POST-ELECTION REFLECTIONS
Gene TeSelle, Witherspoon Issues Analyst
[11-10-04]
So the
voters, for a variety of reasons, have narrowly supported an agenda that
includes an aggressive foreign and military policy, a self-reinforcing
plutocracy fueled by tax cuts for the rich, a growing national debt,
attempts to dismantle the Social Security system, termination of inheritance
taxes, assaults on reproductive rights and domestic partnerships, a
devil-may-care attitude in environmental and energy policies, and a Supreme
Court dominated by ideological conservatives. They have voted for a
corporate feudalism to which they will be increasingly beholden. They have
voted, furthermore, to support a theocracy dictated by Catholic bishops and
Protestant evangelicals, a Holy American Empire eager to assert its power at
home and abroad. Voters may not have understood what the whole package
amounts to; often they voted on symbolic grounds. But the package was made
clear in many ways during the campaign.
The only
consolation for those who feel like moving to Canada is that the Bush
administration will have to deal with the mess it has created -- things like
Iraq and the national debt -- and a Republican Congress must still face
realities like widespread support for reproductive rights and internal
division in their party over civil unions and domestic partnerships. The
last Republican Revolution occurred ten years ago, and it turned off the
voters. Moderate Republicans in Congress, especially from the Northeast,
will play an important role in holding off extremist legislation. A
Republican-appointed Supreme Court may chip away at
Roe v. Wade
but is not likely to reverse it; the Court may also find itself forced to
find some middle ground on the civil unions issue. Arlen Specter as chair of
the Senate Judiciary Committee can be expected to resist the appointment of
ideological conservatives, if only to minimize Democratic filibusters.
Democrats who
wanted to do away with the electoral college after Al Gore's win of the
popular vote in 2000 may feel more subdued after George Bush's
three-and-a-half million "mandate." Who wants the country to be controlled
by the red states in the South and the West without the "containment"
achieved by the electoral college? On the other hand, they may want to give
better expression to the blue voters in the red areas. Eventually we will
probably come to some form of proportional voting, either by Congressional
districts as in Maine and Nebraska, or (even better) by allocating the
state's votes as in the Colorado referendum. Proportional voting, as Lani
Guinier pointed out, enables people to
say how
they want to be represented rather than "be districted." Both parties, of
course, will be turning to their computers to see how they would have fared
under these various plans.
How Much
of a Surprise?
Going into the
2004 presidential election we knew that the country was almost equally
divided between red and blue, conservative and liberal, Fox News and CNN,
church-goers and college graduates, those who want to reduce the role of
government to punishing wrongdoers and those who see government as
responsible for the general welfare. (Yes, that's how majorities of each of
these groups voted according to the polls.)
Pundits often spoke
of a "divided America," both because of the 50-50 divide but because most
issues were framed in ways that presented clear alternatives, often
diametrical opposites. Harold Meyerson in
The American
Prospect has called the election a "cultural census."
We also knew
that George W. Bush, who had campaigned as "a uniter, not a divider," and
who was given the presidency by a Republican-appointed majority of the
Supreme Court, immediately became a divider, on the principle that the
victor deserves all the spoils. Al Gore was too quick to be a good sport,
not only conceding the election for the sake of "national unity" and "the
legitimacy of the presidency," but declining to lead a government in exile,
a shadow cabinet, or even a loyal opposition.
Bush took
advantage of national unity after 9/11 to impose Draconian new laws like the
Patriot Act; his Congressional allies refused to develop legislation
collaboratively and played fast and loose with voting procedures when it was
to their advantage; and he dictated policy to the agencies of the federal
government, creating dismay among professionals in the EPA, the Department
of Energy, the Forest Service and the Park Service, the State Department,
and the Pentagon.
We knew the
general demographics, too.
The "blue" areas
were on the west coast, the Northeast, the large industrial cities,
African-American communities (both rural and urban), and university towns
across the country. They included many who have been disadvantaged by
corporate power (labor, African Americans, Hispanics, the poor), people who
are often regarded as unworthy and unfit to vote; but they also included
many who are not disadvantaged but want to find inclusive solutions that can
be made effective through public policy, people who are often vilified as
"elitists" out of touch with economic and cultural realities.
The "red" areas
were in the South, in rural areas (both the Midwest and the "intermountain
West"), in affluent suburbs, and among religious conservatives. In one way
or another they buy into the language of individualism, self-reliance,
personal salvation, and distrust of most forms of public assistance,
sometimes even including public schools. All too frequently they convey the
impression that they have an intrinsic right to rule the country, whether
because of money, achievement, skin color, masculine assertiveness (no
"girly men" allowed), or firmly held, uncompromising moral and religious
values.
We knew that
both parties were mobilizing to register voters and get them out on election
day. We also knew that the Republican Party was preparing to challenge
voters wherever they could, especially those who had not voted recently, or
whose addresses had changed, or who might otherwise look like welfare cheats
or ex-cons. In some places there was a campaign of intimidation, designed to
keep people from showing up at the polls if they could not show proper
identification or had outstanding traffic tickets (yes, this one was bruited
about in several places).
Wild
Cards
We also had some
notion of the "wild cards" that might prompt people to abandon their
traditional voting patterns. These were in three areas.
1. Republican
campaign strategists exploited the "social issues," most notably abortion
rights and gay marriage, as wedges to separate voters -- especially
Catholics and African Americans -- from their usual loyalties. This
succeeded in some sectors despite the fact that many educated suburbanites
who ordinarily vote Republican are tolerant in these areas and do not want
to see prejudice enacted into law or inserted into the Constitution -- and
despite the fact that many Catholics and evangelicals have a broad concern
for social justice and refuse in conscience to make decisions on the basis
of a few "litmus test" issues.
2. Democratic
campaign strategists knew that "economic issues" ---- stagnant economy,
unemployment, inadequate minimum wage, export of jobs, growing national
debt, the need to strengthen Social Security ---- were their strongest suit.
And yet there were many voters who did not make the connection between these
issues and their own lives, or who were so grateful for the $500 rebate
checks on their taxes that they abandoned the Democratic fold. In What's the
Matter With Kansas, Thomas Frank has traced the ways working-class voters
can be lured into voting against their own interests. (Suburbanites did not
make the same error.) And then there was always the possibility that people
who might be expected to be part of the "Democratic base" ---- those at the
lower end of the income scale ---- might not see much of a difference
between the two campaigns and therefore might not turn out to vote. They are
grass-roots Naderites, we might say.
3. The "new
fact" of the early twenty-first century is terrorism, made all the more
unsettling because the most destructive actions on 9/11 were not
government-sponsored but a privateering operation with no clear base and
exempt from the many kinds of pressure that can be exerted on governments.
Some of the women who had supported Democratic candidates became "security
moms." George W. Bush depicted himself as the candidate who would respond to
terror swiftly and surely, even though his behavior often suggested that he
might be too quick on the draw and would stubbornly defend his decisions.
People worried about Iraq voted for Kerry; those worried about terrorism
voted for Bush. (Augustine commented that the Romans ought to have worshiped
Alien Aggression as a deity, since that was always the excuse for their wars
of expansion.)
4. There was
also a major "perception" issue. Both Bush and Kerry graduated from Yale in
the Sixties and were both members of Skull and Bones. But Kerry looked like
a New England "liberal elitist," and he even spoke French, while Bush,
despite his patrician Connecticut background, managed to look like an
aw-shucks Texan. It is an old story that small-town and rural people do not
like being condescended to; they may feel that any complicated presentation
does that, but they certainly identified with George Bush when he was
dissected with ironic humor by Michael Moore and Al Franken. Their reaction
was expressed in the mode of direct vilification, without a touch of irony.
Political
scientists will start analyzing the
realignment of
the parties that has been going on since Barry Goldwater and George
Wallace and still may not be finished. John Kennedy was the last
non-Southern Democrat to be elected President; LBJ, Carter, and Clinton were
the only ones to make it. The Democrats continue to be pulled in opposing
directions: some want them to give more emphasis to traditional Democratic
constituencies and programs, while others think the road to success is to
move closer to the middle. Although third parties have occasionally been the
catalyst for lasting realignments -- the Republicans began as a third party,
and much of the Progressive Party's agenda was taken over by both Democrats
and Republicans -- it is clear that Ralph Nader will not play that role.
Commentators
mention over and over the perception that Bush emanated "strong leadership"
and was committed to "moral values." Many voters act on the basis of image,
impulse, and one-liners. This year they may have been overwhelmed by the
speed with which issues like prayer in schools, the Ten Commandments in
courtrooms, and especially gay marriage, all became subjects for
sloganeering rather than civil discourse and legislative creativity.
Then it became easy
to blame everything on "liberal elitists," the "gay agenda," and
abortionists, as though everything would be all right except for these alien
infections in the body politic.
And that brings
us to the "religion gap," always mentioned by the pundits, although some of
them have begun backtracking, pointing out possible flaws in the exit polls.
The
Religion Gap
Democratic
strategists never understood or engaged the religion question, although they
could have drawn upon the advice of a host of legal scholars to gain
orientation for the campaign and educate the public about a complex issue.
Voters were
left, then, with a misleading alternative: either religious beliefs ought to
rule political discourse, and government ought to support one or more
religious institutions; or religion ought to be excluded altogether from
public discourse, making it what Stephen Carter calls a mere "private
preference."
That is to
ignore fifteen centuries of experience in the West. We learned, first of
all, to differentiate between
church and
state as institutions, even while refusing to separate
religion and
politics, since we knew that religious concerns are relevant to the
whole of life. More crucially, we learned the value of the
secular state
which has no official ties with any religious institutions but guarantees
religious freedom, including the right to change religions or have no
religion.
If religious
commitments are relevant to politics but become dangerous when they invade
and control politics, how are we to proceed? Recently there has been much
use of the metaphor of
translation
for the move from religious to political discourse; it has been developed in
a convincing way by legal theorist Kent Greenawalt and philosopher Robert
Audi.
Religious
convictions can best contribute to public debate, they say, when they are
translated into "publicly accessible reasons." They do not question the
right of citizens, and even candidates and legislators, to express their
religious convictions in civic discussion. But they argue that
coercive
laws and policies, those that constrain the activities of others, must be
based upon "secular" reasons (reasons shared with others, beyond particular
religious groups) that will be both convincing and workable in the secular
sphere. They go on to point out that those who hold office in the executive
and judicial branches, with the task of
carrying out
or
interpreting the law, have a special obligation to keep personal
religious convictions out of their actions and rulings.
It is exactly in
this area of "coercive" measures that the Religious Right has tried in
recent years to change the rules, claiming that it is an offense to
religious convictions to say that they should not be expressed in laws,
court decisions, and government actions. Then we find ourselves in the midst
of what James Davison Hunter calls "culture wars." Hunter suggests that
culture wars have an intrinsic tendency toward Manichaean thinking: they are
based in competing moral visions, with the result that those who disagree
are placed beyond the bounds of legitimacy, and as a result there is an urge
to "force political solutions" rather than trust continued dialogue.
In a First
Amendment society, with courts protecting freedom of association and
expression, it is easy for religious people to be persuaded that religion is
the only thing that "gets no respect." Then any excesses on the part of the
Religious Right are regarded as an understandable reaction to a relentlessly
"secular" government. To prove their point they engage in provocative acts
such as putting the Ten Commandments on stone in public places or passing
out tracts in public schools, then cry persecution when objections are
raised. Such actions are defended, furthermore, with the argument that
religion is an "absolute commitment," as though this makes it exempt from
the rules of political behavior and even confers the privilege of defining
those rules. The problem, of course, is that many competing religious groups
can claim the right to carry their "absolute commitments" into the public
sphere; this leads inevitably to intolerance and eventually to open
religious warfare. Thus the West has chosen to keep absolute claims out of
the public square and develop a viable "secular state," while not denying
that religious commitments are always relevant to issues of human good.
We have seen a
stunning reversal of the position that John F. Kennedy took when he
addressed a group of ministers, mostly Southern Baptists, in Dallas in 1960.
His purpose then was to defuse a widespread suspicion about the Catholic
church's relation to politics. Now Southern Baptists are more likely to be
allied with Catholic bishops, both on specific issues and on the relation
between church and state.
Christianity has
tried a number of relationships between church and state. At times one of
them claims, perhaps even succeeds, in controlling the other. More often
they strike a
modus vivendi,
the state dealing with "temporalities" and the church dealing with
"spiritualities." But even this
arrangement can take different forms. Sometimes the state enforces religious
uniformity for its own benefit, to reduce the likelihood of disagreement
about the basic issues of life. At other times the church concerns itself
with the moral transformation of public life, as we saw in the "social
Christianity" of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in
England and America, or in the civil rights movement of the Sixties, both of
them inspired by the prophets, the gospels, and a long tradition of
Christian concern for society as a whole.
It is time to
resume these old discussions in the light of challenging new questions at
the beginning of the twenty-first century, when we must deal simultaneously
with a global economy and with close encounters between diverse religious
convictions. The most reasonable and workable response is more likely to be
that of the Interfaith Alliance, the public counterpart to the Religious
Right, which emphasizes the
healing role that all religions can play in the society they share.
Now it's your turn!
As this
analysis suggests, the election challenges progressives to engage in the
national discussion (if that's not too polite a term) on religion and
moral values. We're posting a number of other essays that deal with this
from various perspectives, and we hope you'll join in the conversation!
Just send a note, and we'll post it here. As usual, we ask that you
identify yourself, at least by name, plus anything else you'd care to tell
us about yourself. And we ask that you not engage in sarcastic or
demeaning depictions of "the other side," whatever that may be.