[Mb-civic] EXCELLENT: What Kind of Hater Are You? - E. J. Dionne - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Mar 15 03:09:40 PST 2006
What Kind of Hater Are You?
<>
By E. J. Dionne Jr.
The Washington Post
Wednesday, March 15, 2006; A19
Consider the portraits that Republicans and Democrats paint of each
other. They explain much of the loathing in our politics.
Democrats see Republicans as a collection of pampered rich people who
selfishly seek to cut their own taxes, allied with religious
fundamentalists who want to use government power to impose a narrow
brand of Christianity on everyone else.
Republicans see Democrats as godless, overeducated elitists who sip
lattes as they look down their noses at the moral values of "real
Americans" in "the heartland" and ally themselves with "special interest
groups" that benefit from "big government."
Notice that each side is waging a class war in condemning the other as
nauseatingly privileged. Yes, these are both parodies. But parodies are
weapons in political battles, so it's important to assess the relative
truth of each side's claims.
Begin by dismissing the claim that the economically privileged have
become Democrats. In the 2004 election, according to the main media exit
poll, President Bush won 63 percent of the votes cast by Americans in
households earning over $200,000 a year, and 57 percent from those in
the $100,000 to $200,000 range. All things being equal, wealthier people
vote Republican.
But conservatives counter that Democrats are the party of choice in
swank, well-educated latte enclaves: suburban Boston, New York and
Philadelphia; Montgomery County, Md.; and Microsoftland around Seattle,
Silicon Valley and Hollywood. John Kerry's blue states are, on the
whole, richer than George Bush's red states.
All true -- meaning what, exactly? One of the hottest political science
papers floating around the political world and the Web comes close to
solving the mystery of how Democrats can do so well in certain well-off
places and still not be the party of the rich.
The paper has a fetching title: "Rich state, poor state, red state, blue
state: What's the matter with Connecticut?" Dr. Seuss, who wrote "One
Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish," meets Tom Frank, the author of the
influential book "What's the Matter With Kansas?"
The authors -- Andrew Gelman of Columbia University, Boris Shor of the
University of Chicago, Joseph Bafumi of Dartmouth and David Park of
Washington University in St. Louis -- show, through careful statistical
analysis, how several things can be true at the same time.
Yes, Bush carried a lot of poor states -- but with heavy support from
the rich people who lived in them. The class war is being waged more
fiercely in the Republican states than in the Democratic states. The
income divide is especially sharp in the South, where it is reinforced
by a strong racial divide.
"In poor states," Gelman and his colleagues write, "rich people are much
more likely than poor people to vote for the Republican presidential
candidate, but in rich states (such as Connecticut), income has almost
no correlation with vote preference. . . . In poor states, rich people
are very different from poor people in their political preferences. But
in rich states, they are not."
This suggests that our country may be even more polarized and divided
than we thought. Not only do red and blue states vote differently, but
they cast their votes according to different patterns.
The paper's authors also take a nice swipe at the media, arguing that
reporters tend to overemphasize the role of rich Democrats in elections.
Why? Journalists, they write, "noticed a pattern (richer counties
supporting the Democrats) that is concentrated in the states where the
journalists live," notably the environs of Washington and New York. The
class polarization in such deep red states as Oklahoma, Texas and
Mississippi goes largely unreported.
Gelman and his colleagues help us understand why southern Democrats such
as Bill Clinton and John Edwards may be more attuned to the power of
populism than Northern Democrats such as John Kerry -- and, perhaps,
Hillary Rodham Clinton. Their paper also helps explain why Southern
Republicans such as President Bush pursue policies that are hugely
beneficial to their wealthy base even as they try to diminish the
political impact of class warfare by shifting the argument to other
subjects: religion, values or national security.
The divide in American politics is about more than the ideological
distance between the two parties. Right now red-staters and blue-staters
live in two different political universes. It's no wonder that political
moderation is out of fashion -- though the winner of the 2008 round may
be the person who can scramble the patterns of Dr. Seussian politics.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/14/AR2006031401116.html?nav=hcmodule
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