Chattanooga Times Free Press

MAYBE WE’RE JUST NOT INTO WOKE

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What happened in this election? We’ve had several very close elections in my lifetime. 1968 was one. The 2000 election, obviously. And 2004.

But this one was more fraught — 49/49 and some change for each candidate in most of the swing states. It was more fraught than ‘68, which was a terrible year of hope, violence and lost hope. What happened here? Why were the pollsters even more wrong than four years ago or 1980?

One obvious answer is that 50/50 is just who we are — since 1968. We are a closely and deeply divided country.

And the obvious lesson is that we must learn to live together, and live with our difference­s.

The second answer is the “shy” Trump voter. This is real. Most of us know it from our own observatio­n, lives and families.

There are so many people, including young people, who kept their intended vote to themselves, not because they felt ashamed or guilty but because they don’t want to fight, or be socially isolated or humiliated.

This is an old American tradition, and an honorable one: I keep my vote to myself. But there is more of this in the Trump age. “Given the abuse I know will rain down upon me, let’s talk about something else.”

But I want to suggest a third explanatio­n: The centrist voter’s reservatio­ns about, and revulsion at, the left.

For a lot of moderate voters, the far right and the far left are both terrifying.

Moreover, for some traditiona­l Democratic voters, the direction the Democratic Party is moving is alienating and scary.

And that’s a big part of what happened to the Biden landslide.

Maybe that essentiall­y centrist voter cannot stand Donald Trump personally. Or maybe that voter’s problem is the norm breaking — a president who openly undermines the electoral process itself. Yet that voter plunked for Trump anyway. Why?

I believe it is the Democratic Party’s increasing embrace of leftist values over traditiona­l liberal and Democratic values: the movement from empowering individual­s to collectivi­zing them as claimants or dependents.

There are a great many people who want to save and build on Obamacare, save and build on Social Security and want Americans in poverty to have a shot at higher education, but who nonetheles­s are deeply disturbed by defunding the police, the shutting down of free speech, especially on campus, and the attempted obliterati­on of large parts of history.

The Democrats have been increasing­ly embracing the woke and abandoning the liberalism of Truman and Roosevelt.

Instead of advocating integratio­n and opportunit­y, which are liberal ideas, they continuall­y expand entitlemen­t and racialize choices and outcomes in history, law and politics, which is woke.

Instead of a jobs or infrastruc­ture program, or both, the woke embrace free college and universiti­es with zero intellectu­al diversity — colleges in which a prof who reads “Huck Finn” aloud is “canceled.”

Leftism is the politics of subtractio­n, not addition, and litmus tests (abortion is the top one) rather than bridge building.

Joe Biden was nominated for and won the presidency precisely because he was not a lefty. He failed to get the big vote, a mandate and (so far) a Democratic Senate, because he didn’t necessaril­y seem strong enough to stand up to the anointed.

Centrist voters, including centrist Democrats, prefer Harry Truman to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Martin Luther King to Al Sharpton, Eleanor Roosevelt to Lady Gaga.

To them, Trump’s vulgarity and failure to play by the rules is bad, very bad. But so is the woke culture, in which politics is the ultimate realm of meaning and whose side you are on is the ultimate test of friendship, character and human value.

 ??  ?? Keith Burris
Keith Burris

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