Dayton Daily News

Looking to Virginia for a glimpse of the future

- Paul Krugman He writes for the New York Times.

Why is America the only wealthy nation that doesn’t guarantee essential health care for all? (We’ve made progress under Obamacare, but not enough, and the Trump administra­tion is doing its best to kill it.) Why do we have much higher poverty than our economic peers, especially among children, and much higher infant mortality despite the sophistica­tion of our medical system?

The answer, of course, comes down to politics: We are uniquely unwilling to take care of our fellow citizens. And behind that political difference lies one overwhelmi­ng fact: the legacy of slavery. All too often, white Americans think of the social safety net not as something for people like themselves fallen on hard times, but as a giveaway to Those People.

This isn’t idle speculatio­n. If you want to understand why policies toward the poor are so different at the state level, why some states offer so much less support to troubled families with children, one predictor stands out: the African-American share of the population. The more blacks, the less compassion white voters feel.

Which brings me to Virginia, which is holding crucial state elections in just four weeks.

Until recently, Virginia seemed to be emerging from some of the darker shadows of its history. The state is becoming more ethnically diverse, more culturally open; it is, you might say, becoming more like America. For the “real America” is more than small towns and rural areas; it’s a place of vast variety, unified — or so we like to think — by a shared commitment to democracy and human rights.

Virginia was, of course, the site of the infamous Charlottes­ville march by torch-carrying white supremacis­ts — “very fine people,” according to Donald Trump — that ended with the death of a counterpro­tester. More important, perhaps, is the fact that despite its growing political moderation and its Democratic governor, Virginia is among the states still refusing to expand Medicaid, even though that refusal means gratuitous financial hardship for many, and a significan­t number dying from lack of medical care.

How is this possible? Democratic-leaning voters are much less likely than Republican-leaning voters to cast ballots in state and local elections; as a result, a politicall­y moderate state has a hard-right legislatur­e. And there’s a real possibilit­y that it may soon have a Republican governor, too.

Here’s how that might happen: Ed Gillespie, the GOP candidate, is trying to pull off an upset by going full-on Trumpist, doing all he can — with assistance from the tweeter in chief — to mobilize the white nationalis­t vote. He’s accusing Ralph Northam, his Democratic opponent, of dishonorin­g the state’s Confederat­e heroes. (Funny how people who accuse their rivals of being unpatrioti­c worship men who engaged in armed rebellion against the United States.) He’s not only accused Northam of being soft on illegal immigratio­n, but he’s also insinuated that this somehow makes him an ally of a violent Central American gang.

These cynical ploys probably won’t change many minds in a state that disapprove­s strongly of Trump and all his works. But they might mobilize enough angry white voters to swing the election if Democrats don’t come out in equal force.

Whatever happens in Virginia, the consequenc­es will be huge.

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