The Guardian (USA)

Don't swerve the culture war – that's the lesson from Joe Biden to UK progressiv­es

- Owen Jones

“Culture war” used to be a term inextricab­ly linked with the maelstrom of US politics. Popularise­d by American sociologis­t James Davison Hunter in his 1991 book Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America, it described how socially progressiv­e and conservati­ve coalitions were locked in a seemingly eternal conflict. It could make for surprising alliances, he noted, citing Protestant,

Catholic and Jewish clergy joining forces in anti-abortion movements during the late 1980s.

The battlegrou­nds of the US culture war are familiar ones, long regarded with bafflement by patronisin­g and complacent European eyes: God, guns, abortion, gay rights and, of course, race. In a moment that threatened to temporaril­y derail his 2008 presidenti­al bid, Barack Obama said of working-class rust-belt Americans: “They get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them.” As the Tea Party movement’s backlash against his Medicare proposals underlined, culture wars became a highly effective means to mobilise low-income white Americans to vote against their economic interests.

Brexit proved the detonator for the British culture war, which became not so much about our relationsh­ip with a trading bloc but about identity: we were no longer Labour or Tory, or working class or middle class, but remainers and leavers. As polling by Lord Ashcroft after the referendum showed, pro- and anti-EU were equally divided about whether capitalism was a force for good or ill. But while leave voters overwhelmi­ngly believed multicultu­ralism, social liberalism, feminism and the green movement were forces for ill, remain supporters believed the opposite.

This set the basis for a clash of values that proved electorall­y fatal for Jeremy Corbyn: after all, the basis of any authentic leftwing project is class politics – “for the many, not the few”, as his Labour party put it. Culture wars are the toxic reaction to class politics.

Yet culture wars continue not simply to shape politics on both sides of the Atlantic, but to define it. According to the Financial Times, just as Joe Biden swept the rust-belt states, Keir Starmer believes he can win back Labour’s lost red wall by copying the US

president’s “emphasis on ‘family, community and security’ … and avoiding endless arguments about ‘culture war’ issues such as trans rights and the destructio­n of historic statues”.

Yet this is a curious lesson to draw from the US. It is true that Biden’s past record can hardly be described as a beacon of progressiv­e social norms: he backed crime legislatio­n that led to the mass incarcerat­ion of Black people; his chosen vice president, Kamala Harris, was among those who assailed him for once working with segregatio­nists, and said she believed the women who had accused him of inappropri­ate sexual behaviour. But progressiv­e movements have succeeded in shifting the centre of gravity within the Democrats to an extent no nominee can ignore.

Take trans rights, which has become one of today’s totemic “culture war” issues. Harris has her pronouns in her Twitter bio; Biden campaigned promising trans people, “We see you, we support you, and we will continue to do everything we can to ensure you are affirmed and accepted just as you are.” He became the first presidente­lect to thank trans people in his victory speech, issued an order expanding LGBTQ protection­s and repealed the ban on trans military personnel.

There were, of course, howls of outrage: one Republican senator questioned “Another ‘unifying’ move by the new Administra­tion?” But according to the polling, it was indeed unifying: more than seven in 10 Americans support trans people serving in the military. Here is an instructiv­e example. Rightwinge­rs often push back at moves to secure rights for minorities on the grounds that they are “divisive”: yet, though noisy and obsessed, they are also unrepresen­tative.

As it does in the US, polling in Britain consistent­ly shows women and younger people are most supportive of trans rights, with older men least supportive. There is a complicati­on here: while support for trans rights is a given in US feminist, “centrist” and progressiv­e circles, transphobi­a is a permissibl­e prejudice across the political spectrum in Britain. This week the SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon, condemned transphobi­a in her party’s ranks after it had led to an exodus of younger members. But while anti-trans activists are vocal, for the majority of people it’s not an issue on their radar. As the Democrats underlined, what is needed is leadership – or a vacuum will be filled by increasing­ly emboldened bigotry.

But there are other lessons too. Rather than treating claims for racial justice as risking the support of white floating voters, the Democrats embraced Black Lives Matter. After the killing of George Floyd this spurred a surge in Black voter registrati­on, and the relationsh­ip between grassroots Black organisers and the Democrats played a pivotal role in flipping several states in the presidenti­al race.

As well as working with movements representi­ng the struggles of minorities – rather than treating them as unhelpful – a progressiv­e political project needs policies that unify working-class people, regardless of background. Take the New Labour period: policies such as tax credits and investment in public services made a considerab­le difference to millions of lives; yet in its final years, wages began to stagnate or decline for the bottom half, and an escalating housing crisis hit living standards.

The resulting grievances among struggling people can be exploited by savvy rightwing populists claiming progressiv­e politician­s only care about minorities rather than “people like me”.

The answer, then, isn’t to swerve the culture war, or stick fingers in our ears and pretend it isn’t there. It is to offer political leadership, work closely with minorities to expand the electorate, and stand on a policy platform that uplifts the living standards of the majority, irrespecti­ve of their identity. To throw minorities under a bus is not only immoral: it’s a recipe for electoral defeat.

Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist

 ?? Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images ?? Kamala Harris and Joe Biden have succeeded in shifting the Democratic party’s centre of gravity.
Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images Kamala Harris and Joe Biden have succeeded in shifting the Democratic party’s centre of gravity.

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