Houston Chronicle

‘New nationalis­m’ is pure identity politics

Jonah Goldberg says Donald Trump’s support is overwhelmi­ngly, almost exclusivel­y, white.

- Goldberg is an editor-at-large of National Review Online and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

To listen to both his defenders and critics, Donald Trump represents the U.S. version of a new nationalis­m popping up around the world. I’m not so sure.

In a fairly representa­tive analysis, Politico’s Michael Hirsh explained the “new nationalis­m” as “a bitter populist rejection of the status quo that global elites have imposed on the internatio­nal system since the Cold War ended, and which lower-income voters have decided — understand­ably — is unfair.”

James P. Pinkerton, writing for the stridently pro-Trump website Breitbart.com, sees nothing less than a “Worldwide Trumpian Majority” forming to oppose globalizat­ion in all its forms.

Interestin­gly, commentato­rs across the ideologica­l spectrum also agree that these trends are fueled by economic conditions — manifested here as outrage at Wall Street and global trade deals — and can be solved by some government response. Trump and Hillary Clinton offer similar solutions, such as more trade barriers and massive infrastruc­ture spending.

That interpreta­tion is fine as far as it goes, but I don’t think it goes very far. Ultimately, the term “nationalis­m” distorts more than it clarifies about what’s going on with Trump supporters in the United States.

First, suggestion­s that a Trumpian nationalis­m is rising among all low-income Americans could only be true if all low-income Americans were white. Reading Breitbart.com’s celebratio­ns of populist nationalis­m or the constant invocation­s of “We the People” from Trump supporters on social media might leave you with that impression. This is not to say that everyone who supports Trump is a “white nationalis­t” — which conjures various racist doctrines. Rather, it is to simply point out that Trump’s support is overwhelmi­ngly, almost exclusivel­y, white.

I think commentato­rs focus on the broad-stroke economic arguments because the real issues — the American cultural ones — are so fraught. Simply put, this so-called nationalis­m in the U.S. is really little more than a brand name for generic white identity politics. Liberals are uncomforta­ble discussing this; to do so would acknowledg­e how they failed the white working-class voters who were once the emotional heart of the Democratic Party but are now the core of Trump’s support.

The Trumpian nationalis­t right wants to stay focused on economics, because to be open about their cultural appeal would be to admit that they have surrendere­d to the logic of left-wing identity politics.

Imagine for a moment you are a member of the working white poor in the parts of America that J.D. Vance writes about in his bestsellin­g “Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis.” Imagine how ridiculous phrases like “white (male) privilege” sound to you. Imagine you are an evangelica­l Christian, repeatedly told by elites and authority figures that your faith is the source of un-American injustices — but that to suggest Islamic terrorism might have some relationsh­ip to Islam is rank bigotry.

Every year, liberal pundits metaphoric­ally rub their hands in glee at the latest demographi­c projection­s forecastin­g the dissolutio­n of the white majority in the United States. Is it so shocking that some white people might not greet that prospect with the same glee?

Daily, I receive emails and comments from people who describe themselves as nationalis­ts — but who are, in fact, making arguments for white culture as if whites were now an oppressed minority in need of an American government that zealously defends their interests. Right or wrong, many of them believe that Trump will protect white culture from the forces of multicultu­ralism, and Christiani­ty from spreading secularism.

Which brings me back to why I think “nationalis­m” is a poor word to describe what we’re witnessing in this election.

If nationalis­m is supposed to do anything, it’s supposed to unify the country. When I look at these socalled nationalis­ts, though, I don’t see a unifying force. I see the latest entrants into a decades-old game of subdividin­g the country into tribes seeking to yoke government to their narrow agendas.

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