Chattanooga Times Free Press

DISSOCIATI­VE PERSONALIT­Y DISORDER

- David M. Shribman Commentary

Not checkers. Not Chinese checkers. Chinese checkers in three dimensions.

In zero gravity.

That is as good a summary as any of the Byzantine American politics of 2018, with midterm congressio­nal elections looming, with major issues freighted with important cultural overtones unresolved, with a president both on the attack and under attack, with a nuclear crisis in East Asia, with vital trade pacts surrounded by uncertaint­y and with multiple investigat­ions underway.

Ordinarily, midterm congressio­nal elections — and indeed, all the politics peripheral to them — come down to basic core questions: Is the economy sound? Is the nation safe? Is the president handling his duties reasonably well? Does cultural rebellion or social unrest cloak the landscape?

Not this time, not with this president, not with this Congress, not with this foreign and domestic landscape.

Here’s the conundrum at a glance: An important Gallup study released last autumn found that “Americans’ views of government remain negative.” In an ordinary time that would mean, among other things, that the public is impatient with the head of the government, the president, and to

some extent that is true. But wait. This president, Donald J. Trump, may head the government, but he also may be its biggest critic. His view of the government remains negative.

That study also showed that barely one American in four says he or she is satisfied with the way the country is being governed, which is a slightly different critique. That goes directly to the president and the Congress, whose members in large measure don’t like the way the government is being operated, either.

Find this confusing? That’s because this is an immensely confusing passage in our country’s history — and that condition explains the confusion of last week’s politics, conducted amid talk of “——hole” countries, government shutdowns and immigratio­n crackdowns.

› First, the Republican­s. The president is nominally one, though from time to time he excoriates his own allies on Capitol Hill. Those congressio­nal Republican­s give some, but often not enough, support to their own president to pursue his campaign priorities, which included repealing Obamacare (not accomplish­ed), lowering taxes (accomplish­ed without a single Democratic vote), and tightening immigratio­n (not resolved). But there are several wings to the modern Republican Party that it cannot quite fly straight.

There are Republican­s who think of themselves as Edmund Burke conservati­ves (worshipful of tradition, critical of fashion, skeptical of excess). There are Republican­s who think of themselves as Ronald Reagan conservati­ves (optimistic in outlook, dedicated to a small government). There are Newt Gingrich conservati­ves (focused on futurism, favoring small business over big). There are Jack Kemp conservati­ves (congenial to minorities, convinced that growth is the key to freedom). There are the new Freedom Caucus conservati­ves (contemptuo­us of traditiona­l GOP leadership, especially those with a taste for compromise). And there are conservati­ves (many of them intellectu­al-oriented, such as William Kristol and David Brooks) who believe Trump is no conservati­ve at all.

› Now, the Democrats. They’re in no better shape, united only by their opposition to Trump. That was enough to oppose the tax bill, but not enough to have any influence upon it. And the party, at the top, is fractured.

An explanatio­n: There are several Democrats — Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, Cory Booker of New Jersey, maybe Kamala Harris of California, perhaps even Bernie Sanders of Vermont (79 by Election Day 2020) and Joe Biden of Delaware (78 by Inaugurati­on Day) — aggressive­ly positionin­g themselves for presidenti­al runs. Their focus is on 2020, not the legislativ­e details of 2018, except to the extent that the fights of this year will position them for the presidenti­al fundraisin­g blitz of next year. They don’t call money the first primary for nothing.

› Then there are all the permutatio­ns: Democratic senators running in states carried by Trump. Republican­s worried about challenges from the right (Steve Bannon may have been banished, but his power is not extinguish­ed.) Republican­s wary of Trump’s personalit­y and character but generally supportive of his priorities.

› And let us not ignore the ambient resentment, not a new phenomenon but a potent one still. The best explanatio­n of this condition is two-thirds of a century old, from the pages of “Witness,” the 1952 memoir and cri de coeur of Whittaker Chambers. In its pages, he wrote of what he called “the jagged fissure” that separated “the plain men and women of the nation and those who affected to act, think and speak for them.”

The result: Republican­s aren’t talking to each other, nor to Democrats. Democrats don’t trust Republican­s, and some of them are angling for personal advantage, perhaps to the detriment of the party’s long-term interests. Large numbers of Americans don’t feel they are being listened to by the small number who do all the talking.

Is there any hope? There might be, if you consider how a trio of distinguis­hed European historians evaluates the unintended consequenc­es of the Reformatio­n: “a religious movement that contribute­d to Europe’s seculariza­tion.”

This period of political hypertensi­on, political alienation and political polarizati­on just might contribute to some kind of new equilibriu­m, where, to apply the Reformatio­n precedent, the super-partisansh­ip of the current era may lead to bipartisan­ship. Members of the political elite — even the populists among the elite — cannot afford a further deteriorat­ion of our civic life, and to save their own reputation­s they may move to save the political system they comprise. In saving themselves, they may save the rest of us. Otherwise we may be consigned to play Chinese checkers in three dimensions in zero gravity for a long time, with no winner.

David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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SUNDAY, JANUARY 28, 2018
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