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- From: pierce@lanai.cs.ucla.edu (Brad Pierce)
- Subject: Re: Bankruptcy 1995 (part 1)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.053600.12244@cs.ucla.edu>
- Sender: usenet@cs.ucla.edu (Mr Usenet)
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- Organization: UCLA, Computer Science Department
- References: <BxsA6C.47x@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 92 05:36:00 GMT
- Lines: 183
-
- [Reprinted *without* permission from the Los Angeles Times Opinion
- Section, Sunday, November 1, 1992, pp. M1,M8.]
-
- Political Pandering: A Time-Honored Tradition in the All-American Way
-
- By Guy Molyneux
-
- [Guy Molyneux is president of the Next America Foundation, an
- educational organization founded by Michael Harrington.]
-
- A new orthodoxy has emerged in recent years among the nation's
- chattering classes. One hears it from the press, policy experts, even
- leaders of both political parties. It has attained the status of
- conventional wisdom. It tells a story, if you will, of the nation's
- current predicament.
-
- The story goes like this: Americans have lived beyond their means,
- consuming too much. We have avoided the tough choices, running up a
- huge national debt. We must now tighten our belts and sacrifice to get
- the nation back on track.
-
- Standing in the way of this virtuous path are politicians, who pander
- to voters' self-interest instead of making these tough decisions.
- George Bush and Bill Clinton are shining examples, crisscrossing the
- country promising whatever they think will get votes. If only leaders
- would do what is right, instead of what people want, all would be
- well.
-
- It's become a familiar tale, this New Elitism. Its moral
- high-mindedness makes it seductively persuasive. But in reality, it is
- nothing more than a particular - and highly questionable - economic
- analysis masquerading as objective truth. Still worse is the notion
- that we suffer a crisis of too much, rather than too little, public
- accountability. At a time when the nation desperately needs a
- reinvigorated political life, our leaders betray a profound contempt
- for democracy itself.
-
- This story is fundamentally a morality play. Its lesson concerns the
- dangers of "pandering" - defined as a shrewd vote-getting tactic,
- wherein a politician takes a position thought to be shared by average
- people. This ostensibly reflects said politician's deep cynicism. A
- corrupt cycle is set in motion, as officials shamelessly seek to
- improve people's lives in hope of gaining reelection.
-
- Pandering is a uniquely political notion. Companies, for example, do
- not "pander" when they offer a product people want. That's good
- business. But while people are presumed competent to choose blue jeans
- or automobiles, they apparently can't be trusted to choose the public
- policies that shape their future.
-
- The true villains are thus the voters. It is a story of virtuous - if
- occasionally weak - elites, and selfish masses - the "pandees." To the
- New Elitism, this means such people as union members, women, the
- elderly and veterans - the dreaded "special interests" who feast
- greedily at the public trough.
-
- This represents a truly Orwellian inversion of political language. Once
- upon a time, "special interests" referred to powerful economic forces,
- such as large corporations and trade associations. Now, the agenda of
- such groups - such as the capital-gains tax cut - is thought to be
- synonymous with the "public interest." In the perverse lexicography of
- the New Elitism, it is millions of votes, not dollars, that denotes a
- special interest.
-
- The New Elitism distorts history as well as language. Consider some
- famous historical panders: the eight-hour day, rural electrification,
- the national park system, urban mass transit, Medicare and most of the
- nation's infrastructure. It is no exaggeration to say that pandering
- lay behind most of our great public improvements. Without it, ordinary
- people wouldn't get anything of value from government. Economic
- elites, on the other hand, will always get their share.
-
- The antonym for "pandering" in the New Elite dictionary is "political
- leadership." This can only be demonstrated by embracing widely
- unpopular positions. A model of this leadership style is Paul "I'm No
- Santa Claus" Tsongas, a kind of high priest for the New Elitism. During
- his presidential run, Tsongas routinely faulted other candidates for
- saying "what people want to hear, instead of what they need to hear."
-
- Well, Tsongas certainly didn't do the former. Although it is now
- commonplace to talk of his strong showing, Tsongas was badly crushed in
- Democratic primaries outside New England. What support he did get came
- from affluent, well-educated voters. His trouncing confirmed the
- elite's contempt for the voters, and reaffirmed their own moral
- superiority. Having followers is no longer required for leadership - in
- fact, it's a disqualification!
-
- In this upside-down view, popularity and correctness are not simply
- unrelated attributes - already a rather striking challenge to
- democratic theory. They are actually polar opposites. Good policy will
- be unpopular, by definition.
-
- This stands the entire theory of representative democracy on its head.
- We surrender tremendous power to politicians only because they
- periodically have to solicit our support. It is that incentive system
- that, however crudely, eventually translates our preferences into real
- policies. Why else would we trust officials to pursue our interests?
- Without pandering, we have no democracy.
-
- And just what is the program that voters are rejecting? The favored
- phrase is "tough choices," like these recently suggested by the New
- York Times: "The only way out is for most people to pay higher taxes,
- for popular government programs to be cut and for medical care to be
- rationed." Lower wages and further loss of manufacturing jobs are often
- prescribed as well. Tough choices - and its folksier cousin
- "belt-tightening" - are really polite ways to say austerity. Echoing
- the best and brightest of another era, today's elite aims to save
- America's standard of living by destroying it.
-
- In fact, pain is not merely an unfortunate byproduct, it is the mark of
- good policy. Clinton and Bush are criticized for offering only
- "painless, inadequate" solutions - painless and inadequate being
- synonymous in the new discourse. No pain, no gain. While America's
- chattering classes have become ecumenical in recent years, admitting
- many non-WASPs, a Protestant sensibility apparently must still be
- absorbed before entry is allowed. The New Elitists always have one
- question: Have we stopped having fun yet?
-
- Behind this call for pain is an assumption about the past decade: It
- has been one of indulgence. To the fortunate top 20%, the decade was
- indeed kind. But for most of America, it has been a time of stagnant
- incomes. Profits have risen, but not wages. The Dow Jones is up, but
- leisure time is down. Taxes on the wealthy have shrunk, but actually
- rose for average income earners.
-
- In fact, for 20 years the standard of living for large segments of
- American society have stayed flat or declined. When the elite say, "We
- have lived too well," most Americans respond as modern-day Tontos:
- "What you mean 'we,' rich man?" Their belts are plenty tight.
-
- This disparity explains the public's skepticism regarding frequent
- elite calls for "shared sacrifice." It hasn't been shared so far, so
- why now? Looking at the agenda of the new consensus, this doubt appears
- merited. It calls for higher taxes on "consumption," lower taxes on
- "investment." Left unmentioned is that there's no way to do this
- without exacerbating the nation's growing income inequality.
-
- We also don't hear much about raising inheritance taxes, an obvious
- deficit-reduction step targeted at a group that can afford to
- sacrifice: the dead rich. Perhaps that's because the chattering classes
- - many of them baby boomers or a little older - are about to be on the
- receiving end of the greatest wealth transfer in the world's history.
- As their parents die, they stand to collectively inherit $4 trillion.
- Taxing gasoline or beer is courageous political leadership, but try to
- take a chunk of Daddy's estate and you're a demagogue. How shared is
- this sacrifice?
-
- In fact, most American families make tough choices all the time. Some
- are small: Will they see a movie or eat dinner out - they can't afford
- both. Some are large: Can Mom afford to stay home with the new baby?
- For those who don't face such choices, to suggest that they alone are
- fit to make the hard decisions is chutzpah of awe-inspiring
- proportions.
-
- You would think a leadership class that has presided over two decades
- of economic stagnation might rethink its ideas. But they offer the
- same old stuff: deregulation, incentives for "capital formation," more
- reductions in living standards. And you would think leaders who have
- consistently failed to see emerging problems - rising income
- inequality, the savings-and-loan fiasco - might show some humility. But
- they seem more concerned with blaming the public than engaging in the
- reassessment their failures warrant.
-
- Americans are not rejecting the idea of making choices, or even of
- sacrifice. They are rejecting the "false choices" offered by their
- leaders. They are asked to pay more for rationed health care - yet
- Americans already pay more for less inclusive health care coverage than
- any other industrialized nation. They are told to accept lower wages
- and short-term job loss for the good of the economy - though this same
- strategy has been in place for nearly two decades, to little avail.
-
- The question today is not when will the public awaken to the real
- problems, but when will the leaders start the "tough" job of fashioning
- better choices. Voters are demanding universal health care at
- reasonable prices. They are asking for more efficient delivery of
- government services. They are looking beyond symptoms like the deficit,
- to core issues like improving education and rebuilding the
- manufacturing base. And they seem prepared to politically reward anyone
- who can offer those things.
-
- Let those up to the task step forward, and let democracy work. And may
- the best panderers win.
-
-