All American Presidents are elected on a platform of hope and change. Each arrives in Washington promising to be, in the words of George W Bush, "a uniter not a divider". But few took possession of the White House quite as heavily weighed down by the burden of expectation as Barack Hussein Obama. The hopes that accompanied Obama's election were so extravagant that it became all but inevitable that the 44th President would prove a disappointment once the campaign ended and the torturous business of government began.
Even by that standard, however, Obama's first year in office could be considered under-whelming. His approval rating, once comfortable, has hovered around the 50% mark for months and there is a growing sense that the President is not the transformative figure he once promised to be. Scott Brown's victory in Massachusetts was the last straw for a Presidency that, pundits tell us, is now all but doomed.
Despite that, the headline figures are misleading. According to one recent poll the President is popular in most of the country. In the north-east, more than 80% of voters approve of his performance. In the midwest 62% of voters have a favourable view of Obama and so do 59% of voters in the west. Only the south bucks this trend. There, 67% of the electorate has an unfavourable view of the President. There are still, as John Edwards would put it, "Two Americas" and Barack Obama's popularity in one is matched, almost exactly, by the scale of his unpopularity in the other.
Among the many consequences of Obama's victory is this: the south has been humbled. For the first time in decades southerners are almost entirely excluded from senior administration positions and the Congressional leadership. For half a century the south (including Texas) and the west have dominated the White House; Obama is perhaps the first President elected since John F Kennedy who has no relationship with, or instinctive sympathy for, the white working class culture of the south that has been a dominant influence on American political life. It is unsurprising, then, that his Presidency has reopened and renewed America's Culture wars. With a vengeance.
The populist backlash against Obama is startling. A survey of local Republican party officials provides an intriguing look into the hearts and minds of the conservative movement's foot soldiers. Asked "What is the most worrisome part of Barack Obama's presidency?" one Virginia county chairman warns, "It appears the president is preparing to become dictator." Another local party chief shudders that "Without question the country has elected a Marxist that hates capitalism and liberty". Another declares that "This guy is pushing an unconstitutional, socialist agenda and I never see it mentioned." It is but a short hop from these sentiments to the "Birther" movement that questions whether Obama was even born in the United States and, thus, eligible for the Presidency.
Such views have been disseminated and fanned on the internet and, especially, Fox News. Rupert Murdoch's channel has become, by the standards of cable news, a ratings powehouse as it becomes a kind of unofficial opposition to the White House. Its most popular prsenter, Glenn Beck, airs nightly rants about the looming marxist takeover of america. Channelling Howard Beale in Network, he reminds the American people that they should be mad as hell and asks how much longer they're prepared to put up with the steady encroachment of Big Government power. There is, he suggests, an agenda to destroy the United States as they have been known and loved by all right-thinking, red-blooded patriots.
The facile assumption is that race explains the fury of the populist backlash against Obama. But while it would be foolish to suppose that race has no bearing on these matters, it is an insufficient explanation for alienation felt by many conservatives. This alienation is most keenly felt in an arc that swings from the Appalachian mountains in the east to the Ozarks in the west. These, broadly speaking, are the only parts of the country in which John McCain won by wider margins than George W Bush had in 2004. Culture, as much as race, helps explain Obama's unpopularity amongst white voters in south-west Virginia, western North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas. White voters in these areas voted for McCain in much the same numbers as they voted for Ronald Reagan in 1984 when his opponent, Walter Mondale, was, like Obama, a northerner possessing impeccable liberal credentials.
These are the voters - many of them descended from Scots-Irish immigrants - who tell the US Census that, far from belonging to any "ethnic" group, they are "American-Americans". Their relationship with the political establishment in Washington is a hate-hate one that has its roots in a culture war that dates back to the founding of the Republic itself. Broadly speaking, it may be summarised as New England vs Virginia. That is, it is a tussle between the elites and the populace.
If the north has traditionally dominated business and academe, the south has had the whip hand in cultural terms. The Western, the greatest of all American cinematic genres, really began as a southern story as the Scots-Irish first spread west across the Appalachians. And while the western often glorifies a certain rugged individualism, it's also a struggle between the periphery and the centre in which the freedom of the frontier is controlled and then tamed by the civilising forces of law and order. The long arm of the state reaches all the way from Washington to the Pacific ocean and the Rio Grande. Even freedom must be regulated.
From the Whiskey Rebellion to the Know-Nothings to the reborn Militias of the 1990s, the eastern establishment has always had reason to fear the expression of a certain kind of cussed American individualism that rebels against what it sees as the encroachments of the state. The populist backlash against Obama's presidency is entirely consistent with this earlier, frequently repeated, pattern. When Obama spoke of "bitter" people (he meant working-class whites) who "cling" to their guns and their religion he all-but-guaranteed a populist revolt against his presidency.
Thomas Frank's celebrated book "What's the Matter With Kansas" complained that working class white voters voted Republican even though their economic interests were, he claimed, better represented by the Democratic party. What Frank failed to appreciate properly, was the power of the anti-government ideal and the extent to which culture trumps economics. This, for all his faults, was something Bill Clinton understood. Obama, by contrast, struggles to communicate with these voters, not least because, with some reason, they see him as an unreconstructed northern, elitist.
Unsurprisingly, now that Obama's presidency has coincided with a sharp uptick in gun sales, Richard Hofstadter's celebrated 1964 essay "The Paranoid Style in American Politics" has often been recalled in recent months. But in truth there are two, complementary, styles of paranoia in American politics: the paranoia of the outsider is matched by the paranoia of a centrist establishment that fears, and sometimes cannot abide, a certain raw and unashamed American populism that, yes, is often expressed by its commitment to the Almighty and the Second Amendment in equal measure.
This uneasy balance between the establishment and the populace is built into the Constitution itself. The House of Representatives, elected every two years, gives voice, in theory, to the passions and passing prejudices of the people; the Senate, elected on a six year cycle, is designed to cool and even douse those passions. But with Democrats controlling both houses of Congress, southern conservatives have reason to feel shut-out. The concern that, somehow, the very insitutions of the state are imperilled is hardly novel. The great Kentucky Senator Henry Clay complaiend that President Andrew Jackson threatened "A total change of the pure republican character of the government and...the concentration of power in the hands of one man". Today, ironically, Jackson has become a symbol for populist government.
But the fact that Jackson still remains, more than 150 years later, the go-to President for populists is a reminder that, while populism has often prevailed in the culture wars it has rarely triumphed in the political arena. Among the many questions the Republican party is faces whether it wants to embrace populism or pragmatism. Victories in Virginia and New Jerseys's gubernatorial contests showed the merits of a problem-solving approach that downplayed social conservatism and elevated "pocket-book" issues. As in Massachusetts, local factors were an issue in each contest, but the GOP's victories owed much to their candidates emphasis on pragmatism and fiscal rectitude.
All of which is some way from the populism of a Sarah Palin which, while wildly popular within the conservative movement is actually rejected by, polls suggest, some 70% of the country. Palin is the populist candidate par exellence. She may hail from Alaska, but she appeals to what she calls "Real America". That is, the south. Her book tour didn't include Boston or San Francisco. Palinism has to a large extent captured the contemporary Republican party. Even a politician such as Mitt Romney, ideally-credentialled to run as a can-do technocrat, feels compelled to discover his inner-populist and pander to the party's nationalist base. Palinism and Fox News conservatism espouse a politics based on gut-feeling not reason. The Republican party is not divided between moderates and conservatives so much as it is split between pragmatists and ideologues.
But while a populist revolt against "government run health care" or bail-outs for Wall Street and General Motors offers ample scope for satisfying posturing and positioning, it is, in the end, a recipe for electoral defeat. It is a protest, not a platform for government. At present, however, it has captured the Republican party. Voting against Obama's health-care plans, for example, Congressman Pete Hoekstra said "I will vote no," he explained, "because that's the vote that says 'I love my country.'" A good soundbite perhaps, but not much of an alternative strategy for fixing a health care system that everyone agrees needs reform.
No-one doubts the conservative movement's patriotism, nor its current infatuation with populism. And that can, as we have seen, earn victories. But there are different types of victory: the short-term and the long-term; the illusory and the significant, th emid-term and the Presidential. The Culture Wars will always be a feature of the American political lndscape, but power in Washington tends to be won by those who transcend the culture, not those held captive by it.
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Martin Adamson
January 22nd, 2010 2:43pm Report this commentOr perhaps the Southern working class whites, rather than being the ignorant yahoos you and Thomas Frank understand them to be, are actually sophisticated enough to understand that their material, and not cultural interests are actually best served by a Reaganite low tax, low regulation, low unemployment, high growth economy. And not the stagnant, high tax, high unemployment, low opportunity, highly regulated economy that Obama is now serving them.
THX1138
January 22nd, 2010 2:46pm Report this commentWow! I travel a lot in America spending good chunks of time in NYC & LA but also regularly visiting my little brother in Tulsa OK.
America is really two countries and in my experience the two sides neither understand or like each other.. Perhaps in the long run it would be for the best if they went their separate ways, but considering "Blue" America pays for America I doubt the "Red" South could survive alone.
Sarkis Zeronian
January 22nd, 2010 2:49pm Report this commentAlex - you put two comments next to each other, albeit in separate paragraphs:
"It is but a short hop from these sentiments to the "Birther" movement that questions whether Obama was even born in the United States and, thus, eligible for the Presidency.
"Such views have been disseminated and fanned on the internet and, especially, Fox News."
-
You thus give the impression that Fox News is part of the Birther movement. Just for your information, it isn't, explicitly so. Even some of those who people may be led to expect to indulge in Birther-style conspiracy theories - Glenn Beck mainly, possibly Bill O'Reilly - have vocally derided the fools who spread them.
Craig Strachan
January 22nd, 2010 2:56pm Report this commentYes, Obama has a problem with the Scots-Irish. Massachusetts suggests he may also have a problem with the "Irish"-Irish - or with blue collar white Catholics, let's say.
That would be a problem.
Conservative Cabbie
January 22nd, 2010 4:58pm Report this commentAlex
some rather selective reading of polling going on there, and I suspect you're confusing approval and favourability when mentioning Obama's "high" ratings outside the south. Let's not forget, of those who voted in Mass. less than 50% approved of Obama's performance.
I really don't get this apologism for nationally unpopular policies, for creating a national divide, for ostracising white working class voters in favour of union and hyphen Americans. If you had been writing this article three years ago, who would you have neen blaming for the division within the country? Bush or the northern elites or Bush and the African Americans. Then of course it was all Bush's fault, now it's the white southerners fault. This stuff is nonsensical. Next, like ndm, you'll be blaming America's elderly.
In case you hadn't noticed, Obama is supposed to be the President of the United states. Not the President of inner city Detroit or the President of Harvard or Berkley. If the country is further divided, it is his own fault. As you said, Obama's administration has effectively ignored half the country. His administration has the lowest percentage of members with previous experience of industry of any previous President by far. And that's in the middle of a recession.
As for your regular attack on the GOP, you are just wrong. Recent events have not shown us that east-coast Republicanism is not ascendent against those nasty populist southerners. It has shown us what east-coast Republicanism is capable of when it is supported by the energy and the money of those nasty populist southerners. Without the conservative blogosphere raising a miliion a day for Brown, one wonders how he would have performed.
The last two days have seen the Democratic coalition falling apart with open insurrection from the nutroots against Obama. So cue another post criticising the Republican base.
You criticise Palin (again) and yet here is a politician obviously keen on the limelight but who voluntarily stayed out of the Massachusetts race. As Michael Steele was under fire, she was the only prominent politician that I saw who publically defended him, (and then it later transpires that he was doing good work in Massachusetts). At the same time, as health care reform burned following the election result, Obama dithered.
As you question the Republican response to healthcare (obviously you just expect the opposition to play dead for eight years), do you also question the Democratic blocking of Bush's judicial appointments? Would you have criticised Obama for filibustering those appointments?
Vern
January 22nd, 2010 5:47pm Report this commentJust thought I'd check in to see how you're doing Alex. And here we are, with the Democrats in total disarray and ejected from the JFK/Teddy seat and you're still talking about Sarah Palin, Republicans and Fox. Awesome!
Conservative Cabbie
January 22nd, 2010 6:31pm Report this commentAlex
just had another look at your regional numbers. I'm pretty sure I'm right; you are looking at favourables and I suspect your source is Daily kos/Research 2000 (please feel free to correct me).
Firstly, Obama's favourables are tracking about 5% higher than job approval.
secondly, Kos/Research 2000 has a house effect that favours Democrats by about 5%. They were out on the Massachusetts vote by 5% and their Obama approval number is 5% higher than the Pollster.com average.
So suddenly, lopping 10% off the numbers you gave gives Obama 52% approval in the midwest and 49% approval in the west. Slightly different to the impression you were trying to give.
Also, if you're going to argue that the angry white southerner negatively affects his approval rating, it should also be acknowledged that the loyal African-American and hispanic voter influences his approval rating upwards.
Trying to think of a better way to reflect Obama's actual popularity, I looked at his approval ratings in the larger marginal states* to get an average. This takes out both the negative southern effect and a positive northern effect and hopefully gives us a better idea where the marginal voter is.
The states I used were Ohio, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Florida, Colorado, Nevada and North Carolina. I used the pollster.com average for each state (I'd like to have included Indiana but pollster have no numbers from there). That gives him an average approval of 44.75%.
Alex Massie
January 22nd, 2010 7:26pm Report this commentConCabbie: Those regional figures do date from November - which I should have made clear. And yes, Obama's popularity has slipped since then.
But that's not really the point which was, rather, an attempt to put some of the divisions in contemporary America in some kind of historical and cultural context. Maybe that attempt was less successful than I hoped it might be. Ah well, them's the breaks...
And, just to remind some of y'all: I'm neither a Democrat nor a Republican.
Vern
January 22nd, 2010 8:46pm Report this commentAlso: you really like banging on about the Birthers, but give Andrew Sullivan, the supreme Birther in chief, a free pass, indeed massive respect.
I am kurious, Oranj.
admiller
January 22nd, 2010 9:19pm Report this commentAlex's analysis seems right on the money to me -- and I say that as someone intimately familiar with both the coastal liberal enclaves and the Ozarks.
Olaf Rye
January 22nd, 2010 11:37pm Report this commentIt is perhaps also worth adding that there are two Republican and two Democrat parties. Many of my friends and colleagues in the US were Republicans of quite a different order to Bush and his supporters, which do not necessarily reflect the ideals and beliefs of the typical Republican supporter. An immense tension exists in each party and it does have historical causes, but also expresses the political and economic priorities of different regions. Look at the late William Buckley--he was terribly uncomfortable with Bush and, indeed, Bush spoke a conservative language but often acted like a big-government Democrat. Then consider Clinton, a man that did quite the opposite. It is facile for many to merely invoke the 'Red' and 'Blue' state division, for there are many shades of grey. As a rule, though, Americans are far more sceptical about the good government can do than Europeans and there is an healthy distrust of those purporting to regulate their lives. Ultimately, they want to be left to their own devices to sink or swim which is a sentiment many Europeans feel quite is an alien outlook on life.
NHS
January 25th, 2010 3:26pm Report this commentRefreshing to read such a well-argued article based on genuine polling data. Thanks Alex - very interesting.
Philip Avon St. Cyr
February 5th, 2010 12:05pm Report this commentThank you for a well-developed article. You have convinced me it is worthwhile to add Spectator to my "Favorites" list and to visit it often.
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