Pretty cool article by Jacobin about the elitism and classism that underscores a lot of liberal discussion about poor white voters.
It's Jacobin, so there's some reductionism and a definite Sanders slant, but the author raises some true and very concerning points about the ways in which the party of the worker has ignored the largest working-class demographic in this country. While I think the white working class has a lot to answer for, such as their bad habit of blaming people even more disprivileged people for their own misfortune, Democrats' condescension is alienating a huge amount of voters and helping far-right populists succeed.
I'm concerned by the Democratic party's general blindness to the growing income gap. This is one of the most troubling issues in our country, but the solutions brought forward by American politicians are half-hearted at best. Obviously, the GOP is unimaginably worse when it comes to wealth disparity, but the Democratic is failing the workers it's supposed to represent. As the Democrats are poised to champion federal politics for the forseeable future, it's vital that poor white voters have some say in their own governance.
...the voters of West Virginia one of the poorest and whitest states in the country, a place that repeatedly elected a former Klansman to the Senate asserting their material interests. In the ongoing Clinton coronation, they were about as welcome as a case of black lung. But it isnt just the Sanders campaign zombie that liberal pundits are desperately trying to stamp out. Its the white working class itself.
Somehow liberal pundits have gotten it into their heads that white workers perhaps thanks to Fox Newss racist dispatches are just an aggrieved, pissed off, outnumbered minority. But their particular disgust is just a stand-in for a more generalized anti-working-class politics. No matter how you slice it, the working class while not quite Wes-Anderson-movie-white is really damn white.
While the Economic Policy Institute projects that the US working class will be 49.6 percent non-hispanic white by 2032, 77 percent of all minimum wage (or below) workers today are white. Half are white women, who it should be noted joined young working-class women of color as an enthusiastic core of Sanderss base. And as Tamara Draut shows in her new book Sleeping Giant which stresses the diversity of the new working class 63 percent of all workers without a bachelors degree are still non-Latino white.
Instead of acknowledging the size and importance of this part of the electorate, Democratic Party elites have simply constructed a new narrative to suit their interests a narrative that was on display after West Virginia. Following Sanderss win a significant chunk of the punditocracy came to the conclusion, mostly by abusing the hell out of exit polls, that a vote for the Jewish socialist was actually a vote for white supremacy. After decades of being told white workers would never support socialism because theyre racist, were now told that they support the socialist candidate because they are racist.
The Sanders program is a recognizably working-class one: higher minimum wage, free college for all, labor unionism, and a re-regulation of finance with steep taxes on the one percent. And his actual politics go far beyond that. He preaches the necessity and righteousness of class war, calls out our oligarchs by name and in the case of his Immokalee farmworkers advertisement asks us all to question who benefits from this exploitation? This politics puts Sanders considerably to the left of every major Western social-democratic or labor party leader, short of Jeremy Corbyn. Howard Dean and Bill Bradley he is most certainly not. The Clinton program which is the kind of politics thats defined the Democratic Party and American liberalism for decades is also a class program. But to paraphrase Adolph Reed, its a politics that few would recognize as a working-class one. Despite off-the-charts wealth inequality, Democratic Party liberals have been concerned not with an egalitarian reckoning to unite the have-nots against the haves but with inclusion: bringing different interest groups into the professional class while managing everyone elses expectations downward.
The working class is central to a meaningful progressive politics because they have the numbers, the economic incentive and the potential power to halt capital in its tracks to check the power of our ruling class and build a truly democratic society out of this miserable oligarchy we all find ourselves stuck in today. It becomes clearer every year, particularly with Sanderss popularity, that the American ruling class has made out like bandits simply by keeping portions of the large (and potentially powerful) working class from uniting in a single political party behind even a social-democratic program. And that such a scenario would be nothing short of a disaster for them. Its obvious that this kind of popular politics will never be built if segments of the working class much less a majority of it are written off. So when I hear liberal pundits saying that white workers are morally compromised beyond hope or on the way to irrelevance, I tend to get a little suspicious.
It's Jacobin, so there's some reductionism and a definite Sanders slant, but the author raises some true and very concerning points about the ways in which the party of the worker has ignored the largest working-class demographic in this country. While I think the white working class has a lot to answer for, such as their bad habit of blaming people even more disprivileged people for their own misfortune, Democrats' condescension is alienating a huge amount of voters and helping far-right populists succeed.
I'm concerned by the Democratic party's general blindness to the growing income gap. This is one of the most troubling issues in our country, but the solutions brought forward by American politicians are half-hearted at best. Obviously, the GOP is unimaginably worse when it comes to wealth disparity, but the Democratic is failing the workers it's supposed to represent. As the Democrats are poised to champion federal politics for the forseeable future, it's vital that poor white voters have some say in their own governance.