By David Marcus
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
In an interview with CNN’s Van Jones this weekend,
Democratic Sen. Kristen Gillibrand was asked if it was a problem that a recent
poll shows three white men are leading for the 2020 presidential nomination.
Her answer, which grabbed headlines, was a blunt “Yes,” and drew a laugh from
Jones.
Gillibrand explained her answer a bit, but only in very
broad terms. She talked about the importance of Barack Obama’s first black
presidency, then said, ““I aspire for our country to recognize the beauty of
our diversity in some point in the future and I hope some day we have a woman
president.”
This answer seems to indicate that at the moment
Democratic voters don’t recognize the beauty of our diversity. Their top three
choices — former senator Joe Biden, socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders, and kinda
almost senator Beto O’Rourke — represent in Gillibrand’s view an electorate
that has not advanced to a full understanding of equality and diversity.
This take seems a bit harsh to Democratic voters, whom by
the way Gillibrand may be wooing for her own run at the Oval Office. There are
good reasons these three are the current
leaders. Biden was vice president, Sanders came in second for the nomination
last time, and O’Rourke has received the most celebratory media coverage since
the Beatles came to America.
There’s also the fact that the last time the Democrats
nominated a white man was in 2004. Granted, all the ones before that were white
men, but over the past two decades it’s been a different set. Democrats elected
a record number of women into office in 2018 and are handing the gavel back to
the first woman to be speaker of the House. So is it really a problem that the
three leaders for the nomination are white men?
There are two basic ways to address this question. The
first is electoral, and the second is ideological. From the point of view of
pure voting math, there are good arguments for and against a white male
candidate. Proponents would say that it could help in Trump’s forgotten
America. Detractors would argue that today’s Democratic Party must mirror the
Obama coalition and pump up minority turnout.
A third option exists: most voters care far less about a
candidate’s race and sex than most in the media and on the far left think they
do, and it won’t matter very much at all. In looking at all of these electoral
possibilities, it doesn’t seem accurate to say that fielding a white male
candidate is a problem for Democrats.
That leaves the ideological problem as the one that is
truly at issue here. It isn’t merely symbolic. Sure, somebody not white or male
polling over 10 percent would be the kind of PR win Democrats got with the
photos of their wave of new female legislators. But for many Democrats,
apparently including Gillibrand, equal representation on the basis of race and
sex really does go beyond campaign narrative and is a driving principle of the
party itself.
Many Democrats feel a pressure that if they talk the talk
they must walk the walk. Institutions diversify when they decide to do so
intentionally, when they decide to make people’s identifiers of sex, race, etc.
a key component in hiring, publishing, and promoting. This is not necessarily a
bad thing. Even Mitt Romney once famously asked for binders full of women
because he wanted more of them serving in his administration.
But in general it is Democrats who favor more aggressive
quota policies in forms like affirmative action. While conservatives at least
in rhetoric focus on the importance of equal opportunity, progressives focus on
equal outcomes. From this perspective, the unequal outcome of three white men
sitting atop the polls must be the result of bias or discrimination in the
system.
If Democrats really do think they have a problem, there
are things they can do as an institution to ameliorate the situation. The party
could aggressively set quota goals for elected offices. It could take race and
sex into account for levels of candidate support. In all likelihood, soft forms
of this kind of thing probably are happening. In some sense, the core identity
of the Democratic Party today is that it is diverse and inclusive, so maybe it really
is a problem for them that only white men are scoring significantly in their
presidential polls.
The political calculus that the Democratic Party and
progressives in general must think about is how far they want to push the
agenda of decreasing white men’s power. Jones’ laugh and Gillibrand’s reaction
seemed to show that they both thought she was saying something radical, or at
least something that pushes boundaries.
Frankly, in the context of modern progressive thought and
its influence on the Democratic Party, this was not a particularly radical
thing to say. But in the context of presidential politics and the centrist
smoothing of the Electoral College, it may be. There is a risk that many voters
will look at conversations like the one between Gillibrand and Jones and at
best roll their eyes, at worst accuse them of divisiveness, or even racism or
sexism.
Over the next year and a half, Democrats not only have to
find the person who can beat Donald Trump, they must find the one who can do so
while representing and defining the values of their party. I deeply hope that a
candidate’s race and sex plays an insignificant role, if any, in judging his or
her fitness. But what we are hearing from Democrats lately makes me wonder if
that will be the case.
No comments:
Post a Comment