The 2018 Election Deepened America's Tribal
Divide
By James J
Zogby
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
November 17, 2018
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This Election Deepened America's Tribal Divide
This election was the meanest, dirtiest, and most disgraceful in my
lifetime—and it will have consequences. Even before the results began to
be reported on late Tuesday night, we already knew who the losers were
going to be – the American people and our political culture. The damage
done by President Trump's divisive rhetoric will be with us for a
generation.
While Trump's advisers had urged him to focus on the
good news about the economy during the last few weeks of the election,
he opted instead to preach a message of fear. His target was the
"caravan" of refugees coming northward from Guatemala hoping to find
refuge from the violence and poverty of their homeland.
Reporters covering the impoverished group of refugees found them largely
to be mothers with their children and boys and girls in their early
teens. In Trump's speeches, however, they became more ominous "dangerous
violent gang-members" with some "Middle Easterners" thrown in for good
measure. They were "invaders" and the effort to enter our country was
portrayed as an act of war. And so the president announced that he
was sending troops to protect the border. As he continued to hype the
threat posed by the "invasion," the number of troops being sent
increased - from 2,000 to 5,000 to 15,000.
For three weeks Trump
crisscrossed the country, speaking in rally after rally to mobilize his
supporters to vote for Republican candidates. He warned of dire
consequences if the Democrats won: he might be impeached, the country
would be overrun by dangerous immigrants, the economy would collapse
(despite the fact that the recovery and massive job creation began
during Obama's term), and we'd be less safe and more taxed. And by the
way, should Democrats win, they'll act violently against those who
oppose them. The central message was always fear.
To drive this
home, Trump's team produced a TV ad that featured a frightening
foul-mouthed rant by a convicted serial killer who committed his crimes
while in the US illegally. The ad continued with footage of Latin
Americans storming an unidentified fence. The message was clear, "these
are the violent people Democrats want to let into our country. Be
afraid, very afraid."
The problem with the ad was that the killer
in question had been deported by President Clinton, and had stolen his
way back into the country and committed his crimes during the Bush
Administration. It wasn't the dishonesty of the ad, however, it was its
overt racist appeal that caused the networks (including Trump's favorite
- Fox News) to refuse to run it. Media executives called the ad the
"most racist ad ever put forward by a campaign."
To some extent,
the appeal to fear worked. Despite some of the more bizarre and
flagrantly distorted claims that Trump made during his post-election
press conference (that people really like him, the election was a
victory of historic proportions, that his polling numbers among black
voters are great, etc.), one observation that he made was true. His
intervention during the last few weeks of the campaign did make a
difference in boosting a few Republicans to victory.
Until
Trump's tour, the energy of this election was on the Democratic side.
Trump's appeal to fear and his dire warnings about the country being
overrun by dangerous foreigners, and the violence and economic disaster
that would accompany a Democratic victory, succeeded in energizing
Republican voters. But it did so at a cost to our democracy.
The
final results of this election are still somewhat uncertain, as there
are a few key races that are too close to call. Despite that, as it
stands right now, it's clear that Democrats did well. They flipped the
Congress from 235 Republican and 193 Democrats to a Democratic
controlled body with 230 Democrats and 205 Republicans. Seven
governorships changed from Republican to Democrat. And in down-ballot
state legislative contests, Democrats added almost 300 seats to their
ranks. Only in the US Senate, did the Republicans make slight gains,
possibly adding two to their ranks.
Beyond the vote tallies
and the final determination of who won and lost, my concern is that
after two years of Trump and his behavior in the final weeks of the
campaign, the country is more polarized than ever. Looking at election
day exit polls what comes through is that while there are issue
differences that separate Republicans and Democrats, more to the point
are the splits between the two parties that appear to be driven more by
demographics than by ideas.
On the Democratic side are young
people, the college educated (especially women), and minority
communities. Voting Republican are middle-aged, less educated
working-class whites, gun owners, and white "born-again Christians." It
is as if we have become two distinct tribes at war.
In fairness,
the attacks in this war have been largely coming from one side. For
decades now, Republicans have directed their messaging to white voters
by stoking fears of blacks, Latinos, Muslims and Arabs. They have issued
ominous warnings about drugs and crime, violence, and immigration using
code words to associate all of these with the above mentioned groups.
In response, Democrats have pushed back defending the groups under
attack, mobilizing them to vote for Democrats, and offering reasoned
policy prescriptions to address the issues. What Democrats haven't done
is develop a sustained national outreach campaign directed at the white
working-class voters courted by Trump and the GOP. By abandoning them
and focusing, at times almost exclusively on "their voters," Democrats
have left the white working class to Trump, indirectly contributing to
the tribal war that defines our political culture.
Because I
have no hope that in its current incarnation, we can expect the GOP to
change, it is incumbent on Democrats to work to bridge the divides that
have become so pronounced in the era of Trump. They won't have to stop
doing anything. They will only need to pay attention to a substantial
group of voters whose economic and cultural insecurity and fear of the
"other" have been exploited by Republicans. Not only will this "politics
of addition" help Democrats win more elections, it will also contribute
to healing the divide and making America governable again.
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