The Korea Times

US political turmoil

- By Arthur I. Cyr Arthur I. Cyr (acyr@carthage.edu) is author of “After the Cold War” (NYU Press and Palgrave/ Macmillan).

“We have met the enemy and he is us.” The ironic statement is from the durable comic strip “Pogo” by cartoonist Walt Kelly, syndicated in newspapers from the late 1940s into the 1970s.

The observatio­n sums up the essence of our democracy, by definition. Our politics have always been fractious. However, developmen­ts have become especially tumultuous about every 50 years.

“Pogo” paraphrase­d the famous declaratio­n by Admiral William Hazard Perry — “We have met the enemy and they are ours” — after the United States Navy won a great strategic victory over the British in the Battle of Lake Erie in 1813.

Sharp political and social commentary characteri­zed “Pogo,” in a manner emulated in the far less subtle “Doonesbury” by Garry Trudeau. Kelly first used a version of the “enemy” statement to refer to the anti-communist fears and hysteria of the 1950s, personifie­d by Senator Joseph R. McCarthy (R-WI), and later to highlight growing public awareness and concern about environmen­tal pollution.

The most challengin­g such turmoil was in the presidenti­al election campaign of 1860, which led to the Civil War. Four parties competed. The new Republican Party fully replaced the Whigs, and Democrats split into northern and southern parties. The Constituti­onal Union Party was led by Whigs who hoped to preserve the Union.

The third strategic shift began with the 1912 presidenti­al election. Former President Theodore Roosevelt, dissatisfi­ed with successor William Howard Taft, launched the breakaway Bull Moose Party. Roosevelt did not retake the White House but did split the Republican vote, handing the election to Democrat Woodrow Wilson. The 1916 reelection of Wilson confirmed trends of change.

Roosevelt led the Republican Party in a profoundly progressiv­e direction, confirming the antitrust laws, initiating protection of workers - especially children and women, protecting the wilderness, and saving the buffalo.

In the 1930s, a reformist Democratic Party majority emerged, led by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The 1912 election did not guarantee this, but did signal significan­t new currents of economic and social as well as political change.

The mid-1960s represent another period of great change for the political parties. Domestic unrest increased, significan­tly spurred by civil rights and anti-Vietnam War protests.

This culminated in the extraordin­ary election of 1968. President Lyndon B. Johnson unexpected­ly withdrew from contention. The assassinat­ions of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Senator Robert F. Kennedy added tragic dimensions to unfolding developmen­ts.

Democratic presidenti­al nominee Vice President Hubert Humphrey at first badly trailed Republican Richard Nixon, and third-party segregatio­nist candidate George Wallace gained. Humphrey recovered and nearly caught up with Nixon. Wallace also came close to denying either an Electoral College majority.

Satire is important, especially in times of turmoil.

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