The Arizona Republic

Pro-wrestling could teach Democrats how to win

The thing about the Republican Party that Democrats have a hard time understand­ing is to the GOP, it’s all theater

- Your Turn Kurt Bardella Guest columnist Kurt Bardella is a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs. He is an adviser to the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee. He is a former senior adviser for Republica

In the ’80s, one of the greatest rivalries in profession­al wrestling unfolded between “The Nature Boy” Ric Flair and “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes.

Flair, the champion, represente­d the “greed is good” mantra, flaunting his thousand dollar suits, alligator shoes and Rolex watches. Rhodes was the working man, the son of a plumber, overweight, blue collar, plain spoken. Every night, across the country, fans would show up in droves in the hopes that Dusty would get the better of the self-professed “Dirtiest Player in the Game.” In Dusty, fans had someone they could relate to and root for. In Flair, fans saw the way the elite and privileged could hold their hero down.

A decade later, the same themes would be revisited, this time pitting “Stone Cold” Steve Austin from Victoria, Texas, against World Wrestling Entertainm­ent boss Vince McMahon. Time and again, “Mr. McMahon” would use the levers of power to try to cheat the beer-drinking, foul-mouthed Austin out of his championsh­ip.

The rivalry propelled profession­al wrestling to new heights, producing record television ratings and pop-culture status. It was every worker’s fantasy come true. Watching the employee stick it to the boss.

WrestleMan­ia for politics

In many ways, the world of profession­al wrestling is the perfect mirror for what the world of politics has become. After all, the ultimate cult-of-personalit­y character, Donald J. Trump, once partook in a WrestleMan­ia angle dubbed the “Battle of the Billionair­es.”

And that’s the thing about the Republican Party that Democrats have a hard time understand­ing, to the GOP, it’s all theater. Just as WWE coined the phrase “sports entertainm­ent” to market their product, Republican­s see themselves in a similar light and act accordingl­y. Josh Hawley, Tom Cotton, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Paul Gosar, Matt Gaetz, Ted Cruz, Lauren Boebert, Sarah Palin etc. have effectivel­y formed a “heel” faction.

Their floor speeches, committee hearing statements and television appearance­s serve the same utility that a Paul Heyman promo on “Friday Night Smackdown“does: to further the storyline, fan the flames of conflict and get you to tune in next week.

I often get asked by my fellow Democrats if these Republican­s really believe what they’re saying. But that question misses the entire point. It doesn’t matter if they believe it, the audience does. And that’s what it’s always been about.

How to fight against Republican theater

What Democrats need to do is take a page out of “Stone Cold” Steve Austin and “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes’ playbook and fight back. Embrace the role of the working-man underdog going up against the corporate conglomera­te elites. Use the Republican Party’s own metaphor against them.

We don’t need a conversati­on about public policy; we need a conflict about public policy. Democrats need to wrap that public policy with a cloak of theater, charisma, showmanshi­p and conflict. Republican­s want to make this an “us versus them” contest. Fine. But let’s define who the “us” and “them” actually are.

The “us” Republican­s talk about are the privileged. The billionair­es and millionair­es. The 1% who own the 99%. The bosses who tell the rest of us to do more with less. The powerful who tell us they won’t increase our wages as they sit in their palatial vacation homes. The corrupt who take money from big oil, while the rest of us have to foot the bill for rising gas prices.

The cheaters who have put their foot on the neck of democracy because they are afraid of the working class, rising up and putting them in their place.

The “them” Democrats are talking about are the workers at the factory who put in a hard day’s work while the bosses take another vacation day off. The patients who are struggling to afford their health care.

The constructi­on workers building the roads and bridges that the Republican­s voted against funding. The teachers who are trying to give our children the head start we didn’t have, while the GOP tries to use the levers of big government to interfere in education decisions. The women who are fighting for equal pay.

This isn’t a fight that’s gonna be won with PowerPoint­s and statistics. It is a style of fighting that Democrats are not as well-versed at or even comfortabl­e in. But that’s the fight we have whether we like it or not. If we embrace it, if we adapt to it, it’s a fight I believe we can win. Ultimately, it comes down to which side of the American dream you’re really on.

 ?? JOE CAMPOREALE/USA TODAY SPORTS FILE ?? The “sports entertainm­ent” of WWE star “Stone Cold” Steve Austin, shown finishing off Kevin Owens, could be a lesson for the political parties.
JOE CAMPOREALE/USA TODAY SPORTS FILE The “sports entertainm­ent” of WWE star “Stone Cold” Steve Austin, shown finishing off Kevin Owens, could be a lesson for the political parties.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States