
olitical
commentary is always replete with exaggerations: it fits the
need of the culture industry. Even the greatest thinkers
like Karl Marx and Theodor Adorno tended to take the
experience of a crucial historical moment and extrapolate
its most dramatic implications into the future: it’s a
natural inclination. But the victory of George W. Bush in
the presidential campaign of 2004 is pregnant with the most
ominous economic, political, and ideological developments.
The onus does not simply fall on “capital” in an election
that cost nearly $4 billion and in which roughly the same
amount of cash was spent on both sides. Enough elite sectors
were suffering from a damaged economy and were appalled by
the blatantly incompetent handling of the ill-fated and
immoral invasion of Iraq. Republicans proved themselves
masters of the smear campaign and, most likely, there was
ballot-fraud in the two crucial swing states of Ohio and
Florida.
But 2004 is not 2000.
President
George Bush defeated Senator John Kerry (D-Mass) by three
and a half million votes and voting reached record highs of
nearly 60%; not merely a plurality but for the first time
since 1988, when George Bush the Elder beat Michael Dukakis,
a majority of American voters made a dramatic political
choice. Staring into the abyss in the aftermath of a sweep,
which has resulted not only in greater Republican control
over the Senate and the Congress, but what is being
presented as a new right-wing ideological mandate, the left
must now look in the mirror and reflect upon first
principles. It must consider what strategy the Democratic
Party employed, what the right-wing zealots are planning,
what the role of the left might be, and what outlines its
resistance should take under conditions in which – it should
not be forgotten – the country remains virtually as divided
as it was in 2000.
*
*
*
Dealing with Differences: Could a
different candidate have produced a better result? Perhaps,
but probably not: outside of Howard Dean, who would have
received little support from the careerists within the
Democratic Party, and whom the right-wing media would have
shredded, none of the other candidates inspired much
enthusiasm. Differences between the Republican and
Democratic camps were also apparent and, in spite of a
relentless and hideous right-wing media blitz against the
challenger, the lying and incompetence of the Bush
Administration became public knowledge. But it is not that
simple. Belief once existed in the willingness of the
Democratic Party – or, at least, certain minority segments
of it – to stand for certain principles with respect to
foreign policy as well as domestic reform. That belief was
probably never fully warranted: the Democrats have been the
party of aggressive, liberal nationalism for most of the
twentieth century. Especially now, however, it has become
clear that if the party is to serve as an opposition then
pressure must come from outside or what might be termed “the
street.”
While the Republican Party ran an
explicitly ideological campaign predicated on “mobilizing
the base” – by highlighting the threat posed to moral
values, raising the specter of terrorism, wrapping the
invasion of Iraq in the flag of national interest, and
invoking the fear of higher taxes – the Democratic Party was
guided by exactly the opposite strategy. It too, of course,
wished to bring out its base. But its campaign was driven
less by “liberal” principles let alone “socialist” beliefs,
which was claimed by various reactionary and religious
demagogues in the Mid-West and the South, than by the
“realism” of the pollster and the “pragmatism” of the party
professional. They believed it was enough for John Kerry to
appear as the “anti-George Bush” just as, in the primaries,
he had served as the “anti-Howard Dean.” It would seem from
the results that the wise guys among the Democrats weren’t
as smart as they thought they were.
Asking whether a different candidate
would have done “better” then is, actually, the wrong
question. More important is to reflect upon whether this
candidate left any kind of legacy on which the Democrats
might build down the road. That is where the problem lies.
Senator Kerry presented his party as a somewhat less noxious
version of the Republicans and assumed a reactive, rather
than a proactive, stance on the major issues of our time:
social issues, the economy, nationalism, and the war. To his
credit, Kerry did unequivocally state his support for Roe v.
Wade, indicated he would not appoint reactionary justices to
the Supreme Court, and spoke about extending health care to
the 43 million people who need it.
It should have been enough of a reason to vote for him.
But elections are
decided less by issues than the mobilization of
constituencies. Kerry said little about the declining
conditions of the elderly poor and he did not offer much
more to those African-Americans who would prove his most
loyal supporters. Senator Kerry was also outflanked on the
matter of gay marriage: he opposed the constitutional ban on
it demanded by President Bush only to watch in horror as
Vice-President Dick Cheney, surely to soften the hard-line
stance of his boss, stated publicly that he didn’t see the
need for an amendment. The Democrats never articulated the
vision of a nation steeped in tolerance and acceptance of
the “other,” and ready to meet the needs of social justice
in an age of globalization.
As for the economy,
Kerry was content to oppose “tax cuts” for the rich, but not
for the “middle class”; oppose the “outsourcing” of jobs but
not put forward a plan for mass scale job creation; oppose
privatizing the social security system but not speak about
raising benefits. Intent upon developing “business friendly
policies,” Democrats split the interests of working people
from those of the “middle class” families with incomes
around $60,000. They also refused explicitly to
accuse the Bush Administration of engaging in class war
even though it had redistributed income upward from the poor
to the rich more radically than at any time during this
century, constricted union political activity and the right
to strike, and opposed raising an already pathetically low
minimum wage. Too little was made of the way in which, for
the first time during a war, programs for poor and working
people were actually eliminated.
For the Democrats, it was always less a
matter of challenging elites or reinvigorating the welfare
state than engaging in what Bill Clinton liked to call
“triangulation,” which involves standing just a wee-bit
further to the left on economic issues than the Republicans.
Kerry publicly evidenced the inner conflict of a man
burdened with an exceptionally “liberal” voting record in
the Senate while feeling the “pragmatic” necessity of
running against it for president. During the last week of
the campaign, indeed, he ultimately spoke less about a
plummeting economy than the loss of 350 tons of munitions in
Iraq due to the incompetence of the administration.
To continue: what was true in terms of
social issues and the economy became even more embarrassing
in terms of dealing with the culture generated by 9/11. Much
is made now about the role of religion, and the inability of
Democrats to deal with the faithful, but actually the number
of voting evangelicals remained roughly what it was in 2000
and it was among non-regular churchgoers that President Bush
increased his vote.
Most voters were concerned, especially in the swing states,
with “national security” in the face of a terror attack and
the conduct of the Iraq War. Indeed, while religion and
“moral values” surely played a role,
it was the inability to deal with the insecurities
associated with the post-9/11 climate that sent the
Democrats to defeat.
Senator Kerry was effusive in his
nationalism and preoccupation with making the country more
“secure” throughout the campaign. Rather than appear as the
decorated veteran that he was, in fact, he sought to turn
himself into a war hero. Kerry threatened to “hunt down” and
“kill” Osama bin Laden and the rest of the terrorists with
as much fervor as President Bush. The only difference was
that Kerry did “flip-flop” on his past as a resister to
Vietnam, remained ambiguous on the Patriot Act, and
unrealistically argued for ending the Iraqi occupation by
sending in more troops while maintaining that he
could persuade the United Nations and our economically
strapped former allies – whose citizens overwhelmingly
opposed the invasion from the beginning – to provide “help.”
The Democrats were simply not as convincing in their
obsessions with security, militarism, or nationalism as the
Republicans.
Maybe they were not quite as obsessed.
This only makes sense since, for right or wrong, the
Democrats were considered the party of opposition and they
were supposed to offer an alternative. That was, after all,
their rationale in the election of 2004. It was a rationale,
however, which they neither fully embraced nor fully
discarded. Senator Kerry criticized the set of lies that
legitimated the invasion, but never called upon the United
States to exit Iraq. Until the end of September, near the
conclusion of the campaign, he said that he would have
authorized the war even had he known that Iraq was not
harboring weapons of mass destruction. Kerry lambasted the
President not for waging a useless and immoral war, but for
the incompetence with which it was being waged. This stance
left him open to the charge of not believing in the
legitimacy of the invasion while, simultaneously, engaging
in Monday-morning quarterbacking: Kerry’s catastrophic
ambivalence on legislation calling for $87 billion to
further finance the war, which he apparently supported while
voting against the bill, was symbolic of his entire take on
the conflict. That the invasion of Iraq was misguided from
the beginning – in principle and in practice – never,
ironically, became part of the electoral debate. And for
good reason: most of the Democrats along with a new set of
left wing “fellow travelers” took the bait and – especially
when it looked like victory was near – fell over one another
in expressing support for the Iraqi war. That the cheers
turned to criticism – once victory was no longer at hand –
looked hypocritical though, tactically and pragmatically,
the shift in opinion only made sense.
Senator Kerry shied away from proposing a
new approach to foreign policy or dealing with the need for
a planetary politics in a planetary age.
The doctrine of “pre-emptive strike” was never subjected to
criticism and the loss of the “street” in so many nations,
the squandering of sympathy and support that the United
States had gained due to 9/11, was never linked to the
pursuit of a unilateral foreign policy in favor of an
explicitly multilateral one. Again and again, Kerry
disclaimed the idea that any foreign nation or organization
would hold a veto over American actions under his
presidency. The problem therefore was not that the
Democrats refused to embrace nationalism, fiscal
responsibility, the feelings of the religious right, or the
war effort; it was that they did not do any of this with the
same degree of conviction and consistency as
their Republican opponents.
Advisors to Senator Kerry like Mary Beth
Cahill and Bob Shrum along with the “mainstream” associated
with the Democratic Leadership Council wanted to be
“pragmatic,” “realistic,” and slick. They were. But the
result was merely a watered down version of the campaign
that they opposed. The contradictions and vacillations over
foreign policy became ever more glaring. The Economist was
not wrong when, while supporting Kerry, it claimed in its
election issue that the presidential race involved a choice
between “the incompetent and the incoherent.” The real
lesson of this election is not merely that the former
appeared less noxious than the latter, which it did, but
that the only hope for progressives – now irretrievably on
the defensive – is to recognize that competence requires
coherence and that progressive interests must be linked to
progressive principles.
*
*
*
Republican Plans: President Bush
actually put the matter well when he stated in his victory
address that he had now earned some “political capital” and
that he was willing to spend it. What’s coming will be, if
possible, an intensified version of what has been. The
political trajectory for the administration over the next
four years was set during the electoral campaign and it will
revolve less upon what campaign strategist Karl Rove termed
“mini-ball” than the “big” issues with respect to foreign
and domestic policy. When seeking to understand this
ideologically driven Republican Party, when constructing an
image of neo-conservatism, more is subsequently involved
than discrete issues like privatizing social security,
eliminating taxes on inheritance and savings, introducing
radical tax cuts, or even repealing the Wagner and the Fair
Labor Standards Acts. Such policies would undoubtedly
increase the deficit. But man does not live by bread alone.
This would make it possible for the Republicans to justify
eliminating state programs though, naturally, not those
concerned with “national” security or further bloating an
omnivorous military budget.
Shrinking “big government” was never
actually the aim of neo-conservatives. Bush’s deficit in
2004 was $413 billion and his military budget will run to
$419 billion. Roughly $4 billion per week will be spent
covering the costs generated by Iraq and Afghanistan and the
partial privatization of Social Security could reach $146
billion by 2009. A $258 billion budget is projected
for that year without even considering the further costs of
the war in Iraq.
The point is plain enough: only in terms of cutting
welfare programs – and this often as a “stealth issue” –
were neo conservatives ever intent upon, in their parlance,
“starving the beast.” They were always more than willing to
expand the size of the military and the intelligence
agencies.
“Laissez-faire,” wrote Kevin
Phillips, “is a pretense.”
The government is now part of the economy: the real
question involves the priorities it should set. Ideology is
necessary in privileging one set of priorities over another.
Viewing the state in terms of a family budget helps provide
a basis for provincial thinking about the “fiscal
responsibility” while the vision of an imperiled community,
strengthened by the incessant terror alerts, creates the
justification for building an ever-stronger military capable
of enforcing a foreign policy consonant with imperialist
aims Those wishing to confront the Republican Party will
thus have to deal with the connections it has forged between
imperialism, militaristic nationalism, a new provincialism,
and the waging of an economic class war.
Many now speak about the dangers of
American intervention spreading to Iran, Syria and other
states that are included, or might be included, in what
President Bush called “the axis of evil.” That phrase is now
already almost forgotten but it remains important for making
sense of America’s role in the world. More is involved than
the particular flashpoints for potential crisis or even the
seemingly unending attempt to read the present back into the
original response to the attack of 9/11 and the assault on
the Taliban. Generally ignored have been the basic
nationalist and unilateralist assumptions underpinning the
invasion of Iraq that were presented by Republicans – now
even more than before – as a line of demarcation between “us
and them.”
More than 56% of Americans now doubt
whether the Iraqi War is worth the costs. That number is
steadily rising along with the dead and wounded. But the
election of 2004 suggested what is actually at stake is less
Iraq than the self-understanding of the United States as
the
predominant world power with the God-given right to
intervene where it will. Hard to ignore is the way in which
America has lost the moral standing it acquired in the
aftermath of 9/11. Republicans turned this in their favor.
Former allies opposed to the Iraqi invasion and the
international forum in which the Bush administration
suffered its most embarrassing public setback, the United
Nations, became targets of unrelenting criticism. The need
for self-reflection by the United States and developing new
forms of western unity were transformed into an unthinking
nationalism, resentment against the rest of the world for
its ingratitude, heightened preoccupations with “security,”
and feelings of cultural superiority for leading the “war
against terrorism.” The same hot air, the same propaganda,
is now filling the trial balloons concerning the threats to
our national security posed by Iran and Syria. Why not? Such
talk helped the Republicans generate a new provincialism
within the American polity.
The Democratic Party had no response to
the wave of sentiments and attitudes reminiscent of the
great character fashioned by Sinclair Lewis: Babbitt. The
new provincialism reflects the overlapping consensus between
the “middle class and the depressed rural elements of
American society. It exhibits not only a fear of
criticism, but of expanding individual choices and
legitimating different life-styles that challenge
communitarian norms and religious strictures. It evokes the
Bible thumping of the half-literate preacher, the attempt to
introduce creationism as an “alternative” to evolution, and
the thought that stem cell research and biological
engineering will alter “human nature.”
The new provincialism is the neo-conservative response to
what Norman Podhoretz called the “adversary culture” of the
1960s. Grounded in the basic concerns of the moment –
abortion, gay marriage, and the right to own a gun (any gun)
– this parochial and reactionary ideology is ultimately
intent upon challenging the most basic elements of the
progressive tradition: cosmopolitanism and tolerance, civil
liberties and social reform, and – above all – the attempt
to constrain the arbitrary exercise of institutional power.
Abortion was cleverly pitched in terms of
a “culture of life” for the Republican base even while
George W. Bush largely focused on “partial birth abortions”
in the presidential debates. But there is little doubt that
the Bush Administration will attempt to mitigate or even
reverse Roe v. Wade with the appointment of possibly three
new justices to the Supreme Court. The popularity of the new
provincialism also provides justification for those who
deeply resent abortion in principle and seek new
conservative legislation. Newly elected Senator David Vitner
from Louisiana has called for banning abortion in all
instances while Tom Coburn, the newly elected Senator from
Oklahoma, actually has called for arresting doctors who
perform abortions and trying them for murder should that
procedure become illegal. Similarly, the newly elected
Senator from South Carolina, Jim De Mint has made the modest
proposal that neither gays nor unmarried pregnant women
should teach in public schools.
As for gay marriage, of course, it was a
stroke of political brilliance for Republicans in eleven
states to place bans on gay marriage on the ballot: they
were universally successful. But it remains an open question
whether President Bush will fulfill his campaign promise of
seeking a constitutional ban. The price would be very high.
What is not an open issue, however, is the question of guns.
Rather than take on the National Rifle Association, whose
supporters would most likely vote Republican anyway, the
Democratic Party simply concentrated on the importance of
retaining the existing ban on AK-47s. Cries of “USA! USA!”
directed against outsiders and unbelievers, however,
did not vanish. And for good reason: The forest was missed
for the trees. Ignored was the political role of ideology in
favor of a narrow understanding of economic interests. Only
by bringing ideology back in is it possible to glean
hints of what will surely prove important not merely for
Democrats winning the next election, but for combating what
must be understood as a more general “distortion of
democracy” that pervades the American landscape. The Bush
Administration has already begun packing the lower courts
with conservatives. Three new reactionary justices on the
Supreme Court could have a devastating impact on civil
liberties no less than social issues like abortion. Then
there are the various “anti-terror” intelligence bills along
with the Patriot Acts I & II. They give new powers to the
federal government with respect to issuing subpoenas,
denying bail to those accused of terrorism, instituting the
death penalty for terrorist crimes, developing “enhanced
surveillance procedures,” sealing off borders, and “removing
obstacles to investigating terrorism.”
But the threat to democracy, no less than
democracy itself, is not simply a formal matter. It is not
merely the direct assault on civil liberties through
legislation, and various attempts at censorship, which is
crucial. Just as important is the spirit of intimidation and
the self-censorship generated in what is becoming an ever
more militaristic and provincial climate of opinion. The
belief is growing ever stronger not only that the United
States has been divinely endowed with the right to exert its
power when it wills, but that intellectual activity is an
affront to religious faith, that the political exercise of
democratic rights is an impediment to national “unity,” and
that the concern for economic justice involves an assault on
the individual. Neo-conservatives are bent upon
strengthening the military, waging imperialist wars abroad
and intensifying a class war against the least fortunate at
home under the cover of a hyper-nationalism.
Cultural reactionaries and religious fanatics, advocates of
the new provincialism, are intent upon contesting the
practice of liberty and the progress of knowledge. Support
exists not for Nazism, or for old-fashioned forms of racism
and anti-Semitism, but for a new American form of
authoritarian populism.
That is bad enough.
*
*
*
What Now? : Not since Richard
Nixon defeated Senator George McGovern (D-South Dakota) in
1972 have the hopes of the left been so thoroughly dashed.
The greatest voting registration drive in American history,
the most remarkable fund-raising effort ever, seems to have
led to nothing for the Democrats.
They were out-mobilized by the Republicans.
Even worse: evangelical fundamentalists and those threatened
by the more liberal and cosmopolitan elements of modernity,
seem to have voted against their immediate economic
interests and in favor not merely of a radical
redistribution of wealth upwards, and an old-fashioned class
war directed against programs of benefit to working people
and the poor, but of a costly and unnecessary war in Iraq.
The country seems to have been driven even farther to the
right and it appears to stand more divided than ever before.
http://www.selekta.com/map.jpg
If the map above has any validity,
however, the present divide is not quite as “new” as it
would seem. What becomes evident is a general division
between rural areas seemingly threatened by modernity and
urban areas intent upon embracing it. This translates into a
conflict between the class and groups embedded in rural
existence with its religious and cultural traditionalism
confronting the class and groups embedded in urban life with
its secularism and multicultural dynamism.
Interestingly enough, however, there is
nothing new about that either.
Just as capitalists generally harbored an affinity for the
free markets and civil liberties associated with classical
liberalism, and workers historically identified with either
Marxism or some form of social democratic thinking, the
middle class sought refuge in the security of traditional
values while pre-modern groups including farmers and small
entrepreneurs and the like tended to identify with
pre-modern ideologies. And they did so precisely because the
modern world both in its secular – liberal and socialist –
theory as well as in its capitalist –
industrial and technological –
practice is imperiling both the existential and the material
foundations of their pre-modern way of life.
Herein is the source of the new
provincialism. Nostalgia for the power and glory of the
American imperial past, which was questioned during the
Vietnam War, inclines rural and pre-modern groups towards
embracing nationalist propaganda even in what is manifestly
a failed cause. Fear of the outsider, in this case the Arab
not the Jew, similarly predisposes them to appeals
concerning “security” in the face of a looming terror
attack. Ironically, if such an attack should occur, it will
most likely take place not in some small town, but in
precisely the kind of major urban area whose citizens vote
“left.” Nevertheless, the new provincialism does not merely
speak to issues of foreign and national security: it also
bleeds into domestic concerns.
Most important, perhaps, is the rejection
of a rights based culture in favor of the “community.” The
decline in “family values” is bemoaned without the least
sense of the way in which “the culture industry” is
undermining them. The preoccupation with “creationism” as an
alternative to evolution by the rural, religious, parts of
the citizenry complements their anxiety over complex
scientific developments like stem cell research. All of this
reflects the deeper – perhaps unconscious – and totally
legitimate insight that the small town is anachronistic for
the modern world. Herein is the source of the oft-noted
“rage” and “resentment” that these groups direct toward
“liberals” and “socialists.”
They appear as the cause of their distress, and this
mistaken perception leads to contradictions in which the
poorest counties of a state like Kansas will vote
Republican, citing religion and the like, even though
Republican policies are doing nothing for them and,
actually, are keeping them poor. But simply citing the
irrationality of such beliefs, even while understandably
calling for a new economic populism, misses the point.
Privileging “reason” or utility in dealing with social
problems is itself a function of modernity. This part of the
citizenry may be voting against their material interests,
but not their existential ones. Thus, when the question
arises “What’s the Matter with Kansas?”
The answer is: nothing at all.
Political finesse does not ultimately
help in dealing with this paradox. Something serious is at
stake that becomes even more serious in periods of crisis
when religious or mythical and traditional or reactionary
appeals generally assume heightened importance for precisely
these groups. To be sure: in America during the 1930s, when
they were offered something in terms of legislation that
would
manifestly better their lives, the faithful and the
rural poor briefly aligned with the labor movement and urban
immigrants.
The great divide was also bridged at other moments in
American history. It is only necessary to consider the “New
Nationalism” of Teddy Roosevelt (R-NY) or the elections of
Democrats like Woodrow Wilson, FDR, Harry Truman, and Lyndon
Johnson. More recently, of course, there were the
presidential victories of Governor Jimmy Carter (D-Ga) and
Gov. Bill Clinton (D-Ark.).
But it is important to remember that
these electoral successes were built upon maintaining a
racist political structure in the South and, with perhaps
making an exception of FDR, essentially employing a rank
nationalism that brooked no opposition in the realm of
foreign policy. Once President Johnson signed the Voting
Rights Act of 1964 and mass opposition to the Vietnam War
began, which resulted in a “trauma” born of nothing more
than the desire to render foreign policy decisions
accountable to the citizenry, the “solid” South dutifully
moved from the Democratic into the Republican column. It
only returned when Jimmy Carter began the retreat from the
achievements of 1968 and Bill Clinton, after running a smart
campaign against George Bush the Elder in 1992, introduced
his strategy of “triangulation” and welfare reform.
Such compromises, however, are no longer
acceptable. Or, better, it is now the task of progressives
to block the Democratic Party from entering into compromises
that would sacrifice the interests of their base – people of
color, women, unions and the poor – in order for careerists
and party professionals “to get elected.” Many, of course,
see things differently. Mainstream Democrats, who so heavily
contributed to the ethical collapse of their party during
the onset of the Iraqi War, are now already demanding that
it shift even further toward the “center” in 2008. Given
that the “center” has gradually inched ever further to the
right since the 1990s, however, such a strategy can only
intensify the identity crisis of the Democratic Party. It
can only further diminish its appeal for traditional
constituencies, and enable the Republican Party to fashion
an even more reactionary politics. Such a strategy of
“appeasement” will surely legitimate the anti-democratic and
know nothing elements of the new provincialism.
That doesn’t seem to be a problem for the
noted columnist of The New York Times, Nicholas Kristoff,
who – in the wake of defeat – has called upon the Democratic
Party to temper its support for abortion and gay rights and
its battles for gun control and against symbols like the
Confederate flag. But why stop there? Perhaps Northern
liberals can even be induced to buy pick-up trucks, hang
their guns and flags inside, and then drive those
always-willing people of color and poor women to the voting
booths where they can cast their ballots for the
always-deserving Democratic Party. But Kristoff is not
alone. Another of the “great compromisers,” changing
somewhat a phrase from Nietzsche, has an even better idea.
Steven Waldman, editor in chief of
Beliefnet.com, insists that Democrats should now
empathize more deeply with how “Christians” – unlike the
working poor or gay people or people of color let alone
Arab-Americans – feel “misunderstood and persecuted.” It
doesn’t seem to matter that not all “Christians,” but rather
the religious zealots – the missionary advocates of the new
provincialism – are the ones who feel themselves alienated
from the Democratic Party. Perhaps those degenerate
secularists on the coasts should start building a new
coalition with them by insisting upon re-opening the Scopes
Monkey Trial.
Chipping away at the right-wing
allegiances of pre-modern sectors in American society is
possible, even necessary, but “winning them over” through
talk of a “new nationalism” or a “liberal nationalism”
contemptuous of multiculturalism and the achievements of the
social movements is an illusion.
Obviously points of common interest and even solidarity can
bind the most divergent groups: perhaps progressives should
support “faith-based initiatives” when it comes to the
homeless, AIDS victims, and even prisoners so long as it
doesn’t involve privileging a reactionary alternative to
left-wing forms of community organizing. But it is equally
obvious that conservatives can find reactionary
ideological points of unity and fashion deep and
sustainable alliances with reactionary constituencies more
easily than progressives. And conservatives need not qualify
their support.
Dealing with pre-modern
groups and classes, which the media likes to define simply
as “religious and rural” or “middle class” voters, is –
again – not simply a matter of political finesse.
Snapping military salutes, wearing goose hunting gear, and
loudly identifying with religious values – as Senator Kerry
did – won’t do the trick. It evidences only condescension
for small town voters with strong religious and traditional
values. They sense it, too. That is an important reason why
the Republicans were successful this past election in
identifying “religion” with evangelical fundamentalists and
the most reactionary elements of the religious community. As
for the pragmatists and compromisers in the Democratic
Party, those who hold so little sympathy for ideological
conviction, the suspicion will always exist among those “red
state” voters that they are panderers and hypocrites.
Despite the crowing by fundamentalist
groups like
Focus on the Family or The Christian Defense
Coalition, however, they do not represent the religious
community of America. African-Americans and Hispanics are
both deeply religious constituencies: 89% of the former and
53% of the latter voted for the Democratic Party in 2004.
Then there are the Quaker organizations like the American
Friends Service Committee, radical groups within the
Catholic Church, and other religious institutions were all
once committed to building on the legacy of Martin Luther
King, Jr. Most remain committed to fostering progressive
domestic legislation and a humane foreign policy. Rather
than speak about compromising with religious fanatics, or
adherents of the new provincialism, it would be much more
practical and principled for secular progressives to
highlight their connections with the progressive elements of
the religious community.
The purpose of parties is perhaps “to get
elected,” but getting elected – especially over the long
haul -- often depends upon the party acting as a vehicle for
“protest.” That is the situation today. Economic divisions
in the United States will become worse, a spiteful culture
of intolerance will further harm the democratic discourse,
and the domestic “war on terror” has no end in sight. The
rush to the center, which will be presented as benefiting
“us” not simply the party regulars, is precisely what will
lead to papering over the gravity of these developments. It
is what progressives must resist. Reinvigorating the
Democratic Party is possible only by reinvigorating its
base. Or, to put it another way, providing core
constituencies with proposals and ideals that working
people, women, minorities, progressive religious
institutions, the poor, and the young can be enthusiastic
about.
President
Bush and his followers promulgated an ideology concerned not
merely with fostering imperialist ambitions but with rolling
back the policies and values associated with the most humane
traditions of economic, political, and social reform. And
ideology, as Max Weber reminds us, is not like a taxi that
can be stopped at will. Can the Republicans veer even
further to the right? Is that possible? It is if we on the
left let the obsession with “security” justify the
constriction of civil liberties and a centralization of
intelligence and police agencies. It is if we let an
arbitrarily defined “axis of evil” and the current contempt
for international law go unquestioned. It is if we forget
about the lying and the distortion of democracy that have
shaped the American landscape. It is if we accept the
right-wing identification of religion with fundamentalist
zealotry. It is if we don’t link the war abroad with class
war at home. It is if we let a momentary mandate appear as a
fundamental consensus. A new authoritarian populism is
possible, in short, if progressives don’t stand up to defend
the values that have informed our best traditions: economic
justice, political liberty, and cosmopolitanism.
Notes
Frances Fox Piven, The War at Home: The
Domestic Costs of Bush’s Militarism (New York:
New Press, 2004).
Karl Marx, “The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis
Bonaparte” in Karl Marx and Frederick Engels,
Selected Works 3 volumes (Moscow: Progress
Publishers, 1969) 1:394ff.
Note the fine study by Thomas Frank,
What’s the Matter with Kansas? How
Conservatives Won the Heart of America (New
York: Metropolitan Books, 2004).
Stephen Eric Bronner is
the senior editor of Logos and the author, most
recently, of
A Rumor about the Jews: Anti-Semitism, Conspiracy, and the
Protocols of Zion’ (Oxford University Press) and
Reclaiming the Enlightenment: Toward a Politics of Radical
Engagement (Columbia University Press). He is
Professor (II) of Political Science and a member of the
Graduate Faculties of Comparative Literature and German
Studies at Rutgers University.
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