Americans
are sick of politics. Only 13 percent approve of the job Congress is
doing, a near record low. The President’s approval ratings are also in
the basement.
A large portion of the public doesn’t even bother
voting. Only 57.5 percent of eligible voters cast their ballots in the
2012 presidential election.
Put simply, most Americans feel powerless, and assume the political game is fixed. So why bother?
A new
study scheduled
to be published in this fall by Princeton’s Martin Gilens and
Northwestern University’s Benjamin Page confirms our worst suspicions.
Gilens
and Page analyzed 1,799 policy issues in detail, determining the
relative influence on them of economic elites, business groups,
mass-based interest groups, and average citizens.
Their
conclusion: “The preferences of the average American appear to have only
a miniscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon
public policy.”
Instead, lawmakers respond to the policy demands
of wealthy individuals and monied business interests – those with the
most lobbying prowess and deepest pockets to bankroll campaigns.
Before
you’re tempted to say “duh,” wait a moment. Gilens’ and Page’s data
come from the period 1981 to 2002. This was before the Supreme Court
opened the floodgates to big money in “Citizens United,” prior to
SuperPACs, and before the Wall Street bailout.
So it’s likely to be even worse now.
But
did the average citizen ever have much power? The eminent journalist
and commentator Walter Lippman argued in his 1922 book “Public Opinion”
that the broad public didn’t know or care about public policy. Its
consent was “manufactured” by an elite that manipulated it. “It is no
longer possible … to believe in the original dogma of democracy,”
Lippman concluded.
Yet American democracy seemed robust compared
to other nations that in the first half of the twentieth century
succumbed to communism or totalitarianism.
Political scientists
after World War II hypothesized that even though the voices of
individual Americans counted for little, most people belonged to a
variety of interest groups and membership organizations – clubs,
associations, political parties, unions – to which politicians were
responsive.
“Interest-group pluralism,” as it was called, thereby
channeled the views of individual citizens, and made American democracy
function.
What’s
more, the political power of big corporations and Wall Street was
offset by the power of labor unions, farm cooperatives, retailers, and
smaller banks.
Economist John Kenneth Galbraith approvingly dubbed
it “countervailing power.” These alternative power centers ensured that
America’s vast middle and working classes received a significant share
of the gains from economic growth.
Starting in 1980, something
profoundly changed. It wasn’t just that big corporations and wealthy
individuals became more politically potent, as Gilens and Page document.
It was also that other interest groups began to wither.
Grass-roots
membership organizations shrank because Americans had less time for
them. As wages stagnated, most people had to devote more time to work in
order to makes ends meet. That included the time of wives and mothers
who began streaming into the paid workforce to prop up family incomes.
At
the same time, union membership plunged because corporations began
sending jobs abroad and fighting attempts to unionize. (Ronald Reagan
helped legitimized these moves when he fired striking air traffic
controllers.)
Other centers of countervailing power – retailers,
farm cooperatives, and local and regional banks – also lost ground to
national discount chains, big agribusiness, and Wall Street.
Deregulation sealed their fates.
Meanwhile, political parties
stopped representing the views of most constituents. As the costs of
campaigns escalated, parties morphing from state and local membership
organizations into national fund-raising machines.
We entered a
vicious cycle in which political power became more concentrated in
monied interests that used the power to their advantage – getting tax
cuts, expanding tax loopholes, benefiting from corporate welfare and
free-trade agreements, slicing safety nets, enacting anti-union
legislation, and reducing public investments.
These moves further concentrated economic gains at the top, while leaving out most of the rest of America.
No wonder Americans feel powerless. No surprise we’re sick of politics, and many of us aren’t even voting.
But if we give up on politics, we’re done for. Powerlessness is a self-fulfilling prophesy.
The
only way back toward a democracy and economy that work for the majority
is for most of us to get politically active once again, becoming
organized and mobilized.
We have to establish a new countervailing power.
The
monied interests are doing what they do best – making money. The rest
of us need to do what we can do best – use our voices, our vigor, and
our votes.
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