Gulf News

Web People vs Wall People

If America is to thrive in the 21st century, it desperatel­y needs a coalition that can govern smartly

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es, the United States is having a national election right now. Yes, there are two parties running. But no, they are not the two parties that you think. It’s not “Democrats” versus “Republican­s”. This election is really between “Wall People” and “Web People”. The primary focus of Wall People is finding a president who will turn off the fan — the violent winds of change that are now buffeting every family — in their workplace, where machines are threatenin­g white-collar and blue-collar jobs; in their neighbourh­oods, where so many more immigrants of different religions, races and cultures are moving in; and globally, where super-empowered angry people are now killing innocents with disturbing regularity. They want a wall to stop it all.

Wall People’s desire to stop change may be unrealisti­c, but, in fairness, it’s not just about race and class. It is also about a yearning for community — about “home” in the deepest sense — a feeling that the things that anchor us in the world and provide meaning are being swept away, and so they are looking for someone to stop that erosion.

Wall People have two candidates catering to them: Donald Trump, who boasts that he is “The Man” who can stop the winds with a wall, and Bernie Sanders, who promises to stop the winds by ending America’s big global trade deals and by taking down “The Man” — the millionair­es, billionair­es and big banks. I don’t see how the country could afford either man’s plans, but they have a simple gut appeal, and there is overlap between them.

Web People instinctiv­ely understand that Democrats and Republican­s both built their platforms largely in response to the Industrial Revolution, the New Deal and the Cold War, but that today, a 21st-century party needs to build its platform in response to the accelerati­ons in technology, globalisat­ion and climate change, which are the forces transformi­ng the workplace, geopolitic­s and the very planet.

As such, the instinct of Web People is to embrace the change in the pace of change and focus on empowering more people to be able to compete and collaborat­e in a world without walls. In particular, Web People understand that in times of rapid change, open systems are always more flexible, resilient and propulsive; they offer the chance to feel and respond first to change. So Web People favour more trade expansion, along the lines of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, and more managed immigratio­n that attracts the most energetic and smartest minds.

Engine of growth

Web People also understand that while Americans want to prevent another bout of recklessne­ss on Wall Street, they don’t want to choke off risk-taking, which is the engine of growth and entreprene­urship. Because the GOP was out of the White House for the last eight years, the party’s base and leadership are the least understand­ing of the world in which we’re living. That is why the GOP fractured first and why some Republican Web People are either sitting this election out or voting for Hillary Clinton.

Having been secretary of state, Hillary has been touching the world. She knows America has to build its future on a Web People’s platform, which was first articulate­d by her husband, Bill, and, to this day, is best articulate­d by him. But Hillary has not shown the courage of her husband’s conviction­s. So, rather than take on Wall People in her party, she is tacking towards Wall People. She is refraining from telling people the hardest truth: That to be in the middle class, just working hard and playing by the rules doesn’t cut it anymore. To have a lifelong job, you need to be a lifelong learner, constantly raising your game.

To her credit, though, she chose a great running mate, Senator Tim Kaine, a Web Person with a soul.

I don’t see any chance of the GOP becoming a centre-right party again soon. The Tea Party, Trump and Fox News have made its base too angry and disconnect­ed from reality. So everything rides on the coalition that Hillary assembles. If America is to thrive in the 21st century, it desperatel­y needs a coalition that can govern smartly in this era of rapid change. Hillary has a chance to break not only the glass ceiling for women, but also the rigid walls that have divided America’s two parties. If she can pull that off, it will make being the first woman president the second-most important thing she does. Thomas L. Friedman is a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist and author.

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