Don't Pooh-Pooh Populism

In 2006, journalist Christopher Hayes wrote a little-noticed article
for In These Times magazine about a proposal in Oregon to crack down on
predatory lending. The initiative had become so popular that
conservative legislators supported it fearing that if it were put on
the state's ballot, the resulting gusher of grass-roots support would
not only ratify the measure, but depose the bank-allied Republican
Party, too.

Hayes' piece was titled "Economic Populism Proves Popular," the
headline a sarcastic middle finger flashed at a political and media
Establishment that portrays policies "supporting the rights and power
of the people" -- i.e., the dictionary definition of "populism" -- as
somehow anathema to the people.

That depiction, of course, continues today. But now, populism isn't
just popular in America; it is becoming the dominant paradigm, and that
has the Establishment frightened.

For years, the country watched its populist desire for healthcare, tax,
trade and financial reform run into the reality of elite politicians
handing out trillions of dollars' worth of corporate welfare and bank
bailouts as the economy collapsed. Not surprisingly, a new Rasmussen
poll on attitudes toward government and corporations shows 75 percent
of the country "can be classified on the populist or Mainstream side of
the divide" while just 14 percent "side with the political class."

As if to confirm the chasm, this "political class" -- consultants,
politicians, lobbyists and commentators -- has been denigrating
populism as too overwrought to be taken seriously. Listen to a typical
pundit defending AIG's bonuses or criticizing demands for a new trade
policy, and you will inevitably hear the word "populist" accompanied by
the word "rage" and/or "dangerous," followed by tributes to the status
quo.

This elite propaganda, says Georgetown University's Michael Kazin,
dismissively implies "that anger from ordinary people is emotional,
coming from people who don't understand how the economy works and are
just lashing out at their social betters."

The caricaturing cribs from Richard Nixon's playbook. Whereas the 36th
president got himself reelected by steering the country's anger at the
Vietnam War into anger at countercultural war protestors, today's
political class portrays the public's outrage as the nation's biggest
problem, rather than what the public is justifiably outraged at.

Today, though, Tricky Dick's tactics aren't working, and not just because 2009's economy is far worse than 1972's.

This
is the era when "You" are Time magazine's person of the year -- an era
whose information and interactivity revolution now has us looking to
ourselves for direction, not officialdom's gatekeepers. Additionally,
America has lately been taught to expect results from democracy. TV
viewers get to decide "American Idol" winners, Facebookers get to
change their site's bylaws, and voters get to autonomously use Obama
campaign resources to win elections -- and we get to do all this from
outside the press clubs and smoke-filled rooms.

This profound rewiring of instincts and expectations is why the
vilification of "populist rage" has failed as a political barbiturate,
why the country still seethes, and why both parties are suddenly
listening to "the people" instead of the Establishment. This is why,
for instance, Republicans are staging "Tea Party" protests against
federal spending and why Democrats are pushing bills to expand
healthcare, reregulate Wall Street and cap executive pay -- because
they know the political class, however offended, can no longer stop a
voter backlash.

Admittedly, contradiction is everywhere: Republican rallies bewail
deficits the GOP manufactured, and Democrats lament deregulatory
schemes they originally crafted. But no matter how hypocritical the
response is, it is
a response, and that represents change from decades of aloof
government. It suggests a democratic renewal whereby populism -- i.e.,
advocating what the public wants -- isn't merely one popular brand of
politics, but is politics itself.

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