The Boyertown Area Times

Pivotal election: Is Donald Trump the next Goldwater?

- Arthur Garrison Dr. Arthur Garrison is an assistant professor of criminal justice at Kutztown University. This piece is the work of Dr. Garrison and does not reflect the opinions of Kutztown University or its faculty, staff, students or alumni.

In America, elections have consequenc­es because they are seldom without significan­t political debate. This is all the more true at the presidenti­al level. While all such elections have been significan­t, some have been pivotal.

The election of 1800 decimated the Federalist Party but establishe­d that in America the party that loses has no appeal to the army and the party that wins allows the departing party to leave with its head attached.

The election of 1828 ushered in the Age of Jackson and Jacksonian democracy. The politics of the average man, the beginning populist politics, and modern party politics was birthed. The elections of 1860 and 1864 set the stage for a war to end the scourge of slavery and set America on a road of Jim Crow and then civil rights which led to the election of a black man to be president.

The election 1932 brought FDR and the rise of the federal government being responsibl­e for the economic welfare of the nation. His successes led to his reelection during World War II and America emerging as the leading superpower on the planet.

Starting with his book in 1960 and during the election of 1964, Barry Goldwater redefined the ideologica­l principles of Republican Party. This ideologica­l definition was made permanent with Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980.

Donald Trump is a reflection of the disdain of Republican voters. He has created a constituen­cy of voters that cuts across various ideologica­l lines. He has merged non-ideologica­l, social conservati­ve, Libertaria­n, economic nationalis­ts and protection­ists, free market, non-interventi­onalists, limited government, foreign policy interventi­onalists and antigovern­ment voters together under abroad concept that America is no longer great but it can be again under his business leadership style in which the goal will be getting things done not government by political orthodoxy at all costs.

Like Goldwater in 1964, Trump has changed the meaning of Republican Party. Trump has proposed full funding of school vouchers and went to a black church to ask for blacks to give the party a second look since they have achieved nothing after four decades of faithful support of the Democratic Party. He has said that he would economical­ly punish corporatio­ns that move manufactur­ing jobs to Mexico and then sell those goods in America. He will build a wall to end Mexican illegal immigratio­n but also spend billions on American infrastruc­ture. He will appoint Supreme Court justices in mold of Antonin Scalia but he does not oppose gay marriage. He opposes internatio­nal trade agreements like NAFTA and TPP. He wants a powerful military but has said support for NATO is not an absolute and opposes American nation-building around the world.

The rise of the candidacy of Donald Trump is a combinatio­n of Andrew Jackson in 1828, Barry Goldwater in 1964 and George Wallace in 1968. Like Jackson, he exhibits an authoritar­ian persona in which things will get done his way because he says so. Like Goldwater, he proposes a completely different ideologica­l definition for the Republican Party. Like Wallace, he is a populist who has a disdain for the political media and the establishm­ent elites of both parties that he says do not care about the average American.

The significan­ce of the 2016 election is two-fold, one completed and one to be decided. What has been completed is that Trump has broken the traditiona­l definition­s of the Republican Party and has offered a new model. Trump has found a way to merge both liberal and conservati­ve policies into one narrative. If accepted, Trump will take his place alongside Jackson, Lincoln, FDR and Goldwater — all of whom changed the trajectory of American party definition­al politics and the political ramificati­ons will put 2016 in line with the handful of pivotal elections of the past.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States