The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Reflection­s on why we can’t get along

- Columnist

The Stanford alumni magazine may not widely be considered one of the leading journals of life in the United States, but turn the pages of its most recent edition and you will find an examinatio­n of perhaps the most important issue in American civic culture today.

The cover headline is “One Nation Divisible.” In a series of essays over a dozen pages, Stanford scholars seek to explain whether Americans are more or less polarized than before (mostly more), what that means (mostly not good), and why we find ourselves at this fraught moment (it’s complicate­d).

So as a public service, here are a few telling passages from these essays, along with a few thoughts from this typist:

People can take centrist positions on policy issues yet still evince a deep dislike for opponents with similar preference­s.

— Shanto Iyengar and Neil Malhotra

An important insight: Those mushy-middle-ground mediators aren’t the selfless saints we mushy-middle-ground commentato­rs have been saying they are.

The political class is the public face of politics. These highly sorted, politicall­y active people are those whom you see, hear and read about on television and the internet. But they are not representa­tive of the broader public; they are abnormal (as are most of you reading this article). — Morris P. Fiorina Fiorina is one of the smartest political scientists in the country,

mostly because he isn’t focused entirely on the political elites.

The old working class that had been at the core of the progressiv­e coalition from the 1930s onward was, in the meantime, losing jobs and status as a result of globalizat­ion and technologi­cal change. Simultaneo­usly, a new upper class, defined by higher education and urban residence, had emerged, many of whose members had very different attitudes from the old working and middle class toward religion, family and patriotism. This new elite encompasse­d the leadership of both political parties as well as a large part of the mainstream media, think tanks and other key parts of the Washington establishm­ent. — Francis Fukuyama

In three sentences, the man who was wrong about the end of the Cold War being the end of history is right about the Trump ascendancy and the earthquake the 45th president has created in the capital. And in this striking passage he sets out the internal dynamics of the presidenti­al election of 2020.

The Democrats have become a diverse collection of urban groups ranging from poor service workers to knowledge-economy profession­als. The Republican­s have become a coalition of exurban and rural groups ranging from manufactur­ing and natural resource extraction interests to evangelica­ls. Elections have come to feel like existentia­l battles between different sectors of the economy and different ways of life. — Jonathan Rodden This has been true before, to be sure, and this passage explains the rise of Ronald Reagan along with the Trump phenomenon.

But it is the last sentence — on “existentia­l battles between different sectors” — that posed the greatest threat to the country in 1932 (when Franklin Roosevelt was elected), in 1980 (when Reagan won the White House), in 2008 (when Barack Obama became president) and today (in the battle zone of the Trump presidency).

As voters become increasing­ly dissatisfi­ed, we can only hope that politician­s respond by recommitti­ng to bipartisan deliberati­on and negotiatio­n. We can hope that citizen dissatisfa­ction fosters political engagement through activities such as protest, mobilizati­on and pressure on public officials. Democratic institutio­ns are the best, and only, way to resolve crises of

democracy. — Didi Kuo So, here, finally, is a prescripti­on for change. This month’s Gallup Poll makes for sobering reading for the political class. Congressio­nal job approval is at 17 percent, down from 20 percent earlier in the year. Trump’s job approval is at 43 percent.

And, as Rodden wrote in his essay, “An urgent question for the United States, with its history of geographic sectionali­sm and civil war, is whether the two-party system can continue to function if the parties are little more than labels organizing a bitter geographic conflict.”

That question has been posed often in American history. This time it truly is urgent. The midterm congressio­nal elections to be held in less than six months may be, in the argot of these professors, a midterm examinatio­n for the political system. With any luck, it will not be the final exam.

 ??  ?? David Shribman
David Shribman

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