Americans Are Sick to
Death of Both Parties: Why Our Politics Is
in Worse Shape Than We Thought
2014 signaled a new stage of disintegration.
By Walter Dean Burnham, Thomas Ferguson
December 23, 2014 "ICH"
- "Alternet"
- - The way many pundits tell it, the
Democratic debacle in the 2014 midterm
elections sounds like a perfect storm of bad
breaks. The President was aloof. The
party’s message was weak and muddled, in
some races focused almost entirely on gender
issues. Meanwhile record or near-record
breaking waves of political money (for off
year elections) cascaded through the
political system while voter turnout plunged
to levels last seen in 1942.
The real story is much
uglier: 2014 was fundamentally a democratic
debacle. It likely heralds a new stage in
the disintegration of the American political
order.
Though Republicans
jubilate now, the trend is probably as
threatening to them as it is to the
Democrats. The reason is stark: Increasing
numbers of average Americans can no longer
stomach voting for parties that only pretend
to represent their interests.
So they stayed home, in
quite extraordinary numbers. A full
accounting of all votes cast in 2014 is
still weeks, perhaps months away; it takes
that long for all the returns to come in,
especially in races in which incumbents
faced no challenger or a recount was
required. Some high stakes state elections
also attract a few more voters than House
contests held at the same time, which makes
working off unofficial tabulations of a
state’s “total vote” even trickier. But our
cautious guess is that turnout in this
year’s Congressional races will finally
weigh in at around 36 percent of the
potential electorate that had legal rights
to cast a ballot.
That’s a shocking
statistic. Put aside for a moment all talk
of 1942 and absolute levels of turnout.
Instead focus on changes in turnout between
presidential elections and the next off-year
election. Across the whole sweep of American
history, the momentous dimensions of what
has just happened stand out in bold relief.
The drop off in voting turnout from the
presidential election of 2012 to 2014 is the
second largest of all time –24
percentage points. Only 1942’s decline from
1940 was bigger – 29 percentage points. But
then there was an excuse. Millions of
Americans were hurriedly fanning out across
the globe to wage total war. (World War I
showed a similar pattern – turnout in the
off year elections of 1918 fell 22 points
from 1916’s presidential race, marking the
fourth largest decline ever. Which leads
naturally to the question of the third
largest. Read on.)
Now cast a glance at the
actual levels to which turnout in many
states sank this year. In the last
generation, turnouts in the many formerly
industrialized states in the Northeast, the
Mid-Atlantic region, and parts of the
Midwest have bounced around, with one or
another state sometimes touching historic
lows in a particular election. But this
year the decline is broad and to levels that
boggle the mind – rates of voting that
recall the earliest days of the
19th century, before the Jacksonian
Revolution swept away property suffrage and
other devices that held down turnout.
Turnout in Ohio, for example, fell to 34
percent -- a level the state last touched in
1814, when political parties on a modern
model did not exist and it had just recently
entered the Union. New York trumped even
this: turnout in the Empire State plunged to
30 percent, almost back to where it was in
1798, when property suffrage laws
disenfranchised some 40 percent of the
citizenry. New Jersey managed a little
better: turnout fell to 31 percent, back to
levels of the 1820s. Delaware turnout fell
to 35 percent, well below some elections of
the 1790s. In the west, by contrast, turnout
declined to levels almost without precedent:
California’s 33 percent turnout appears to
be the lowest recorded since the state
entered the union in 1850. Nevada also hit a
record low (28 percent), as did Utah at 26
percent (for elections to the House).
Exceptions to this pattern
exist. There is no point in comparing
changes in turnout in 2014 with 2012;
presidential elections are in a different
league altogether. But if one looks at the
differences between 2014 and the last off
year election of 2010, some interesting
cases turn up. For decades after the failure
of the Populists in 1896, southern politics
was a world unto itself. Turnouts were
reminiscent of England before the Great
Reform Bill of 1832. In Georgia in 1942, for
example, turnout topped out at 3.4 percent
(that’s right, 3.4 percent; no misprint).
Why is no mystery: the Jim Crow system
pushed virtually all African-Americans out
of the system, while the network of poll
taxes, registration requirements, literacy
tests and other obstacles that was part of
that locked out most poor whites from
voting, too. Since the civil rights
revolution, turnouts in the South have risen
fitfully to national levels, amid much
pushback, such as the raft of new voter ID
requirements (though these are not limited
to the South). In 2014, the sharp plunge in
turnout elsewhere helped achieve a milestone
of sorts: regional differences between the
South and the rest of country just about
vanished, for the first time since perhaps
1872, when the Union army still occupied
much of the old Confederacy.
The other class of
exceptions is uniquely telling. Turnout rose
compared to that of 2010 in at least eight
states. We will not know whether 2014 set a
new record for political money in off year
elections until the post-election disclosure
reports are all in at the Federal Election
Commission and the IRS (where reports on
so-called 527 spending are filed, on a
different schedule). But it is already clear
that the scale of expenditures this year
guarantees 2014 will be a worthy contender
for that dubious honor. Most states in which
turnout rose were sites of high stakes,
heavily contested elections either for the
Senate, as in North Carolina, Louisiana, and
Arkansas, or for the governor’s office –
precisely the sort of places that big donors
for sure concentrated their resources on.
The tidal wave of money, we judge,
supercharged campaigns in those states, if
not electorates. (The turnout increases were
quite modest, save in Louisiana.)
It seems plain that the
American political universe is being rapidly
reshaped by economic and cultural crisis
into something distinctly different. The
Democrats’ messaging this year was, indeed,
almost eerily spectral. But its otherworldly
feebleness was rooted in fundamental facts
that are not going away and cannot be fixed
by switching media advisers.
The first problem was the
administration’s dismal economic policy
record. Though some Democrats try to
sugarcoat the dismal facts by focusing on
changes since 2009, when the President
assumed office, the truth is that the fruits
of the recovery have gone lopsidedly to the
very richest Americans. Wall Street and the
stock market boom, but wages continue to
stagnate, and unemployment remains
stubbornly high, with millions of Americans
withdrawn from the labor force or working
only part time. As incomes recovered from
2009 to 2012, for example, 95 percent of all
the gains
went to the top 1 percent of income earners.
The rest of the population was left far
behind. As of July 2014, real median
household income was still
more than 6 percent below its value in early
2008. The administration’s continuing
efforts to court Wall Street, along with its
reluctance to sanction even flagrant
misconduct by prominent financiers just pour
salt into these wounds.
The other reason for the
messaging failure is graver, because
responsibility for it cannot possibly be
fobbed off on the Republicans. Though the
full figures are still coming in, we are
confident that what Ferguson, Jorgensen, and
Chen
demonstrated to be true in 2012 will
hold for 2014, despite claims to the
contrary in parts of the media: The
President and the Democratic Party are
almost as dependent on big money – defined,
for example, in terms of the percentage of
contributions (over $500 or $1000) from the
1 percent as the Republicans. To expect top
down money-driven political parties to make
strong economic appeals to voters is idle.
Instead the Golden Rule dominates:
Money-driven parties emphasize appeals to
particular interest groups instead of
the broad interests of working Americans
that would lead their donors to shut their
wallets.
In the short run, the
Democrats’ minuses look like big pluses to
Republicans. Both the party’s big donors and
its national leaders are exultant at their
prospects. As David Stockman, President
Reagan’s Budget Director
once all but confessed, in the modern
era the party has never really pretended to
have much of a mass constituency. It wins
elections by rolling up huge percentages of
votes in the most affluent classes while
seeking to divide middle and working class
voters with various special appeals and
striving to hold down voting by minorities
and the poor. As we move further into the
next stage of our New Gilded Age politics,
only the terms of the bargain will change
that the party’s core donors and economic
policymakers strike around election time
with the gaggle of evangelicals, gun
advocates, and anti-feminist and homophobic
crusaders – not to mention sheer racists –
that whip up their flocks. They will also
serve, who only stand and bait.
By contrast, 2014 suggests
that the Democrats’ ability to retain any
mass constituency at all may now be in
question. The facts of globalization, top
heavy income inequality, and the world wide
tendency toward austerity may just be too
much for a party that is essentially
dominated by segments of the 1 percent but
whose legacy appeal is to average Americans.
Exit polls from the 2014
House races suggest that the old New Deal
political formula has become like the grin
of the Cheshire Cat. Traces of the ancient
pattern are still there in the aggregate: In
the lowest income bracket (under $30,000 in
the 2014 exit polls) voters overwhelmingly
prefer the Democrats by 59 percent to 39
percent.
As income rises, that percentage falls off
steeply, with the slightest of hiccups
in the very highest bracket. Conversely,
upper income voters were much more likely to
vote Republican, though a modest gender gap
remained in the national electorate, if not
that of every state. (Nationally women
voters preferred the Democrats by only 51
percent to 47 percent; the Republican
advantage among men was much larger – 57
percent to 41 percent.) But after six years
of profound policy disappointment, not
enough lower income voters bothered to go to
the polls.
Right now Hillary
Clinton’s strategists appear to be pinning
their hopes on firing up another ritualized
big money-led coalition of minorities and
particular groups instead of making broad
economic appeals. That hope might perhaps
prove out, if the slow and very modest
economic recovery continues into 2016, or
the Republicans nominate another Richie Rich
caricature like Mitt Romney, who openly
mocks the poorest 47% of the electorate.
But exit surveys showed that in 2014
many women voters thought economic recovery
and jobs were top issues, too. And one may
doubt how robust the recovery can be in the
face of a steadily rising dollar, which now
seems baked in the world economic cake for a
considerable time to come.
But if the time has
perhaps passed when a Democratic Party
dominated and financed by Wall Street and
Silicon Valley can mobilize anything but
remnants, the Republicans can hardly count
on smooth sailing for very long. In 2016, if
voters are offered another choice between
Republican Lite and real Republicans, the
affluent Americans who will mostly turn out
may well once again cast ballots for the
real thing. But once in power the
Republicans will have to do something.
Here they face a huge
problem. We live in a world in which
education, infrastructure, and national
strategies are crucial to economic
performance.
Corporate leaders also reward themselves
virtually without limit for average (not to
mention less than average) economic
performance that runs down their own firms
over the long run. And, especially in the
financial sector, they do this as they throw
the costs of their mistakes on taxpayers and
demand all sorts of subsidies as they
finance campaigns for big budget cuts and
against taxes. (A stunning case in point is
the recent success of the big banks in
muscling through a provision in the new
spending bill that allows them to move many
derivatives back into the parts of their
operations insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, even as Congress
trimmed government backstops for pension
funds. )
Little in the free market
fundamentalist prayer book offers effective
solutions to these dilemmas. Large scale
public investments are indispensable to any
effort to revitalize the American economy.
Since 2006, when the Democratic landslide
lamed George W. Bush’s administration,
American politics has become a game of
musical chairs. 2008 was certainly a
negative referendum on the greatest economic
policy disaster since the Great Depression.
2010 was yet another vote of no confidence
after the administration’s timidity and
intransigent Republican opposition combined
to dash the soaring hopes that had
accompanied President Obama into the White
House. That election saw the third greatest
drop off in voting turnout in American
history and a Republican landslide in the
House. In all probability, if the GOP
presidential field of 2012 had not behaved
like Democratic caricatures, including the
eventual nominee, the President might quite
possibly have become one of the millions of
Americans who lost their jobs and their
homes thanks to the Great Recession.
In any case, both direct
poll evidence and common sense confirm that
huge numbers of Americans are now wary of
both major political parties and
increasingly upset about prospects in the
long term. Many are convinced that a few
big interests control policy. They crave
effective action to reverse long term
economic decline and runaway economic
inequality, but nothing on the scale
required will be offered to them by either
of America’s money-driven major parties.
This is likely only to accelerate the
disintegration of the political system
evident in the 2014 congressional elections.