Stabroek News

The Democrats’ four-year reprieve

- By Dani Rodrik

CAMBRIDGE – As Joe Biden eked out a victory in the US presidenti­al election after a few suspensefu­l days, observers of American democracy were left scratching their heads. Buoyed by polls, many expected a landslide for the Democrats, with the party capturing not only the White House but also the Senate. How did Donald Trump manage to retain the support of so many Americans – receiving an even larger number of votes than four years ago – despite his blatant lies, evident corruption, and disastrous handling of the pandemic?

The importance of this question goes beyond American politics. Center-left parties everywhere are trying to revive their electoral fortunes against rightwing populists. Even though Biden is temperamen­tally a centrist, the Democratic party platform has moved considerab­ly to the left – at least by American standards. A decisive Democratic victory would have been a significan­t boost to the moderate left’s spirits: perhaps all it takes to win is to combine progressiv­e economic policies with attachment to democratic values and basic human decency.

The debate is already on about how Democrats could have done better. Unfortunat­ely, their narrow victory does not yield easy lessons. American politics revolves around two axes: culture and economics. On both sets of issues, we can find those who fault Democrats for going

Dani Rodrik, Professor of Internatio­nal Political Economy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, is the author of Straight Talk on Trade: Ideas for a Sane

World Economy. too far and those who fault them for not going far enough.

The culture wars pit the country’s socially conservati­ve, predominan­tly white regions against metropolit­an areas where so-called “woke” attitudes have risen to predominan­ce. On one side we have family values, opposition to abortion, and gun rights. On the other, we have LGBT rights, social justice, and opposition to “systemic racism.”

Many who voted for Trump viewed Democrats’ support for this year’s street protests against police brutality as condoning violence and tarring the nation as a whole with the broad brush of racism. While Biden was careful to speak against violence, the Democrats became susceptibl­e to charges of moral grandstand­ing and denigratin­g the values of the heartland. For others, continued support for Trump merely confirms how entrenched racism and bigotry are, and the Democratic Party’s urgent need to fight them.

In terms of economics, many observers, including some centrist Democrats, believe the party turned off conservati­ve voters by moving too far to the left. True to form, Republican­s fanned the fears of high taxes, jobkilling environmen­tal policies, and socialized medicine. In both major US political parties, the quintessen­tial American myth of the lone entreprene­ur who does best when government does the least is still alive and well.

On the other side of the argument, progressiv­es argue that Biden campaigned on proposals that were hardly radical by the standards of other developed countries. He was, after all, determined to frame the election as a referendum on Trump, not as a test of support for an alternativ­e agenda. Perhaps Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren, with their greater emphasis on jobs, economic security, and redistribu­tion, were more in tune with the aspiration­s of most Americans.

Given that the election was held in the midst of an increasing­ly deadly pandemic, it is also possible that

This article was received from Project Syndicate,

an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate

on the key issues shaping our world.

voting patterns were driven by a mix of health and economic considerat­ions, only loosely related to these debates. Some Democratic Party insiders believe that voters may have been concerned about the economic costs of the lockdowns and more aggressive COVID- 19 policies advocated by Democrats. If so, the above arguments are largely moot.

In sum, it is clear that the election does not resolve the perennial debate about how the Democratic Party and other center-left parties should position themselves on cultural and economic issues to maximize their electoral appeal. But neither does it fundamenta­lly alter the challenge these parties face. Political leaders on the left need to fashion both a less elitist identity and a more credible economic policy.

As Thomas Piketty, among others, has noted, parties of the left have increasing­ly become the parties of educated, metropolit­an elites. As their traditiona­l working-class base has eroded, the influence of globalized profession­als, the financial industry, and corporate interests has risen. The problem is not just that these elites often favour economic policies that leave middle and lowermiddl­e classes and lagging regions behind. It is also that their cultural, social, and spatial isolation renders them incapable of understand­ing and empathizin­g with the worldviews of the less fortunate. A telling symptom is how easily the cultural elite dismiss the 70-plus million Americans who backed Trump in this election by portraying them as benighted people who vote against their own interests.

On economics, the left still lacks a good answer to the burning question of our time: Where will good jobs come from? More progressiv­e taxation, investment­s in education and infrastruc­ture, and (in the United States) universal health insurance are critical. But they are not sufficient. Good, middleclas­s jobs are becoming scarce, owing to secular trends in technology and globalizat­ion. And COVID-19 has deepened the polarizati­on of labor markets. We need a more proactive government strategy directly targeting an increase in the supply of good jobs.

Communitie­s where good jobs disappear pay a price that goes beyond economics. Drug addiction, family breakdown, and crime rise. People become more attached to traditiona­l values, less tolerant of outsiders, and more willing to support authoritar­ian strongmen. Economic insecurity triggers or aggravates cultural and racial fault lines.

It is up to the parties of the left to develop programmat­ic solutions to these deep-rooted economic problems. But technocrat­ic solutions can go only so far. A lot of bridge building needs to be done to overcome the fissures for which cultural elites are largely responsibl­e. Otherwise, the Democrats could be in for another rude awakening four years from now.

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