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Kathianne
08-04-2016, 05:54 PM
I know my thoughts on 'the electorate' are forever changed. It depresses me, as I've always had faith that 'the people' would eventually make things right. No more. Instead of rejecting the super executive, one side wants to upend; the other wants to continue. Same coin, different sides.

http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/438689/american-voters-lose-faith-democracy?utm_source=NR&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=August4McLaughlin


Pew: The Voters Lose Faith In The Voters by DAN MCLAUGHLIN August 4, 2016 2:24 PM

https://www.nationalreview.com/sites/default/files/pew%20poll%20loss%20of%20faith.jpg


Of all the polls taken this year, this nugget from a Pew Research survey in March is maybe the most fundamentally depressing, and its pessimism now seems hard to argue with. Pew found that a solid majority of voters in both parties had confidence in the voting public in October 1997 (after both Bill Clinton and the Newt Gingrich-led Republican Congress were re-elected) and again in January 2007 (well into George W. Bush’s unpopular and unsuccessful second term, and just after the Pelosi-Reid Democrats swept to control of Congress). Those were days of intense partisanship and a lot of discontent with electoral outcomes from each party, and discontent as well with both united and divided government – yet between 58% and 69% of voters in each party still had faith that the American electorate gets it right over the long haul. (Arguably, that faith was sustained in part by Republicans who saw the Clinton years as an illegitimate plurality government and Democrats who saw Bush as “selected, not elected” after losing the popular vote in 2000).

After eight years of Obama and the rise of Donald Trump, that faith is gone. In polls in late 2015 and March 2016, nearly two-thirds of voters expressed “little or no confidence in the public’s political wisdom.” Only 40% of Trump supporters had faith in the voting public, and it got worse from there, down to 27% among Bernie Sanders supporters. Thus, the problem is not just disenchantment with a single partisan outcome, although clearly Republican voters have decided that the majority who voted for Obama are hopeless, and the rise of Trump reinforced Democratic voter views of GOP voters.

Frankly, part of the problem is not just bad results; it’s also that we’ve had a whole cottage industry – especially on the left side of the spectrum, but not exclusively – now devoted to demonizing the other side’s voting base. It wasn’t always like this, especially not back in the 1980s when both parties relied on ticket-splitting voters like the “Reagan Democrats.” The red/blue maps of 2000 hardened the view that we were not just a country with two different camps of politicians, but a country divided between two irreconcilable tribes of people. (Pew’s latest emphasizes how few Clinton voters, in particular, even know anyone in the other tribe). Pollsters like PPP regularly turn out “troll polls” designed to generate headlines about how stupid and bigoted Republican voters are. Blogs and Twitter encourage “nutpicking,” the use of things written by the worst people on the other side to discredit them. We’ve taken Winston Churchill’s maxim that “the best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter” to its logical extreme.

I’m as disenchanted as anyone with the last three presidential election cycles, but this is unhealthy and dangerous direction. The Founding Fathers designed our representative democracy knowing full well that people can be terrible, stupid, self-interested and hateful; their goal was to balance out the flaws of small groups of people and short periods of time by spreading out the electorate to encompass a nation too big for any one faction and creating ’speed bumps’ in the system that require sustained popular will rather than passing popular enthusiasms before one side can take full control of the agenda. This is the conservative way: get the largest possible sample size before translating popular opinion into lasting change. The prevalance of bad leaders should only encourage us to make those checks and balances stronger, rather than weaker, rather than losing our trust in the system. Yet there’s also an important truth here that Washington and Adams remarked upon: if the voters are truly debased, no system can protect us from ourselves.

There are many causes to our drift into hyper-partisan tribalism that now – in the Year of Trump, when the Democrats’ message is Vote for the Crook – seems shorn even of ideological content. I maintain that the largest of all is the massive growth in the Supreme Court’s power over issues that were once decided democratically at the local or state level, represented most dramatically by Roe v. Wade. The Court, of course, has for decades now been subject to no external checks and resolves issues on a winner-take-all basis without compromise. Given its control over cultural issues as the spoils of quadrennial presidential elections, the long tenure of its Justices and the permanent and nationwide nature of its decisions, this encourages and exacerbates the view that every national election is a fight for absolute power to Do Unto Others Or Get Done Unto You – to gain absolute authority over who may marry or own guns or attend college or publish political ads or adhere to their religious faith. It is no wonder that such a system of government creates a lot of losers who feel embittered and disenfranchised at the process and at the neighbors near or far who foisted those outcomes on them.

jimnyc
08-04-2016, 06:00 PM
"Public's political wisdom"

There may have been a day that this had some truth to it. Now, I believe a lot of our problems are because we have effing idiots voting. Some may even say I am one of them. But then I think of Pelosi, Sheila Jackson Lee, Reid, Boxer, Rangel.... the list goes on. SOMEONE repeatedly voted for these people.

Kathianne
08-04-2016, 06:27 PM
"Public's political wisdom"

There may have been a day that this had some truth to it. Now, I believe a lot of our problems are because we have effing idiots voting. Some may even say I am one of them. But then I think of Pelosi, Sheila Jackson Lee, Reid, Boxer, Rangel.... the list goes on. SOMEONE repeatedly voted for these people.

There's plenty of research results on the power of incumbency which explains some of the above. Then there are the candidates of representation-some of these folks seem to actually reflect their constituents. On a national office though? That is where mass stupidity or something comes into play. Saw it with Obama, in spite of all the bad results of 1st term, he was re-elected. Couldn't blame 'the wonder of the 1st black' anymore. Nope.

Now we see it in both parties.

To very different degrees the electorate allowed themselves to be played by media and candidates. Bernie hadn't a chance, while the media is 'left' they are much more lapdogs to those in power. Clinton is Power with P. So they reported on Bernie's big crowds, played up the youth cult. Then turned and backed the superdelegates and the problems that would come from trying to upset the convention.

Likewise, the media wanted Trump to be the nominee. They don't provide all the ink nor facetime for fun. Nope. Selling papers, advertising, ratings. Then there was their real desire to elect Hillary. Boom.

They used the whole 'outider' meme for Bernie and Trump. Watched Bernie make a race of sorts, knowing the superdelegates were in the bag. On Trump, they really did want him, as the one to go up against Hillary. Once they caught onto the Jeb is going 'no where' and Trump branded him and seriously started building his following, it was all Trump, all the time. The media barely covered the Democrat primary debates, but covered Trump's 'victories' for days. The numbers grew and more able candidates could not be heard. His antics took up all the debates and airtime for others was non-existent, with the exception of Cruz on Hannity, when asked about Trump. He always agreed with Hannity that Trump was just wonderful. Until he wasn't. Then he too was no longer getting air time.

Now that the media has their two, everyone should be happy, no? That they are now going after Trump, just shows the predictable bias of the MSM. No one should be surprised.

aboutime
08-04-2016, 07:21 PM
The Politicians from BOTH political parties KNOW, and ENDORSE the poor education, and lack of information retention by the voters who constantly put them in office.
The Democrats demagogue to their INTENTIONALLY, EDUCATIONALLY HANDICAPPED voters with promises that have been made every year since LBJ created the GREAT SOCIETY in the 60's. And to this day...in 2016. The same IGNORANT Americans vote for the Liars who promise everything to get elected..then they forget the people who put them there.