What If the Bums Are Us?

This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

The New York Sun

“Public opinion stands out, in the United States, as the great source of power, the master of servants who tremble before it.”

— James Bryce, “The American Commonwealth,” 1888

The problem of American democracy is (of course) democracy. We are on the cusp of an election that commentators have already imbued with vast significance if Democrats recapture part or all of Congress — or if they don’t. But here’s something that no one’s saying: Regardless of who wins, it won’t make much difference for many pressing problems. We won’t have a major new budget policy, energy policy, or immigration policy. The election might not even much affect the Iraq war.

In many ways, the election doesn’t matter. We could blame the prospect of divided government or a bipartisan leadership vacuum; both might promote paralysis. But the deeper cause is public opinion. As Bryce saw, our politicians are slaves to public opinion. Superficially, this should be reassuring. Democracy is working because public attitudes remain the dominant influence — not “big money” or “special interests.”

But it is not reassuring. The trouble is that public opinion is often ignorant, confused, and contradictory; and so the policies it produces are often ignorant, confused, and contradictory — which means they’re ineffective. The Catch-22 of American democracy is this: A government that mirrors public opinion offends public opinion by failing to do what it promises.

The election is rightly seen as a referendum on the war. In late 2003, 67% of Americans thought that President Bush’s invasion was the “right decision,” reports the Pew Research Center; only 26% thought it the “wrong decision.” Now, views are split, 43% “right” and 47% “wrong.” But it’s public opinion, not the election outcome, that matters for policy. Indeed, it explains why the Democrats lack a unified position on Iraq.

Suppose that the Democrats retook Congress but that the ground situation in Iraq — and public opinion — improved. Then, Democrats would look foolish if they’d promoted a quick withdrawal. Now suppose that the Republicans kept control of Congress and that the situation in Iraq — and public opinion — worsened. Then, the pressure on Mr. Bush from Republicans to pull back would intensify. Either way, public opinion governs.

Public opinion also marches in many directions at once.

Americans favor balanced budgets. But in 66 years of surveys, taxpayers have never said their income taxes were too low. A Gallup poll in April found that 48% thought their taxes too high, and only 2% too low. Americans also think government spending is hugely wasteful. But locating that waste is hard. A recent Fox News poll reported that only 19% favor cuts in Social Security, 21% in health care, and 25% in defense.

Or consider energy. Americans crave cheap gasoline. Unfortunately, that increases our oil demand — which conflicts with our desire to reduce oil imports. Or immigration. A recent Pew Research Center survey said that 52% of Americans think immigrants are “a burden because they take jobs and housing.” But only 27% would require illegal immigrants to go home and only 40% would reduce legal immigration.

Facing such inconsistencies, how can government make sensible policy?

Not easily.

Occasionally, presidents and congresses get a free pass — some crisis or event fosters national unity. Mr. Bush had such a moment after 9/11; Johnson had one after Kennedy’s assassination. Otherwise, politicians can deal with public opinion in three ways: Ignore it, change it, or pander to it. Politicians who choose the first often become ex-politicians. The second is hard. The easiest course is to pander.

Mr. Bush and the Republican Congress happily cut taxes, enacted the Medicare drug benefit, and praised deficit reduction. Anyone who thinks the Democrats set a higher standard should read “A New Direction for America,” the manifesto issued by House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi. It proposes much new spending (bigger drug benefits, Pell grants, and veterans benefits), new tax breaks, balanced budgets, and no specific new taxes.

It also promises energy “independence” by 2020 — a popular but (unfortunately) impossible goal. We now import 12.5 million barrels of oil a day, 60% of our use. We can’t offset that by 2020. Unsurprisingly, House Republicans also plug energy “independence.”

Tell people what they want to hear, regardless of how shortsighted or stupid it might be. That’s the bipartisan instinct. In this election, the Republicans deserve to lose, and the Democrats don’t deserve to win. Yes, I am a longtime believer in divided government because it may check each party’s worst excesses. But don’t expect fundamental changes if Democrats reclaim some power. We won’t acknowledge choices, contradictions, unpalatable facts. So, many problems persist. Throwing the bums out is a venerable tradition, but what if the ultimate bums are us?


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