Why populism and liberalism don't mix in American politics
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  Why populism and liberalism don't mix in American politics
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Author Topic: Why populism and liberalism don't mix in American politics  (Read 326 times)
All Along The Watchtower
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« on: October 16, 2013, 01:43:08 AM »
« edited: October 16, 2013, 01:45:42 AM by Progressive Realist »

Some on the liberal/Left of the American political spectrum have argued that more populism is needed in American politics. But the problem with this thinking is that populism isn't an ideology, but is rather, expression of the dominant ideology and cultural norms of the "common people", however defined. And the "common people" of populism are inevitably the dominant social and cultural groups, in America and elsewhere.

This is part of why populism in the modern United States trend toward the right-wing in form;  the white, suburban, middle-class, Christian, nuclear family model that has dominated America's mass cultural imagination since the Cold War (nevermind that it was never really a reality, the ideal was what was important) is something that the Right can implicitly and reflexively point to as something for the "real Americans" to "take back."

Liberals, for their part, mostly recognize the Right's populist appeals for what they are; silliness at best, demagoguery at worst. Yet liberals by their nature can't really appeal to "the masses"  in terms of cultural credibility, because liberals tend to focus their appeals to "the masses" on individual economic self-interest-which is just not good enough for the vast majority of people (Liberals also don't help matters when they call ordinary people stupid, ignorant, uneducated, etc....)

So liberalism by its nature is generally anti-populist. I suppose you could point to the rare FDR or whomever who could connect with common people while being surrounded by technocratic liberal intellectuals. But given that the labor movement is essentially dead in the United States, there's simply no way of bridging the gap between liberalism and populism these days.

(Thanks to Nathan for inspiring me to write this post).




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H. Ross Peron
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« Reply #1 on: October 16, 2013, 01:50:52 AM »

That is why a form of liberalism or progressivism that is "national" in character is needed (rather then one based on identity politics), that is to say one that concentrates on economic issues while taking a liberal stance on social issues but one not based on identity politics and embracing nationalist and patriotic rhetoric much as Teddy Roosevelt did along with a liberalism that prides itself on meeting national objectives such as building a high speed rail system or becoming energy independent via nuclear power. 
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