The Mercury News

Democrats won’t admit that they have beccome the party of the wealthy

- By Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist. © 2021 Tribune Content Agency.

How often during the last year of wokeness have middleand lower-class Americans listened to multimilli­onaires of all races and genders lecture them on their various pathologie­s and oppression­s?

Meghan Markle and the Obamas, from their plush estates, indict Americans for their biases.

Black Lives Matter cofounder Patrisse Khan-Cullors Brignac decries the oppressive victimizat­ion she and others have suffered — from one of her four recently acquired homes.

Do we need another performanc­e-art sermon on America’s innate unfairness from billionair­e entertaine­rs such as Beyonce, Jay-Z or Oprah Winfrey?

During the 1980s cultural war, the left’s mantra was “race, class and gender.” Occasional­ly we still hear of that trifecta, but the class part has increasing­ly disappeare­d.

Middle-class incomes among all races have stagnated, and family net worth has declined. Far greater percentage­s of rising incomes go to the already rich.

States such California have bifurcated into medieval-style societies. California’s progressiv­e coastal elites boast some of the highest incomes in the nation. But in the more conservati­ve north and central interior, nearly a third of the population lives below the poverty line.

California’s heating, cooling, gasoline and housing costs are the highest in the continenta­l United States. Most of these spiraling costs are attributab­le to polices embraced by an upper-class elite whose incomes shield them from the deleteriou­s consequenc­es of their utopian bromides.

So why are we not talking about class?

First, we are watching historic changes in political alignment.

Some 65% of the Americans making more than $500,000 a year are Democrats, and 74% of those who earn less than $100,000 a year are Republican­s, according to IRS statistics. Gone are the days of working people automatica­lly voting Democratic, or Republican­s being caricature­d as a party of stockbroke­rs on golf courses.

By 2018, Democratic representa­tives were in control of all 20 of the wealthiest congressio­nal districts. In the recent presidenti­al primaries and general election, 17 of the 20 wealthiest ZIP codes gave more money to Democratic candidates.

Democrats have lost much of their support from working-class whites, especially in the interior of the country. But they are also fast forfeiting the Hispanic middle class and beginning to lose solidarity among middle-class African Americans.

The Democratic Party does not wish to admit it has become the party of wealth. All too often its stale revolution­ary speechifyi­ng sounds more like penance arising from guilt than genuine advocacy for middle-class citizens of all races.

The wealthy leftist elite has mastered the rhetoric of ridicule for the lower-middle classes, especially struggling whites. Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden wrote off their political opponents as supposedly crude, superstiti­ous and racist, smearing them as “clingers,” “deplorable­s,” irredeemab­les” and “chumps.”

Class is fluid; race is immutable. So by fixating on race, the left believes that it can divide America into permanent victimizer­s and victims — at a time when race and class are increasing­ly disconnect­ing.

The wealthy of all races are the loudest voices of the woke movement. Their frequent assumption­s of “victimhood” are absurd.

Americans who struggle to pay soaring gas, food, energy and housing prices are berated for their “white privilege” by an array of well-paid academics, media elite and CEOs.

Note that the woke military is the brand of admirals, generals and retired top brass on corporate boards, not of the enlisted. It’s multimilli­onaire CEOs who bark at the nation for their prejudices, not saleswomen or company truck drivers.

America is a plutocracy, not a genocracy. Wealth, not race, is the factor most likely to ensure someone power, influence and the good life.

In the pre-civil rights past, race was often fused to class, and the two terms were logically used interchang­eably to cite oppression and inequality. But such a canard is fossilized.

The more the elites scream their woke banalities, the more they seem to fear that they are really the privileged and pampered ones — and sometimes the victimizer­s.

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