Andrew Jackson, Revenant. By Walter Russell Mead. The American Interest, January 17, 2016.
Mead:
The biggest story in America today is the roaring return of Andrew Jackson’s spirit into the political debate.
Not
since he fought with Nicholas Biddle over the future of the Bank of the United
States has Andrew Jackson been this controversial or this central in American
political life. Jacksonian populism, the sense of honor-driven egalitarianism
and fiery nationalism that drove American politics for many years, has never
been hated and reviled as often as it is today, and many American academics and intellectuals (to say nothing of Hollywood icons) are close to demanding that
Jacksonian sentiment be redefined as a hate crime.
For President Barack Obama and his political allies in particular, Jacksonian
America is the father of all evils. Jacksonians are who the then Senator had in
mind when, in the campaign of 2008, he spoke of the “bitter clingers” holding
on to their guns and their Bibles. They are the source of the foreign policy
instincts he most deplores, supporting Israel almost reflexively, demanding
overwhelming response to terror attacks, agitating for tight immigration
controls, resisting diplomacy with Iran and North Korea, supporting Guantanamo,
cynical about the UN, skeptical of climate change, and willing to use “enhanced
interrogation” against terrorists in arms against the United States.
He
hates their instincts at home, too. It is Jacksonians who, as I wrote in Special Providence back in 2001, see the
Second Amendment as the foundation of and security for American freedom. It is
Jacksonians who most resent illegal immigration, don’t want to subsidize the
urban poor, support aggressive policing and long prison sentences for violent
offenders and who are the slowest to “evolve” on issues like gay marriage and
transgender rights.
The
hate and the disdain don’t spring from anything as trivial as pique.
Historically, Jacksonian America has been the enemy of many of what President
Obama, rightly, sees as some of America’s most important advances. Jacksonian
sentiment embraces a concept of the United States as a folk community and, over
time, that folk community was generally construed as whites only. Lynch law and
Jim Crow were manifestations of Jacksonian communalism, and there are few
examples of race, religious or ethnic prejudice in which Jacksonian America
hasn’t indulged. Jacksonians have come a long way on race, but they will never
move far enough and fast enough for liberal opinion; liberals are moving too,
and are becoming angrier and more exacting regardless of Jacksonian progress.
Just as
bad, in the view of the President and his allies, Jacksonians don’t have much
respect for the educated and the credentialed. Like William F. Buckley, they
would rather be governed by the first 100 names in the phonebook than by the
Harvard faculty. They loathe the interfering busybodies of the progressive
state, believe that government (except for the police and the military) is a
necessary evil, think most “experts” and university professors are no smarter
or wiser than other people, and feel only contempt for the gender theorists and
the social justice warriors of the contemporary classroom.
Virtually everything about progressive politics today is about liquidating the Jacksonian influence in American life. From immigration policy, touted as ending the era when American whites were the population of the United States, to gun policy and to regulatory policy, President Obama and his coalition aim to crush what Jacksonians love, empower what they fear, and exalt what they hate.
Virtually everything about progressive politics today is about liquidating the Jacksonian influence in American life. From immigration policy, touted as ending the era when American whites were the population of the United States, to gun policy and to regulatory policy, President Obama and his coalition aim to crush what Jacksonians love, empower what they fear, and exalt what they hate.
Jacksonian
America is many things; well organized isn’t one of them. Jacksonians are found
in both political parties; most are habitually indifferent to national
politics, seeing all politicians as equally corrupt, equally useless. Other
than the NRA, there are not many national organizations organized around the
promotion of a Jacksonian agenda. In the world of think tanks and elite media,
the Jacksonian voice is seldom heard and never heeded.
It is
hard for Jacksonians to mobilize politically. Neither party really embraces a
Jacksonian agenda. Combining a suspicion of Wall Street, a hatred of the
cultural left, a love of middle class entitlement programs, and a fear of free
trade, Jacksonian America has problems with both Republican and Democratic
agendas. Any Jacksonian political movement will start as a party insurgency,
and the Jacksonians will on the whole be less well funded, less experienced and
less institutionally powerful than their party opponents. Jacksonians are
neither liberal nor conservative in the ways that political elites use those
terms; they are radically egalitarian, radically pro-middle class, radically
patriotic, radically pro-Social Security. They are not, under normal
circumstances, joiners in politics; they are individualists who organize in
response to threats, and their individualism goes to their stands on what outsiders
sometimes think are the social issues that unite them.
Many
Jacksonians, for example, are not evangelicals and not even Christian at all.
While some are strongly anti-abortion, others believe that individual freedom
makes abortion nobody’s business but their own. Some stand strongly behind the
drug war; many indulge in recreational drugs and some Jacksonians grow or
manufacture them, much like the moonshiners who have been evading ‘revenuers’
since the Washington administration.
There’s
another obstacle in the face of a Jacksonian rising: Jacksonians have been hard
hit by the changes in the American economy. The secure working class wages that
underpinned two generations of rising affluence for the white (and minority)
industrial working class have disappeared. That isn’t just about money; the
coherence of Jacksonian communities and family life has been seriously
impaired. These are the points Charles Murray makes in his harrowing Coming Apart: The State of White America,1960-2010; they have been recently reinforced by studies documenting a
holocaust of lower and lower middle class whites.
These
devastating changes, utterly ignored by an upper middle class intellectual and
cultural establishment that not so secretly hopes for a demographic change in
America that will finally marginalize uncredentialed white people once and for
all, make Jacksonians angry and frustrated, but they also make it harder to
develop an organized political strategy in response to some of the worst and
most dangerous conditions faced by any major American demographic group today.
Strong in numbers (though not a majority), awakening to a new sense of anger
and endangerment, Jacksonians are still groping for a movement and a program.
What we
are seeing in American politics today is a Jacksonian surge. It is not yet a
revolution on the scale of Old Hickory’s movement that transformed American
politics for a generation. Such a revolution may not be possible in today’s
America, and in any case the current wave of Jacksonian activism and
consciousness is still in an early and somewhat incoherent phase. In the past,
moderate leaders on the center left and center right alike have found ways to
capture Jacksonian energy. FDR was able to steal the demagogic energy of Huey
Long; Richard Nixon marginalized George Wallace even as he responded to some of
Wallace’s concerns about bussing and crime. (He did not, however, give way to
Wallace on the core issue of racial equality.)
Donald
Trump, for now, is serving as a kind of blank screen on which Jacksonians
project their hopes. Proposing himself as a strong leader who “gets” America
but is above party, Trump appeals to Jacksonian ideas about leadership. Trump’s Jacksonian appeal has left the Republican Party in deep disarray, demonstrating
the gulf between contemporary conservative ideology and Jacksonian nationalism.
Indeed, one of the reasons that Trump hasn’t been hurt by attacks that
highlight his lack of long term commitment to the boilerplate conservative
agenda (either in the social or economic conservative variant) is that
Jacksonian voters are less dogmatic and less conservative than some of their
would-be political representatives care to acknowledge. Jacksonians like Social
Security and Medicare much more than most Republican intellectuals, and they
like immigration and free trade much less.
Whatever
happens to the Trump candidacy, it now seems clear that Jacksonian America is
rousing itself to fight for its identity, its culture and its primacy in a
country that it believes it should own. Its cultural values have been traduced,
its economic interests disregarded, and its future as the center of gravity of
American political life is under attack. Overseas, it sees traditional rivals
like Russia, China, North Korea and Iran making headway against a President
that it distrusts; more troubling still, in ISIS and jihadi terror it sees the
rapid spread of a movement aiming at the mass murder of Americans. Jacksonian
America has lost all confidence in the will or the ability of the political
establishment to fight the threats it sees abroad and at home. It wants what it
has always wanted: to take its future into its own hands.
The
biggest story in American politics today is this: Andrew Jackson is mad as
hell, and he’s not going to take it anymore.