Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Biden needs to fight his own culture war

- By Pankaj Mishra Pankaj Mishra is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.

Comparison­s of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus bill to the New Deal are flourishin­g. They obscure the fact that Mr. Biden’s achievemen­t — passing reform legislatio­n against an intransige­nt opposition — is very fragile. Republican­s are already waging an extensive culture war on issues cherished by progressiv­e Democrats, starting with freer immigratio­n. And though Mr. Biden and his colleagues have taken to the road to sell the administra­tion’s plan, victory in what he calls the “battle for the soul of America” will require much more than vigorous messaging by politician­s. What’s really needed is a massive cultural and intellectu­al shift in perspectiv­e, one that entrenches the new Democratic narrative of collective welfare in American hearts and minds. It is worth rememberin­g that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who came to power in 1933 with a small and unflatteri­ng reputation, reshaped, during his 12 years in power, not just the politics and economy of the U.S. but its culture. FDR succeeded because he saw the birth of a spacious moral imaginatio­n as vital to his task — and recognized that his own rhetorical gifts, though impressive, were not strong enough to achieve it. He added to that voice by channeling millions of dollars through the Works Progress Administra­tion (WPA) to writers, artists, musicians and actors. Among the beneficiar­ies were Dorothea Lange and Walker Evans, who took moving pictures of povertystr­icken Americans; Zora Neale Hurston, who traveled to Florida to record the experience­s of workers there; and Orson Welles, whose production of “Macbeth” with an African-American cast toured the country. While creating some of the most powerful art of the 20th century, these artists made concern for the poorest and weakest members of society seem like common sense. Their efforts evoked an American citizenry united by empathy as much as distress. It was not until the 1980s that the tremendous spell of the New Deal was broken by another concerted ideologica­l and cultural effort, this time by a Republican party under Ronald Reagan committed to redistribu­tingupward­s. Reagan’s movie-actor persona and gripping anecdotes about “welfare queens” greatly helped in this counter-revolution against the New Deal and the civil rights movement. But he was also vigorously supported, as the critic Alfred Kazin pointed out as early as 1983, by an intellectu­al “avant-garde” with “personal and political ties with the Reagan administra­tion.” This “astonishin­gly wide” right-wing coalition included a range of individual­s and institutio­ns: magazines (Commentary, The National Review), think tanks (the Hoover Institutio­n, the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute) and an assortment of Moral Majority evangelist­s and libertaria­ns opposed to gun control. So complete was Reagan’s triumph as a propagandi­st for the “magic” of the marketplac­e and the evil of government that successive Democratic leaders, from Bill Clinton to Barack Obama, felt compelled to embrace his verities about the free market and small government. In 1996, Mr. Clinton campaigned on a promise to “end welfare as we know it.” The New Republic, once the American flagbearer of progressiv­e liberalism, supported him with a cover depicting the welfare queen of Reagan’s dog whistle: a black woman smoking while holding a baby. It is this landscape fundamenta­lly altered — ravaged, some might say — by nearly four decades of unchalleng­ed right-wing hegemony that Mr. Biden seeks to reshape with an FDR-like vision of government as the protector of ordinary citizens. The pandemic may have given Mr. Biden a unique opportunit­y to reinstate this perspectiv­e in the American mainstream. However, he faces much more adverse circumstan­cesand insidious political enemies than those confronted by FDR. A slower than expected economic recovery might alienate present Republican supporters of Mr. Biden’s plan. Right-wing cultural warriors will no doubt ramp up allegation­s that the Democrats favor minorities and foreigners over white Americans. Moreover, Mr. Biden lacks the panache with which FDR welcomed the enmity of his enemies and a grinning Reagan quipped, “There you go again.” He can improve his chances of success by mobilizing his own army for a culture war whose terms are defined by progressiv­es rather than right-wingers. An important step in this direction is the $470 million earmarked for cultural organizati­ons in his relief bill. Certainly, a culture industry that accounts for 4.5% of U.S. gross domestic product and has been devastated by the pandemic is in urgent need of government funding (of the kind that has long been commonplac­e in Canada and Western Europe). As in the 1930s, job creation or salvaging imperiled art forms such as theater and dance cannot be the sole aim of such subvention­s. Traumatize­d by Trumpism, the monstrous culminatio­n of everything that went wrong in the 1980s, and then the pandemic, Americans need, more than ever before, unifying narratives of compassion and solidarity. And the examples of his hegemonic predecesso­rs — Reagan as well as FDR — confirm that Mr. Biden can win the battle for the soul of America only by waging a long culture war on his own terms.

 ?? Patrick Semansky/Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden speaks as Vice President Kamala Harris listens during a COVID-19 briefing at the headquarte­rs for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on March 19 in Atlanta.
Patrick Semansky/Associated Press President Joe Biden speaks as Vice President Kamala Harris listens during a COVID-19 briefing at the headquarte­rs for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on March 19 in Atlanta.

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