By Kevin D. Williamson
Monday, November 26, 2018
Some of my conservative friends are mystified by the
apparently enduring appeal of Robert Francis O’Rourke, a.k.a. “Beto,” the
faux-Hispanic progressive from El Paso who failed to unseat conservative
stalwart Senator Ted Cruz in spite of a flood of money and a tsunami of media
adulation. “He lost, didn’t he?” they
ask, perplexed.
There is an answer to this riddle: snobbery.
The Democratic party is the political home of snobbery, a word and a concept often
misunderstood. Snobbery does not
refer to the cultivated preferences of those refined persons who order the ’82
Bordeaux because it is their mothers’ milk or who have an iTunes library full
of Liszt because the sound of Cardi B fills them with discomfort and anxiety.
The genuinely refined — particularly those cocooned by wealth — usually are not
much interested in the enthusiasms or tastes of others, whereas the snob is
obsessed with his own discernment relative to the low and vulgar tastes of
those around him. The snob is the kind of man who sees a pair of Wranglers and
sneers at the life he imagines they represent: $42,000 a year, tract house,
SUV, work boots, Garth Brooks, Donald Trump. The snob isn’t a man of exacting
tastes, but a poseur: The word derives from an older English word for a
shoemaker’s apprentice and is intended to convey contempt for vulgar social
climbers who aped the manners and tastes of the upper classes.
There is a peculiar paradox at the heart of modern
progressivism: Progressives, especially Democratic candidates for office, claim
to speak for the poor, the low-income, the marginalized, those born and raised
without the benefits and (inevitable word) privilege of a Bush or a Romney or a
McCain. But, at the same time, there is nothing they hate worse than somebody
who comes from such a background entering public life: You’ll recall the
sneering at Sarah Palin’s education — six years spread out over four colleges,
none of them very good ones. There are many good criticisms to be made of Sarah
Palin and the shtick into which she eventually sank, but she is a self-made
woman who entered public service in one of the least glamorous and least
lucrative ways, as mayor of a small city — as thankless a job as there is in
elected office. She was ridiculed as a “snowbilly” and worse.
And who was doing the ridiculing? There are eight schools
in the Ivy League, but pare that down to the two most famous institutions:
Harvard and Yale. You would have to go back to Walter Mondale to encounter a
Democratic presidential candidate who did not have an affiliation with one or
the other. The Republicans have their share of Ivy Leaguers, too, including
Donald Trump of Penn and Mitt Romney of Harvard Law. But you’d have to go back
only to John McCain (and Bob Dole before him) to exit the Ivies. Dan Quayle was
mocked for his night-school law degree, sometimes by reporters who could barely
spell their own names; Richard Nixon was condescended to by the Harvard elite
he hated so intensely; Ronald Reagan’s education at Eureka College was held up
for scorn.
I myself am an unapologetic elitist; I am only pointing
out the contradiction.
John Kennedy, young and handsome and Harvard-educated,
arguably marked the beginning of Democratic politics as snobbery-by-proxy — “no
class,” he famously said of Richard Nixon, a man born in a house his father
built with his own hands. But, for many years after Camelot, the Democratic
party remained dominated by bring-home-the-bacon politicians of the
once-familiar kind, dairy-state organized-labor candidates like Mondale and
Hubert Humphrey (both graduates of the University of Minnesota), and agrarian
liberals like George McGovern (of Dakota Wesleyan University) and, probably
most significant, Lyndon Johnson (of Southwest Texas State Teachers’ College).
Then came the Harvard-Yale parade: Bill Clinton, Al Gore, John Kerry, Barack
Obama, Hillary Rodham Clinton — and, very likely, Elizabeth Warren (Harvard
Law), Cory Booker (Yale Law), Amy Klobuchar (Yale), etc.
In Oliver Stone’s fever-dream Nixon, the embattled president stands in front of the famous
portrait of the martyr John F. Kennedy, which he addresses with a mix of
bitterness, self-pity, and awe: “When they look at you, they see what they want
to be. When they look at me, they see what they are.” That is exactly right. As
the American presidency becomes ever-more caesaropapist — even as the
government over which the chief magistrate presides becomes ever-more
dysfunctional — the presidency is no longer about what we used to
conventionally understand as politics.
Instead, the president has become a totem, an object of popular veneration who
supposedly embodies who we are.
The progressive mourning of the passing of the Obama era
is rarely if ever about policies or decisions coming out of the Oval Office but
about what progressives thought they saw of themselves in the mirror of his
public persona: “President
Barack Obama, a model of grace, dignity, and class, will be missed”; “The
Obamas were a master class in dignity and civility”; “I
will remember President Obama for his dignity”; “We’ll
miss grace, dignity of Obama family.”
The people to whom Democrats condescend express similar
feelings about Sarah Palin and Donald Trump, who are lionized for standing up
to that condescension.
Which brings us back to Señor O’Rourke, the most
oleaginous, condescending, and sanctimonious man in American politics at the
moment. He talks a good man-of-the-people game, as most progressives do, but
who he is, is who progressives are and who they want to be: a rich white
liberal with political power, from a family of rich white liberals with
political power. He has the prep-school diploma and the Ivy League imprimatur,
too.
As one does.
No comments:
Post a Comment