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The beginning of the end of angry white males

The half-century masculine scream is fading, writes

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YOU can argue about when the era of white male reaction in American politics began. But surely March 8, 1970, four days after National Guardsmen opened fire on students at Kent State University, deserves a hearing.

On that day, a student protest in Manhattan against the Ohio shootings was met by a counter-offensive: the “Hard Hat Riot”. Dozens of constructi­on workers organised, marched and clobbered the protesters with hard hats in what the New York Times called a “wild noontime mêlée”.

The constructi­on workers were sick of hippies, leftists, privileged college kids complainin­g about the war and the draft and the country. Some rioters branched off to Pace University, near City Hall, where they beat up more kids after having been pelted with objects hurled from the school’s roof.

Less than three weeks later, president Richard Nixon wel- comed a delegation of hard hats to the White House.

The riot was extreme. But the combustibl­e mix of resentment­s and prerogativ­es it channelled has resurfaced time and again for half a century.

In the spring of 1995, months after a midterm election in which “angry white males” were credited with powering Republican­s to a historic victory in Congress, president Bill Clinton said that it was a psychologi­cally difficult moment “for a lot of white males – the so-called angry white male”.

The angry white males who vexed Clinton in the 1990s were muted during the presidency of George W Bush. But for some, the psychologi­cal adjustment to empowered women and a more diverse citizenry never did arrive.

Under Bush’s Democratic successor, the angry white guys promptly reappeared, recast as the tea party, to wage a culture war under the guise of a tax protest.

The flowering of Donald Trump’s campaign arguably represents the political peak of the angry white male. In Trump, the aggravated and aggrieved have a presidenti­al candidate who speaks their language and validates their resentment­s.

They also have a candidate at risk of a decisive defeat – one with the potential to dislodge the angry white male from the centre of American politics.

Change is coming. A study by the Economic Policy Institute in the US predicts the American working class will be majority non-white by 2032 – a decade earlier than the population as a whole.

But with a disastrous, divisive showing in November, Trump could begin to usher the angry white male off centre stage.

Democracy Corps, a project of Democratic pollster Stanley Greenberg and consultant James Carville, both long-time students of white working-class voters, released a memo this week that is incautious about the 2016 election, stating: “America is about to experience a once-in-a-lifetime earthquake of an election.”

Hillary Clinton is emerging with the kind of lead you would expect in a country where over 60 percent of the electorate will be racial minorities, single women, Millennial­s and seculars and where the positive sentiment about the Democrats is 9 points higher than for the Republican­s.

If Greenberg and Carville prove to be correct, perhaps those white male voters can continue to dominate a few more midterm elections, when the electorate is older and whiter than during presidenti­al years.

But in the event of a Trump fiasco in November, Republican­s will be looking for answers to a demographi­c problem for which no answer is “white male”.

Even if the party freezes in place, incapable of making necessary changes, or fractures altogether, the result will be a diminished GOP, not a restoratio­n of white male power.

And if the party finally begins diversifyi­ng its coalition, white males will have to learn to share the big tent. Trump’s racially polarising campaign, and celebratio­n of crude machismo, will make that more difficult.

But no matter the course Republican politics takes, it’s hard to see how angry white males can remain the party’s abiding focus.

Growing constituen­cies will need care and feeding.

The half-century masculine scream that began with a hard-hat riot may begin to fade under the administra­tion of the first woman president. – The Washington Post/Bloomberg

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? The Occupy Wall Street campaign of 2011 began to change the national conversati­on in the US. Five years later, those minorities Occupy claimed the odds were stacked against make up 60% of the electorate, says the writer.
PICTURE: REUTERS The Occupy Wall Street campaign of 2011 began to change the national conversati­on in the US. Five years later, those minorities Occupy claimed the odds were stacked against make up 60% of the electorate, says the writer.

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