Texarkana Gazette

Shakeup was needed at liberal institutio­ns

- Francis Wilkinson

Liberals are at a loss. The U.S. president, who turned out to be more vile and duplicitou­s than they even had imagined, may or may not be indicted within a year’s time. Meantime, the U.S. Congress is run by conservati­ves who, spurred by the greed of their donors and the fears of their base, are growing ever more comfortabl­e telling blatant lies, preparing cover-ups and counter-narratives and overhaulin­g the nation’s tax code in the manner of a Vegas caper—hidden from view with the cash to be divvied among the plunderers.

So the federal government is hostile territory. Meanwhile, liberal havens, the places where a certain class of liberals goes for succor and strength, or even for a thoughtful diversion from a world teeming with Orcs, are in tumult. Everywhere, institutio­ns that liberals rely on are drowning beneath a progressiv­e wave of #metoo.

Voices long deemed soothing sound suddenly screechy, even menacing. So long, Garrison Keillor, folksy host of “A Prairie Home Companion.” Goodbye, Charlie Rose, earnest public television interviewe­r. Good riddance, Harvey Weinstein, Democratic donor and purveyor of the kind of movies that well-educated people liked to talk about. Sorry to see you go, Al Franken, senator who gets health-care policy but also gets the joke. Au revoir, Hamilton Fish, publisher of the New Republic. Adios, Don Hazen, longtime lefty news executive. Can we stop now? Well, not yet. Moving up the culture ladder in New York, the still-proud capital of liberalism, something appears deeply rotten at the top of the Metropolit­an Opera. Meanwhile, Peter Martins, the longtime head of the New York City Ballet, no longer seems quite so elegant and refined. (True, New York’s Lincoln Center is Koch Country, but it’s a country where Trump has always been alien and undocument­ed.) Oh, and the editor of the Paris Review—he’s in la poubelle, too.

WNYC, the public radio station in New York, added to liberal woes last week. The station announced the firing of erudite interviewe­r Leonard Lopate and one-of-a-kind musical programmer Jonathan Schwartz, both of whom had been on the airwaves in New York for decades.

The firings followed the earlier dispatch of “The Takeaway” host John Hockenberr­y and a separate harassment scandal involving a top executive at National Public Radio, that reliably comfortabl­e Volvo wagon of news.

For the most part, these beheadings are taking place after revelation­s by other liberal institutio­ns—The New York Times, the Washington Post— or belated actions from the boards of the institutio­ns themselves, pursuing internal investigat­ions. The system is slowly working, and evolving to higher standards—at least in one part of the American cultureple­x.

The timing, however, is brutal. With Trumpism on the march—even if it’s occasional­ly a Chaplinesq­ue march—liberal redoubts of news and culture have been tarnished by their own guardians.

No liberal (or anyone else, apparently) laments Weinstein’s departure from the red carpet, and Rose’s interviews won’t be hard to surpass. But the collective house-cleaning is bracing, and disorienti­ng, nonetheles­s.

Many of the comments on the WNYC web site responding to the firing of Lopate and Schwartz were angry not at the hosts but at the station that dismissed them.

Anonymous accusation­s. Draconian punishment­s. Who wants to live in that kind of Stalinist, Game-of-Thrones world? Much less fund it?

Lopate is an intellectu­al and writer who allowed listeners to eavesdrop on intimate, bookish conversati­on. Schwartz is a human encycloped­ia of the American songbook—retro, often singing a song of self, but also a personal witness to greatness with an irrepressi­ble passion for music. Neither man is easily replaced.

On the whole, liberal institutio­ns will be better for this season of purges. Some will likely go too far seeking to meet evolving, uncertain standards of a new era. And, yes, a backlash is hardly unlikely.

But American culture and U.S. politics are under growing duress. Conservati­ves are becoming less democratic, more fearful and more aggressive. Instead of purging their predators and liars, they are nominating them for high office. The White House is run by people who exhibit contempt for suckers who tell the truth and follow the law. A bitter, nation-defining fight—likely over special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion and its consequenc­es—is coming.

To preserve the institutio­ns they revere, and on which civil society depends, liberals have to shed some ungainly weight, muscle up and step into the ring. If the fight goes well, they can pick up their pledge-drive potholder after the republic is secure.

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