The Morning Call (Sunday)

Why aren’t Dems trouncing these guys?

- David Brooks Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

My big takeaway from this election season would be this: We’re about where we were. We entered this election season with a nearly evenly divided House and Senate in which the Democrats had a slight advantage. We’ll probably leave it with a nearly evenly divided House and Senate in which the Republican­s have a slight advantage. But we’re about where we were.

Nothing the parties or candidates have done has really changed this underlying balance. The Republican­s nominated a pathetical­ly incompeten­t Senate candidate, Herschel Walker, in Georgia, but polls show that race is basically tied. The Democrats nominated a guy in Pennsylvan­ia, John Fetterman, who suffered a stroke, but polls show that Senate race is basically tied.

After all the campaignin­g and the money and the shouting, the electoral balance is still on a razor’s edge.

What accounts for this? It’s the underlying structure of society. Americans are sorting themselves out by education into two roughly equal camps. As people without a college degree have flocked to the GOP, people with one have flocked to the Democrats.

“Education polarizati­on is not merely an American phenomenon,” Eric Levitz writes in New York Magazine, “it is a defining feature of contempora­ry politics in nearly every Western democracy.”

Over the past few years, the Democrats have made heroic efforts to win back working-class voters and white as well as Black and Hispanic voters who have drifted rightward. Joe Biden’s domestic agenda is largely about infrastruc­ture jobs, expanded child tax credit, raising taxes on corporatio­ns. This year the Democrats nominated candidates designed to appeal to working-class voters, like the sweatshirt-wearing Fetterman in Pennsylvan­ia and Tim Ryan in Ohio.

It doesn’t seem to be working.

As Ruy Teixeira, Karlyn Bowman and Nate Moore noted in a survey of polling data for the American Enterprise Institute last month, “The gap between non-college and college whites continues to grow.” Democrats have reason to worry about losing working-class Hispanic voters in places like Nevada. “If Democrats can’t win in Nevada,” one Democratic pollster told Politico, “we can complain about the white working class all you want, but we’re really confrontin­g a much broader working-class problem.” Even Black voters without a college degree seem to be shifting away from the Democrats, to some extent.

Forests have been sacrificed so that Democratic strategist­s can write reports on why they are losing the working class. Some believe racial resentment is driving the white working class away. Some believe Democrats spend too much time on progressiv­e cultural issues and need to focus more on bread-and-butter economics.

I’d say these analyses don’t begin to address the scale of the problem. America is two different cultures. It’s very hard for the party based in one culture to reach out and win voters in the other culture — or even to understand what people in the other culture are thinking.

As I’ve shuttled between red and blue America over decades of reporting on American politics, I’ve seen social, cultural, moral and ideologica­l rifts widen from cracks to chasms.

Politics has become a religion for a lot of people. Americans with a college education and Americans without a college education no longer just have different ideas about, say, the role of government, they have created rival ways of life. Americans with a college education and Americans without a college education have different relationsh­ips to patriotism and faith, different ideas about corporal punishment, gender and, of course, race.

You can’t isolate the difference­s between the classes down to one factor or another. It’s everything.

But even that is not the real problem. America has always had vast cultural difference­s. In 2001, I wrote a long piece for The Atlantic comparing the deeply blue area of Montgomery County, Maryland, with the red area of Franklin County in south-central Pennsylvan­ia.

I noted the vast socioecono­mic and cultural difference­s that were evident, even back then. But in my interviews, I found there was a difference without a ton of animosity.

For example, Ted Hale was a Presbyteri­an minister there. “There’s nowhere near as much resentment as you would expect,” he told me. “People have come to understand that they will struggle financiall­y. It’s part of their identity. But the economy is not their god. That’s the thing some others don’t understand. People value a sense of community far more than they do their portfolio.”

Back in those days I didn’t find a lot of class-war consciousn­ess in my trips through red America. I compared the country to a high school cafeteria. Jocks over here, nerds over there, punks somewhere else. Live and let live.

Now people don’t just see difference, they see menace.

People have put up barricades and perceive the other class as a threat to what is beautiful, true and good. I don’t completely understand why this animosity has risen over the past couple of decades, but it makes it very hard to shift the ever more entrenched socioecono­mic-cultural-political coalitions.

Historians used to believe that while European societies were burdened by ferocious class antagonism­s, Americans had relatively little class consciousn­ess.

That has changed.

 ?? RUTH FREMSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A billboard with a strong opinion is seen Wednesday in the western Pennsylvan­ia town of Worthingto­n.
RUTH FREMSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES A billboard with a strong opinion is seen Wednesday in the western Pennsylvan­ia town of Worthingto­n.
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