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The fruits of oligarchy

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Two years ago, Professor Martin Gilens created one of the simplest, saddest graphs in the nation. It represents the degree to which the policy preferences of ordinary Americans affected policy making when their desires differed from those of the political elite. The graph is a straight line: Since 1981, ordinary Americans and the mass organizations they joined had no affect on policy. Instead, Gilens found, the 1,779 policy choices he studied had all been most decisively influenced by economic elites and organized business groups.

This election was a scream of anger from millions of people who had never read Gilens’ research, but felt it in their bones; who felt they had more voice on TripAdvisor than on trade, more say in “American Idol” than in American policy.

The media has suddenly rediscovered the white working class — those Reagan Democrats whose support handed the former Hollywood actor the presidency. It’s true that these same voters came out in large numbers for Trump in the few states that mattered to give him the same office. Places hardest hit by manufacturing losses to China were surprise areas of Trump support, and many Trump voters had been hurt personally by such job losses or by the economic wallop of rising Obamacare insurance premiums.

But Trump’s coalition was not just angry, unemployed whites. In fact, Hillary Clinton won among voters who said the economy was their biggest concern, and she won the struggling working class most strongly. The people who voted for Trump had jobs — he did 4 percent better among those earning $50,000-99,000 a year, and 1 percent better among those in the $100,000-199,000 income range — but they may have lost the dignity that went with their work.

Nor were Trump voters all racist or ignorant. Only 1 percent more whites voted for Trump than came out for Reagan and Romney, while 29 percent of Latinos picked a man who wants to build a wall between the U.S. and Mexico. Yes, Clinton supporters were better educated, but Trump garnered 45 percent of all voters with a college degree and 37 percent of those with graduate degrees.

In other words, the people who voted for Trump were not voting from their pocketbooks — they were voting from their sense of pride. They were people from the working class, middle class, and even upper middle class whose dignity had been denied, whose views had been denigrated, and whose lifestyles had been deteriorating thanks to the choices of “others.”

The greatest differentiation between those voting for Trump versus Clinton was that Trump voters overwhelmingly felt their country was going downhill. They may have been doing OK, personally. But they walked through leaking airports, they sat in stopped trains, they watched manufacturing move to China, they saw their country bumble into adventures abroad that we seemed to fail at over and over again.

Emotions don’t stay in tidy policy boxes. For some, these feelings of decline were rooted in racism, nativism and sexism. We were doing worse because other countries were doing better, and were leaving their problems for us to deal with. Our country was going downhill because we had too many people with the wrong color skin, too many immigrants, or we had pandered too much to women.

And who was at fault?

The elites who had rigged the system, who were running America for themselves, who belittled and ignored the “flyover states.” So the more nearly every media outlet in the nation exhorted them to vote for Clinton, the more they doubled down on their belief that she was part of the problem. Trump was a billionaire — but the issue wasn’t money per se. It was oligarchy — the cozy relationship between money, media and politics. Trump was clearly hated by the elites, so he was exempted from that system. Instead, his supporters hoped his wealth would shield him from the corruption they felt in Washington, the favors owed, the cozy inner circle.

Why didn’t the media pick up on this?

For the same reason the media missed Brexit and the Colombian referendum rejecting its peace deal with the FARC. When there is a loud social force setting the tone of what is acceptable, people prefer to keep quiet rather than express views they fear will get them ostracized. German social scientist Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann described this phenomenon as a “spiral of silence.”

The polarization of views and the failure to pick up on them are symptoms of the fact that many of our longest-standing democracies are, in fact, moving closer and closer to oligarchies. Or, in the modern language of academia, they are tending towards economic-elite domination. This tendency is greatest in the United States, where inequality has grown to Gilded Age proportions. But the sense among European voters that they have so little control over their lives, that decisions are being made by bureaucrats in Brussels to benefit cozy insiders, is also driving right-wing sentiment on the continent. And there are a series of important elections coming up that could turn more countries towards the path of Poland, Hungary and, now, the United States.

In other words: the problem is much greater than Trump. We have created political systems that denigrate the wishes of major portions of citizenry. The elites have ignored those desires because they — we — think they are wrong and misguided. But rather than attempt to change minds, understand preferences or meet in the middle, those in power have simply sidestepped the conversation entirely. And so these views have erupted, unvarnished, into the middle of our public lives. The problem is greater than the U.S., or even the West. It is such fear of the same majoritarian backlash that led the elites of Egypt to back General Abdel Fatah Al-Sisi and turn their backs on democracy in the Middle East’s largest country.

Democracies cannot be afraid of their citizens. Nor can they afford to ignore them for decades. As a Democrat, I’ll be fighting Trump’s policies and his ugly brand of politics. But as a democrat, I’ll be working to reconnect with my fellow citizens, to listen, argue and seek what common ground there may be to rebuild their sense of voice and dignity. We are stuck with this demagogue. To prevent another, we must have more democracy, not less.

© The Mark News

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

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Some interesting points raised, but one key point is missed: the local

An article in History Today, 'Democracy: a user's guide' by a guy called Paul Cartledge,( http://www.historytoday.com/paul-cartledge/democracy-users-guide - unfortunately you need to pay to download it) makes the interesting point that all 'democratic' elections do is elect temporary oligarchies. In short, so-called 'democracies' based on representative electoral processes are not really democracies. Rather, democracy in essence is a pretty cumbersome and inefficient decision-making process for every time a decision needs to be made. For instance, many people think that the old Roman Republic (which looked democratic but wasn't really so democratic,could not deal with a complex governing of what had become an empire, which is why the top-down 'Emperor' system developed.

So, democracy may not really work so well at a nation-state level because oligarchy seems to develop as a matter of course. This is not to say that democracy doesn't work. At a local level at which things tend to be far less complex than in a nation state, it can work pretty well. This point is also made in this article.

Naturally it is not as simple as this: is the Executive (ie. ministers and Secretaries of State and so on) made up of elected people such as in Britain, Japan, or appointed such as in the US and various European countries even if they need to be approved by vote of an elected national assembly. Then it becomes complicated by the issue of party - such as in Australia elected members of parliament are coerced to make party their main loyalty over the area they represent.

In the present scenario, the last paragraph of Kleinfeld's article makes a predictable exhortation:

As a **Democrat, I’ll be fighting Trump’s policies and his ugly brand of politics. But as a **democrat, I’ll be working to reconnect with my fellow citizens, to listen, argue and seek what common ground there may be to rebuild their sense of voice and dignity. We are stuck with this demagogue. To prevent another, we must have more democracy, not less

She mentions 'Democrat' with a big 'D' and 'democrat' with a small 'd'. There is a very crucial distinction here that needs to be kept in mind. Among "... to listen, argue and seek what common ground ...", of course 'listen' is the essential one. But good luck with that if people are going to continue having that 'spiral of silence'

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Bigotry won the day for Trump. Some interesting information presented here but there is more to this story.

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And who was at fault?

The elites who had rigged the system, who were running America for themselves, who belittled and ignored the “flyover states.” So the more nearly every media outlet in the nation exhorted them to vote for Clinton, the more they doubled down on their belief that she was part of the problem.

Well said. Nice to hear from a democrat that gets it.

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Rachel Kleinfeld: And who was at fault?

Why not look to this article for an example?

Rachel Kleinfeld: The people who voted for Trump had jobs — ... but they may have lost the dignity that went with their work.

Is there anybody the media DIDN'T call a misguided idiot?

I can see they're not letting up with this article.

If you want another guess, it's that anyone who can google can find lists of Hillary's failures and scandals. If they remember the news items over the years, they have such lists in their heads. If the media want to pretend the Empress has clothes, that's up to them, but if they want to push the rest of us to believe it, it's only likely to reinforce the bad memories, in those who have memory.

Third: Constantly tarring one candidate and painting the other in sweetness and light isn't going to fool people, whether in news coverage or in debates. Once you have people triggering on your false treatment, double down will just make them trigger more.

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Nice post inkochi

It's neither odd or shocking that the differences between the two parties have been steered towards issues that further divide us (abortion, LGBT, climate change, immigration, etc) by the corporate media. Who, by the way, cater to both parties in the "political elite" board rooms. It's no coincidence that both Obama and the newly appointed CIA director Mike Pompeo were both Harvard JD grads and sat, at different times, on the Harvard Law Review. After reading Mike Pompeo's wiki page and other info, I see no special qualifications that warrant him for this position. I had no doubts that Trump would keep up this tradition of placing elites in his cabinet. So whine and cry all you want lefties, you backed an even bigger "political elite" in Hillary and were to emotional or short sighted to see that reality. We had a great chance back in 1996 to elect Ralph Nader, a true outsider who would have definitely shakendown the elites, but the "political elite" and their corporate media stooges would have nothing of it, and the Dem/Rep sheep followed. There's a new Oligarch in town, much different from the establishment's "political elite". Let's hope his leadership will prove to be as righteous as his words.

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@fizz I had no doubts that Trump would keep up this tradition of placing elites in his cabinet.

Are you suggesting someone else wrote JT posts under one of your user names saying Trump was going to take control from the elites because he wasn't part of the establishment?

Right wing reactionaries got just what they wanted: an establishment, right wing reactionary president. And Congress. And soon the Supreme Court.

Say your 'Our Fords'. The Party is yours.

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@PT

So you feel like arguing eh?

If you have NO understanding of my/our(?) elite run nation, then you shouldn't try commenting on it.

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