”
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Interesting take by Brooks and lines up with something I've been thinking about lately.
For years and years we've seen congressional ratings at 10-15%. We've seen poll after poll of the American people saying "government is broken". Everything in the federal government is kicked down the road, or dealt with in a last minute fashion like the deficit, budgets, debt limits, etc.
Compromise is a dirty word. Statesmen are ridiculed. Even someone like Paul Ryan, a VP candidate 4 years ago, are considered RINO's when his name is put forward as the candidate for Speaker of the House because he didn't line up 100% with the conservative base when it came to immigration or government spending, or simply because he's worked across the aisle on the budget.
So along comes Donald Trump. And one of the key points of his whole candidacy is that the people running our federal government are incompetent.
Based on the years of polling and direct evidence, can anyone disagree with him?
This isn't a defense of Trump. His exploitation of immigrants, Muslims, and inability to articulate a policy position are reasons 1, 2, and 3 why I could never vote for him.
But his ability to call out the dysfunction of our political state of affairs is something I get.
Which brings me to last night's GOP Debate.
If you didn't see the debate, what you saw was Trump, Rubio, and Cruz throw eggs at one another for 2 hours. And occasionally Kasich and Carson jumped in to say a few words.
It was, in my opinion, a shit show and I could only imagine Hillary in the oval office measuring the drapes while this whole affair was happening.
But here's the thing. Trump's main message was that Cruz and Rubio have done nothing in their lives other than debate and stonewall progress while Trump negotiated deals, built a business, and got things done.
And if you listen to Cruz and Rubio, they are essentially fighting to see who can be the more obstructionist, non-compromising President. In other words, Rubio and Cruz are campaigning to show the American people that they can fight the hardest to maintain the status-quo.
So possibly, that's the appeal of Trump for some. Not so much that he's a "superhero" as Brooks suggest. I mean, if you're a Bernie/Cruz/Hillary fan, he/she's probably a superhero too. It's that people are fed this constant line that Washington is broken and Trump is going to come along and "fix" it. And fixing it means brokering deal, negotiating, and compromising.
Just a thought.
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Goose wrote:
Good point.
The problem with trump is that he is just the end point of the ultimate victory fallacy.
I would ask people, are politics and deal making bad, or are they the essence of good society? Politicians have been telling people that they will get everything they want if they just vote for me. And they can't deliver.
But, I live in western Massachusetts and share the land with a farmer in Iowa, and an immigrant family in Texas, and software writers in California, etc. I can't get everything I want and neither can you. And if I could this wouldn't be the wonderful republic it is. Valuing each other and compromising is how we get along.
Give up the fantasy of some ultimate triumph of your ideology.
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In some ways, I think the stage is set for authoritarian rule here in the USA. For those of us who have been tuned into history, we have seen this repeated over and over and over again ever since civilization began. It's not that the founders of any nation didn't have good intentions at first, but for some reason eventually the citizenry of each civilization get duped into accepting an authoritarian as a leader when their lives begin to suck.
Fascinating.
Good posts from Goose and Lager.
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Security fears and general frustration with gridlock are powerful incentives to give in to authoritarianism.
Of course everyone imagines that only the other guy with suffer any hardship
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Lager--I watched parts of the debate and can only describe it as appalling behavior by three immature males who each think they are entitled to become our next president. Yes, there were five on the stage last night but two were mostly ignored for the evening. News reports discuss "winners" and "losers" in that fiasco.They all lost, including respect, in spite of the background hooting and hollering from what sounded like teens at a concert. I switched back & forth to TCM and the " Longest Day" movie and frankly that battle was much more entertaining than any battles on that debate stage.