Real Time with Bill Maher, November 11, 2016. Video. HBO. YouTube.
Saturday, November 12, 2016
Walter Russell Mead on U.S. Foreign Policy Under President Trump.
Walter Russell Mead on U.S. Foreign Policy Under President Trump. Video. PolicyExchangeUK, November 11, 2016. YouTube. Also at The American Interest.
Donald Trump’s Jacksonian Revolt. By Walter Russell Mead.
Andrew Jackson with the Tennessee Forces on the Hickory Grounds, 1814. Library of Congress. |
Donald Trump’s Jacksonian Revolt. By Walter Russell Mead. Wall Street Journal, November 11, 2016.
Mead:
Andrew Jackson’s brand of populism—nationalist, egalitarian, individualistic—remains one of the most powerful forces in American politics.
Andrew Jackson’s brand of populism—nationalist, egalitarian, individualistic—remains one of the most powerful forces in American politics.
The
election of Donald Trump was a surprise and an upset, but the movement that he
rode to the presidency has deep roots in American history. Mr. Trump’s
strongest supporters are the 21st-century heirs of a political tendency that
coalesced in the early 1820s around Andrew Jackson.
Old
Hickory has been the despair of well-bred and well-educated Americans ever
since he defeated the supremely gifted John Quincy Adams in the 1828
presidential election. Jackson’s brand of populism—nationalist, egalitarian,
individualistic—remains one of the most powerful forces in American politics.
The Republican Party’s extraordinary dominance in this election demonstrates
just how costly the Democrats’ scornful rejection of “hillbilly populism” has
been.
Jacksonian
culture can be traced to the 18th-century migration of Scots-Irish settlers to
the colonial backwoods and hill country. Some Jacksonians have long been
Democrats; some have long been Republicans. They are not a well-organized
political force, and their influence on American politics, while profound, is
often diffuse.
The
folk ideology of Jacksonian America does not line up well with either liberal
or conservative dogma. Jacksonians have never been deficit hawks when it comes
to government spending on the middle class. In the 19th century, they
enthusiastically supported populist land policies culminating in the Homestead
Act, which gave out western farm land for free. Today, Jacksonians support
middle-class entitlements such as Social Security and Medicare, even as they
remain suspicious of policies and benefits seen as supporting the poor. They do
not, on the whole, approve of free trade.
Jacksonians
are often libertarian when it comes to everyday life. While many of them
support tough drug laws, some are recreational drug users. Jacksonian farmers
participated in the Whiskey Rebellion against federal excise taxes on alcohol
in the 18th century, and Jacksonians today still view tax collectors and
federal agents with skepticism and hostility. One issue that largely unites
Jacksonian opinion is gun control. Jacksonians often view the Second Amendment
as the foundation of American liberty, ensuring the rights of a free people
against overreaching government.
On
race, Jacksonians have been slow to accept change. Their conception of
America’s folk community has not historically included African-Americans. While
a small fringe of violent racists and “white nationalists” seeks to revive old
Jacksonian racist attitudes, Jacksonian America today is much more open to
nonwhite and non-Anglo cultures.
Now
their bitterness is directed primarily against illegal immigration and Islam,
which they see as culturally and politically incompatible with their conception
of American values. Jacksonians have come a long way from Jim Crow, but they
still resent their tax money being spent to help the urban poor, and they
overwhelming support both the death penalty and tough police tactics against
violent criminals.
As for
foreign policy, Jacksonians are motivated by threats. When other countries are
not threatening the U.S., Jacksonians prefer a course of “live and let live.”
They believe in honoring alliance commitments but are not looking for
opportunities for military interventions overseas and do not favor grandiose
plans for nation-building and global transformation.
In war,
the fiery patriotism of Jacksonians has been America’s secret weapon. After
Pearl Harbor, Jacksonian America roused to fight the Nazis and Japan. After
9/11, Jacksonians were eager to do the same in the Middle East, particularly
after they were told that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. When
Iraq turned out not to be such a threat, Jacksonians felt betrayed.
Many of
them voted for President Barack Obama in 2008 out of disillusion with the
neoconservative agenda of war and democracy activism. Mr. Trump’s criticisms of
the Iraq war and President George W. Bush struck a chord in Jacksonian America.
When
war does come, Jacksonians believe in victory at any and all costs. Jacksonian
opinion has never regretted the atomic attacks against Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
In a war of self-defense, Jacksonian opinion recognizes no limits on the proper
use of force by the U.S.
Social
scientists and urban intellectuals have been predicting the death of Jacksonian
America since the turn of the 20th century. Urbanization and immigration were
the forces that observers like Woodrow Wilson and Walter Lippmann hoped would
transform American popular culture into something less antagonistic to the rule
of technocratic intellectuals ensconced in a powerful federal bureaucracy. This
did not work out as planned.
It is
too simple to say that economic discontent was responsible for the political
insurrection that over the past year has upended the Bush and Clinton dynasties
as well as the Republican establishment and Democratic electoral hopes. When
liberal politicians talk eagerly about a future where whites will no longer be
the majority in the U.S., Jacksonians hear a declaration of war, a plan to deprive
them of power in their own country. Democratic support for identity politics
among every group in the country except for heterosexual white males has
strengthened a sense among Jacksonians, both male and female, that their values
and their identity are under determined attack.
How
President-elect Trump will channel Jacksonian frustrations into policies
remains unclear. Whatever happens, though, Mr. Trump’s election sends a signal
that leaders and citizens at home and abroad cannot ignore: Andrew Jackson is
still the most important figure in American politics, and any political party
that pours contempt on Jacksonian values risks a shocking rebuke at the hands
of the voters.
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