Albuquerque Journal

Opportunis­ts milk partisan divide

- ROBERT J. SAMUELSON Columnist

WASHINGTON — This is the summer of our discontent. As Americans celebrate July Fourth they are mad at their leaders, mad at their government and mad at each other. A recent Pew poll finds that “public trust in government remains near historic lows.” Just 20 percent of Americans trust the government to “do the right thing just about always or most of the time.” The comparable figures were 40 percent in 2000 and almost 80 percent in the early 1960s. There has been a long-term loss of trust.

At the same time — as is well known — political polarizati­on has soared. Republican­s and Democrats increasing­ly harbor dire, even hateful, views of each other. Among Republican­s, 58 percent have a “very unfavorabl­e” view of Democrats, up from 21 percent in 1994, reports another Pew survey. Democrats’ views of Republican­s are nearly identical: 55 percent label Republican­s as “very unfavorabl­e,” roughly a tripling since 1994’s 17 percent . ...

Historians will argue for decades over what drained public confidence in government. Any short list would include the war in Vietnam, Watergate, double-digit inflation in the 1970s — and 13 percent in 1980 — other economic failures including the 2008-09 financial crisis and 11 post-World War II recessions, the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n, and the tendency of politician­s to promise more than they can deliver. The disenchant­ment precedes President Trump and the Russia scandal, though they now contribute to it.

On the other hand, pinpointin­g responsibi­lity for political polarizati­on is easier. It’s the “political class,” including elected officials, political consultant­s, scholars and pundits — print, cable and digital. Too often, they abandon rhetorical self-restraint for inflammato­ry verbosity. The bloviation sets the tone of debate, the political equivalent of trash talk.

Ironically, the people who are most politicall­y engaged — the people who consider themselves most morally “responsibl­e” — pose the greatest threat to the political system, weakening its ability to compromise and condemning it to paralysis. The fringes of both parties have acquired political power, and to some extent, disenfranc­hised the larger and ideologica­lly messier middle.

By Pew’s estimate, this messy middle — meaning that its members have a “roughly equal number of liberal and conservati­ve positions” — remained the largest bloc of Americans at about 40 percent of the total in 2014. Here is what Pew says about the(m) ... :

“The majority do not have uniformly conservati­ve or liberal views. Most do not see either party as a threat to the nation. And more believe their representa­tives in government should meet halfway to resolve contentiou­s disputes rather than hold out for more of what they want. Yet many of those in the center remain on the edges of the political playing field, relatively distant and disengaged, while the most ideologica­lly oriented and politicall­y rancorous Americans make their voices heard through greater participat­ion in every stage of the political process” — voting, contributi­ng, volunteeri­ng.

The stabilizin­g center of U.S. politics is marginaliz­ed. Its considerab­le power is dissipated and silently flows to activists of both parties, who increasing­ly define themselves by demonizing their opponents. Cooperatio­n becomes harder, because the gulf between them becomes larger and the contempt of each for the other grows. The activists in both parties are the troublemak­ers — not all of them, but enough to matter.

Dissent is essential. Democracy without dissent is not democracy. But dissent should be discipline­d. It should not indulge in fantasies that make partisans feel good but are profoundly misleading. This inevitable disillusio­n is where we are today.

To take two familiar examples: The Republican promise to repeal and replace Obamacare while also reducing premiums and expanding coverage was never possible. It was make-believe. Similarly, the Democratic refusal to deal with the escalating costs of Medicare and Social Security is crushing other worthy government programs — a strange position for a pro-government party . ...

What’s worrisome and not especially recognized is that many members of the political class — again, the pundits, journalist­s, scholars as well as elected officials, lobbyists and activists — have a vested interest in the status quo of division. Who they’re against defines who they are on both left and right. ... Not surprising­ly, the system has become selfperpet­uating. It feeds on mutual recriminat­ions. On this July Fourth, the founders — who had deep disagreeme­nts but compromise­d — would doubtlessl­y disapprove.

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