By David Harsanyi
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
In a recent Washington
Post column, “We
must weed out ignorant Americans from the electorate,” I argued that voters
should have to take the civics test portion of the citizenship exam before
being allowed to vote.
As you can probably imagine, the headline alone incited
some histrionic criticisms. Most of them inadvertently confirming just how
little many in the media really think about the American electorate and our
democratic institutions.
What we do know is that nearly every study conducted on
voter knowledge finds a big chunk of the electorate understands next to nothing
about American governance. To varying degrees, this is what allows Hillary
Clinton, Donald Trump, and other platitude-spewing populists to lean on
identity, anger, grievances, empathy, and jealousy rather than policy.
A democracy without knowledge corrodes the republic. And
that’s exactly how elites like it.
If you dare blame the voters for the state of the union,
you will be accused of harboring racist or elitist feelings, depending on
whether you’re talking to a liberal or a Trump supporter. Neither makes sense.
Me: Ignorant people shouldn’t vote!
Them: I can’t believe you’re saying African
Americans shouldn’t be able to vote, racist!
Do all the snarky critics who contend I was being
implicitly racist realize they’re arguing blacks are less capable than whites of passing a simple civics test? Are they saying
the citizenship test is racist, as well? If so, which questions are
problematic? And how did millions of poor non-white prospective citizens pass
the same test?
Do they really believe that asking voters to name one right protected under the First
Amendment is only a small step away from advocating for the return of Jim Crow?
Despite the best effort of Byron York — and many others —
to conflate a civics test with a poll tax, there is no Bull Conner barring the
in Internet door, prohibiting Americans from taking a couple of hours out of
their lives to learn that we have three branches of government. This
development should be celebrated, not muffled with cheap historical analogies.
If we do concede that the average African American or
white working-class voter can’t pass such a test, or that such a test will have
consequentially disparate outcomes (and I don’t know if any of that’s true),
then we have a serious problem. It isn’t a test problem, it’s a knowledge
problem. In this golden age of information, 32 percent of Americans can’t
identify the Supreme Court as one of the three branches of the federal
government, yet we’re advocating they Rock the Vote. It’s irresponsible.
It was amusing, however, to see liberals argue that
nothing should ever inhibit an American from exercising his constitutional
rights. Now, of course, many of them have no reservations about inhibiting gun
ownership or demanding political groups register with the IRS and meet a whole
list of demands before practicing their right of free expression. But
advocating for a simple civics test — that you can take as many times as
necessary — is tantamount to a military junta.
Me: Ignorant people shouldn’t vote!
Them: I can’t believe you’re saying the working
class is too dumb to vote, you elitist!
When I wrote the piece, I was thinking about those who
cheered on Barack Obama’s executive abuse. I was also thinking about Hillary
Clinton’s corruption. I was thinking about everything Bernie Sanders says. I
was thinking about George Bush’s attacks on federalism. Mostly, though, I was
thinking about the cult of Trump — the people who applaud his attacks on free
speech and separation of powers and embrace his identity politics.
Trump fans have assured me that his voters are the
smartest and best educated in America, so I’m unsure why they were offended by
the piece. It’s not elitism, after all.
Being well-informed about government doesn’t necessarily
make you smarter than your neighbor. You may have gone to better schools, had
more attentive parents, etc., but there are working-class Americans who have a
keen understanding of their vocations, communities, and faith. Some possess an
intuitive feel for the world or an emotional IQ that gives them greater insight
into the human condition than an educated, aristocratic voter.
But so what? If they’re willing to support a candidate
who promises to deport 11 million people for contaminating the purity of
American citizenship, they should be able to pass a simple civics test.
When the next swindler promises them a shiny new object,
voters might be better equipped to recognize the absurdity of it all.
Now, with that said, there’s something I didn’t mention
in The Washington Post article that I
thought was pretty obvious: It’s not
going to happen.
There will never be a voting test in our lifetime. Never. So yes, James Taranto, it’s
unlikely such a proposal would pass judicial scrutiny. A person can argue that
abortion is immoral, even if he knows abortion is protected by the courts. And
a person can genuinely believe that instituting a basic, unalterable civics
exam for voters is a good idea and simultaneously understand it is improbable.
Others can sidestep that debate.
If there were a voting test, political organizations
might be incentivized to spend billions teaching prospective voters the answers
to the test. And when the next swindler promises them a shiny new object,
voters might be just a little better equipped to recognize the absurdity of it
all. Or maybe a test wouldn’t substantively change the dynamics of the
electorate at all. I’m willing to concede that there are plenty of good
arguments against it that go beyond vacuous accusations of elitism and racism.
Noah Rothman at Commentary
offered a thoughtful pushback. Ilya Somin — whose book “Democracy and Political
Ignorance: Why Smaller Government Is Smarter” along with Bryan Caplan’s “The
Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies” are must reads
for anyone interested contemporary democracy — also makes a strong case:
While I am sympathetic to
Harsanyi’s idea, I ultimately cannot support it because I doubt that a
real-world government can be trusted to implement it without bias. … Even if
the test can be structured in such a way as to avoid racial or ethnic bias
(which is by no means certain), it is unlikely to avoid bias against the
opponents of those in power.
I’m unsure why the test would ever need to be changed.
The Constitution does not change. History does not change. I’ve can’t find any
substantive complaints about the test being biased. It is true that the
powerful will typically find a way to manipulate the system. They manipulate it
best when people have no clue how it works. And the today’s political class —
right and left — seems very comfortable with this arrangement.
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