Manawatu Standard

Progressiv­es need more than size

- Leonard Pitts Jr Columnist for The Miami Herald

Here’s what gets me about progressiv­es. They never seem to realise that they are the majority. Yet on issue after issue, the polling consistent­ly shows that they are.

Abortion? Sixty-four per cent of Americans support Roe v Wade.

Guns? Sixty-seven per cent want stricter laws.

Taxes? Sixty-one per cent say the rich need to pay more.

Healthcare? Fifty-six per cent want the government to ensure coverage to all Americans.

But it’s not just opinion polls. It’s also presidenti­al polls. Republican­s have won the popular vote only once since 1992.

So liberals could have the world they say they want – with sensible gun laws, immigratio­n reform, universal healthcare, reproducti­ve rights, healing of the planet – if they only had the wit, the will and the courage of their conviction­s.

Instead, we have a world of weekly mass shootings, children in cages, the Affordable Care Act barely escaping repeal, Roe v Wade endangered and a dire new United Nations report forecastin­g planetary catastroph­e. Also: Brett Kavanaugh was just confirmed to the Supreme Court.

He is a man credibly accused of attempted rape and blackout drunkennes­s, a man who, under pressure, demonstrat­es the temperamen­tal restraint of a sugar-addled toddler two hours past nap time. Yet he sits now on the highest court in the land.

That didn’t just happen. Rather, it was the capstone of a long-term scheme to reshape the judiciary as a Right-wing rubber stamp. Maybe you remember how Republican­s stole a seat on the high court by refusing to give a hearing to President Obama’s nominee.

Now, with the mostly party-line vote that shoved Kavanaugh through, the court suddenly seems less a disinteres­ted referee of democracy than a partisan tool, its legitimacy sacrificed on an altar of political expedience.

But what’s going on here is bigger, even, than the court. Consider the Census Bureau projection that within about 25 years the United States will no longer be a majority white nation, but rather, a nation in which no racial group is numericall­y superior. Consider the visceral terror of many in the white majority as ‘‘others’’ – blacks, Muslims, LGBTQ, Hispanics – rise and demand voices.

Consider the gutting of the Voting Rights Act, the correspond­ing rise of voter suppressio­n, the use of gerrymande­ring to neuter black ballots, mass incarcerat­ion and rising hostility toward immigrants from the south.

Consider all those factors and the true shape of things becomes clear. Like Afrikaners in apartheid South Africa, conservati­ves seek to enshrine minority rule, to ensure that, even as they decline as a percentage of the population, the forces of white patriarchy, of racial, religious and cultural homogeneit­y maintain their strangleho­ld on power.

And with apologies to Malcolm X, they are willing to do so by any means necessary. The question is: What are the rest of us willing to do in response?

Are we willing to play the long game as conservati­ves have?

Are we willing to play with the ruthlessne­ss and calculatio­n they’ve shown? Are we willing to organise, to meet at the intersecti­on of our manifold causes, concerns and lives?

November 6 will give us the beginnings of an answer. Until then, one can only hope. Progressiv­es are the larger of the two main ideologies in American politics.

Yet they were forced to just watch in impotence as conservati­ves reshaped the top court by an act of sheer political thuggery.

The lesson should be clear. It’s great to have size on your side.

But it’s how you use it that counts.

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