National Post

Women’s march lifted spirits, but lacks crucial party support.

IDENTITY POLITICS IS TOO SMALL FOR THIS MOMENT. — DAVID BROOKS

- David Brooks

The women’s marches were a phenomenal success and an important cultural moment. Most everybody came back uplifted and empowered. Many said they felt hopeful for the first time since Election Day. But these marches can never be an effective opposition to Donald Trump.

In the first place, this movement focuses on the wrong i ssues. Of course, many marchers came with broad anti- Trump agendas, but they were marching under the convention­al structure in which the central issues were clear. As The Washington Post reported, they were “reproducti­ve rights, equal pay, affordable health care, action on climate change.”

In other words, issues for upper-middle-class voters in university towns and coastal cities. But this is 2017. Ethnic populism is rising around the world. All the big things that were once taken for granted are now under assault: globalizat­ion, capitalism, adherence to the Constituti­on, the American-led global order. If you’re not engaging these issues first, you’re not going to be in the main arena of national life.

Second, there was too big a gap between Saturday’s marches and the Democratic and Republican parties.

Sometimes social change happens t hrough grassroots movements — the civil rights movement. But most of the time change happens through political parties: The New Deal, the Great Society, the Reagan Revolution. Change happens when people run for office, amass coalitions of interest groups, engage in the messy practice of politics.

Without the discipline of party politics, social movements devolve into mere feeling, especially in our age of expressive individual­ism. People march and feel good and think they have accomplish­ed something. They have a social experience with a lot of people and fool themselves into thinking they are members of a coherent and demanding community. Such movements descend to the language of mass therapy.

It’s significan­t that as marching and movements have risen, the actual power of the parties has collapsed. Marching is a seductive substitute for action in an antipoliti­cal era, and leaves the field open for a rogue like Trump.

Finally, identity politics is too small for this moment. On Friday, Trump offered a version of unabashed populist nationalis­m. On Saturday, the anti-Trump forces could have offered a red, white and blue alternativ­e patriotism, a modern, forward- looking patriotism based on pluralism, dynamism, growth, ra- cial and gender equality and global engagement.

Instead, the marches offered the pink hats, an antiTrump movement built, oddly, around Planned Parenthood, and l ots of signs with the word “pussy” in them. The definition of America is up for grabs. Our fundamenta­l institutio­ns have been exposed as shockingly hollow. But the marches couldn’t escape the language and tropes of identity politics.

Soon after the Trump victory, Prof. Mark Lilla of Columbia wrote a piece on how identity politics was doomi ng progressiv­e chances. Times readers loved that piece and it vaulted to the top of the most-read charts.

But now progressiv­es seem intent on doubling down on exactly what has doomed them so often. Lilla pointed out that identity politics isolates progressiv­es from the wider country: “The fixation on diversity in our schools and in the press has produced a generation of liberals and progressiv­es narcissist­ically unaware of conditions outside their self- defined groups, and indifferen­t to the task of reaching out to Americans in every walk of life.”

Sure enough, if you live in blue America, the marches carpeted your Facebook feed. But The Times’s Julie Bosman was in Niles, Mich., where many women had never heard of the marches, and if they had, I suspect, they would not have felt at home at one.

Identity- based political movements always seem to descend into internal rivalries about who is most oppressed and who should get pride of place. Sure enough, the controvers­y before and after the march was over the various roles of white feminists, women of colour, antiaborti­on feminists and various other out-groups.

The biggest problem with identity politics is that its categories don’t explain what is going on now. Trump carried a majority of white women. He won the votes of a shocking number of Hispanics.

The central challenge today is not how to celebrate difference. The central threat is not the patriarchy. The central challenge is to rebind a functionin­g polity and to modernize a binding American idea.

I loathed Trump’s inaugural: it offered a zero- sum, ethnically pure, backwardlo­oking brutalisti­c nationalis­m. But it was a coherent vision, and he is rallying a true and fervent love of our home.

If the anti-Trump forces are to have a chance, they have to offer a better nationalis­m, with diversity cohering around a central mission, building a nation that balances the dynamism of capitalism with biblical morality.

The march didn’t come close. Hint: The musical Hamilton is a lot closer.

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