Beyond my participation on a panel on Tom West's book on the American founding, my main goal at the convention of the American Political Science Association in San Francisco was to attend as many of the panels on Donald Trump as I could, so that I could hear what the political scientists are saying about his surprising electoral victory and his unusual presidency.
The fact that most political scientists failed to predict Trump's victory is embarrassing for the profession, and so it's not surprising that there were many panels on Trump that attracted large audiences. Two of the panels I attended had over 150 people in the audience, which must be at least four or five times the average attendance for panels.
The panels sponsored by the Claremont Institute were generally dominated by right-wing pro-Trump supporters. The panels sponsored by organized sections of the APSA were generally dominated by left-wing empirical political scientists who were anti-Trump.
There were three kinds of questions raised at these panels. First, who voted for Trump, and why did they do so? Second, how did the Trump voters prevail in the election? Third, if Trump is judged unfit to be President, is there any constitutional means to remove him from office?
To the second question, the obvious answer is the Electoral College. Despite losing the popular vote, Trump won in the Electoral College. Why? Some political scientists suggested that what this shows is that the Electoral College increases the weight of the white voters and voters in rural areas who voted for Trump. One can argue that this is not what was intended by the framers of the Constitution, who hoped that the Electoral College could prevent the election of demagogues like Trump. The Constitution says that "Each state shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature therefore may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress." Many state legislatures have chosen to bind the electors to vote for their party's nominee, and the selection of electors is by a "winner-take-all" principle, so that the candidate with the most popular votes in a state wins all of the electors of that state. This creates a weighting of votes that favored Trump over Clinton. Clinton lost overwhelmingly in white and rural areas of some key states (like Wisconsin) that led to her defeat in the Electoral College, despite that fact that she led in the popular vote total by almost 3 million votes.
Unless one believes that rural white voters deserve to have their votes weigh more than the votes of urban non-white voters, one has to wonder about how to change this. One way to do this could be carried out by the state legislatures. They could legislate that all the Electoral College votes of the state would be allocated to the winner of the national popular vote. Or they could legislate that the Electoral College votes of the state would be divided up proportionally to the popular vote, so that it would no longer be "winner-take-all." Another way, of course, would be to amend the Constitution to abolish the Electoral College.
To the third question, there are three possible answers. If Trump is clearly unfit--morally and intellectually--to be President, then the Congress could impeach him, or the threat of impeachment could persuade him to resign, or he could be declared (under the 25th Amendment) to be "unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office" by the Vice President and a majority of the Cabinet. If the Vice President and the Cabinet were to declare Trump unable to fill his office, but Trump disagreed, then a 2/3 vote of each House of Congress would be required to up the judgment of disability.
According to some interpretations of the impeachment power of Congress, the 25th Amendment (ratified in 1967) was unnecessary, because the Congress's impeachment power was intended to allow the Congress to remove a President judged to be unfit to fill the presidential office.
At the APSA convention, John Yoo made this argument on one of the Claremont panels. Yoo made the same points that were summarized a few months ago by Greg Weiner in an op-ed article in The New York Times. According to the Constitution, impeachment applies to "Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors." It has been commonly assumed that "high Crimes and Misdemeanors" means that only criminal acts by the President are impeachable. And thus, we now have a lot of discussion about whether Trump has committed a criminal "obstruction of justice," for which he could be impeached. But as Yoo and Weiner have argued, persuasively I think, this mistakenly sees impeachment as a legal judgment rather than a political judgment. As Hamilton indicated in Federalist Number 65, impeachment applies to offenses "of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated POLITICAL, as they related chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself." At the Constitutional Convention of 1787, Madison explained the purpose of impeachment, saying "that some provision should be made for defending the community against the incapacity, negligence or perfidy of the Chief Magistrate." If the Congress judges Trump unfit to be President, the Congress should impeach him, because his unfitness will inflict a great injury on the American community.
The first question--who voted for Trump and why--elicited a variety of answers at the convention. Most of the people on the Claremont panels answered with Trump's own rhetorical answer to that question: the country is divided by a battle between the interests of the Ruling Elites (including Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives) and the interests of The People, and Trump is on the side of The People. Of course, this is the usual rhetoric of the demagogic populist who contrasts the "people"--the virtuous majority of the community--with powerful elites and minority groups who aggrandize themselves at the expense of the people.
The obvious problem with this simple dichotomy--The Elites versus The People--is that The People is divided between Trump opponents and Trump supporters, and Trump's loss of the popular vote and his unpopularity today indicate that his opponents outnumber his supporters. When I made this point in the question and answer period for one of the Claremont panels, I did not hear a clear answer. The only answer I can think of is that the Trump opponents among the People have been fooled into sacrificing their own interests in serving the interests of the Elites and minority groups.
Unlike the Claremont political scientists, the empirical political scientists think that the political sociology and psychology of Trump's supporters cannot be explained with a simple dichotomy of Elites versus the People, because the interests of the People are diverse. Here is where I see the political sociology and psychology of evolved human nature. The 20 natural desires include the desires for social status, political rule, and property. Most of the explanations of Trump's supporters by the empirical political scientists depended on one of those three natural desires.
Carson Holloway presented a paper on how Aristotle's account in the Politics (book 5) of the sources of factional conflict in a regime might explain Trump's appeal. At the most general level, Aristotle claims, factional conflict arises from disputes over equality and inequality: some people engage in factional conflict because they aim at equality, and they think they have less than they deserve, because others have aggrandized themselves unfairly; and other people engage in factional conflict because they aim at inequality, thinking that they deserve to be above others.
According to Aristotle, this battle over equality and inequality is commonly over either profit or honor: factional conflict arises when people think they have less wealth or honor than they deserve. This can be seen in Trump's rhetoric, Holloway observes, in that he criticizes the American Elites for taking more wealth and honor than they deserve, and he promises that he will overturn this unfair inequality by increasing the economic wealth and social status of the People and reducing the unfair privileges of the Elites.
Are the Trump supporters motivated by economic issues? Are they mostly members of a white working class who are economically disadvantaged? Trump's rhetoric about creating and protecting jobs for the working class suggests this. But some of the political scientists doubted that Trumpism can be explained by economic interests. Most of those who voted for Trump are in the top 50% of Americans in income. And in average income black Americans are generally much worse off than white Americans.
In her speech in August of 2016, when Hillary Clinton warned against the "Alt-Right" support for Trump, she quoted from the Wall Street Journal as describing the Alternative Right as a movement that “rejects mainstream conservatism, promotes nationalism and views immigration and multiculturalism as threats to white identity.” Some of the political scientists who study the political psychology of "white identity" present evidence that Trump's appeal depends on "white identity politics." White Americans who believe that they are threatened by non-white racial and ethnic groups were much more likely to vote for Trump than for Clinton. For these Trump supporters, the motivation is not interest but identity--their identity as white Americans, who have long been the majority in America, but who now fear becoming the minority as more non-white immigrants enter the country.
Three of the speakers at the convention--John Sides, Michael Tesler, and Lynn Vavreck--have written a forthcoming book about this--Identity Politics: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America. They make two general points about how political scientists can explain Trump's appeal, which have been summarized in a couple of articles (here and here). First, most voters are not ideologues: they don't organize their political beliefs through some coherent political theory such as liberalism, conservatism, or libertarianism. It should not surprise us, therefore, that Trump could appeal to many republican voters even though he has no consistent commitment to the conservative or libertarian ideas that are thought to characterize the Republican Party.
Their second point is that instead of being motivated by any intellectual ideology, the Trump supporters are indeed motivated by white identity. This is not the same as white supremacy, because white supremacists are only a small minority of the Trump supporters. Rather, what moves most of the Trump supporters is a sense that white Americans are losing their dominant status in America--that they are being discriminated against by policies like affirmative action, that they are losing jobs to nonwhites, and that the immigration of nonwhites into America will soon make white Americans a minority. Through survey research, Sides, Tesler, and Vavreck have shown that while fewer than 5% of white Republicans who think that their racial identity is not important supported Trump, 81% of white Republicans who think their white identity is very important voted for Trump. Although most of these "white identifiers" are not white supremacists, the Alt-Right can appeal to their sense of white identity.
In some previous posts (here and here), I have argued against the Alt-Right supporters of Trump who appeal to the defense of "ethnic genetic interests" as rooted in human evolution. I am persuaded that evolved human nature is inclined to tribal thinking, so that we naturally categorize people as us and them, and we naturally favor our group over others. And while the social conditions of life have often predisposed people to make this in-group/out-group division along racial and ethnic lines, there is no evidence that this predisposition is an innate adaptation of the human mind. On the contrary, there is lots of evidence that while we are innately inclined to look for cues of coalitional affiliation, the content of those cues depends on social learning; and people in multi-racial and multi-ethnic societies can learn to be cooperative without regard for racial or ethnic boundaries.
Aristotle observed: "Dissimilarity of race is also conducive to factional conflict, until a cooperative spirit develops" (1303a25). I agree. Racial differences often divide a country. But the liberal culture of an open society can promote a multiracial cooperative spirit.
Some of the pro-Trump political scientists on the Claremont panels scorned this idea of America as a multiracial open society, and they did so by appealing to their teacher--Leo Strauss. One of them was Michael Anton, the author of the famous "Flight 93" essay arguing that electing Trump was the only way to avoid the death of America through Clinton's election. Anton now sits on Trump's National Security Council. He cited Strauss's letters to Alexandre Kojeve as supporting the Trumpian claim that America must avoid the degrading effects of globalization by asserting its national identity as a closed society. (Last February, The New York Times published a good article on the Straussian supporters of Trump.)
Similarly, Tom West suggested that protecting American identity might require closing the borders to all but white European immigrants. As a standard, he quoted from the nation's first naturalization law of 1790, which restricted naturalization to "any alien being a free white person." In his new book, West claims that "a policy welcoming non-European immigrants would have been rejected by all" during the American founding (267). At the convention, West appealed to white identity politics by arguing that white Americans were victims of discrimination that favored the interests of minority groups and nonwhite immigrants. West also said that many young white people are now worried about the attack on their white identity, and, in effect, they are saying "I don't want to die!" "People want to live," West observed, and white people see their life as defined by their white identity. He argued that conservatives need to listen to, and appeal to, these people. He thus seemed to endorse what Trump alt-right supporters like Richard Spencer have called "white identitarianism."
The racial division between Trump voters and Clinton voters holds for both men and women. At the convention, Jane Junn of the University of Southern California pointed out that the "gender gap" between the Democrats and the Republicans is actually a "racial gap." Although Democratic presidential candidates usually win the majority of women voters, Republican presidential candidates usually win the majority of white women, which was true for Trump. And in the case of Trump, white women were voting against a white woman!
Nonetheless, some of those who look to Trump as a defender of American identity seem to define that identity in non-racial terms. One of the political scientists at the convention explaining Trump's appeal was Katherine Cramer, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who wrote The Politics of Resentment: Rural Consciousness in Wisconsin and the Rise of Scott Walker (2016). In Wisconsin, she sees the supporters of Scott Walker and Trump as an us-versus-them resentment against the political elites, but rather than being based on a racial divide, the largely rural white citizens of northern Wisconsin feel resentful against the urban people in Madison and Milwaukee, who show no respect for rural Wisconsin. Cramer recorded conversations among 39 groups of people in 27 small communities in northern Wisconsin over five years. These people complained that Wisconsin's state government was controlled by people in the urban areas who favored their own interests, who used government programs to benefit lazy people, including state government employees who advanced their interests at the expense of the hard-working taxpayers. These rural citizens were the ones who supported Walker's attack on state employee benefits and his efforts to reduce state government generally. These were also the rural voters who gave Trump his victory. (This was true across the nation--Clinton lost the rural vote to Trump by huge margins. Similarly, the Brexit voting in Great Britain was much stronger in rural areas than in London.)
Cramer argues that while these white Republican voters show some evidence of racism--they refer to the highway dividing northern and southern Wisconsin as the "Mason-Dixon line"--their xenophobic resentment is based mostly not on racial differences but on their "rural consciousness" as set against the urban life of Madison and Milwaukee, where the Democrats are the majority. Some of Cramer's critics have complained that she does not give a good explanation for the causes of this "rural consciousness," except to say that it has been passed down through families. Some of the critics have suggested that she should have considered the influence of conservative talk-radio in Wisconsin.
So it seems that although the motivations for the Trump voters were complicated, the general pattern is clear: Trump prevailed through a demagogic rhetoric of populist resentment against arrogant exploitative elites. The question now is what to do about the consequences of electing to the presidency someone who is unfit to fill the office.
Remarkably, I did not hear any political scientist defend Trump's fitness for the office. The only defense for the Trump presidency that I heard was the claim that some of the people appointed by Trump were well qualified to promote policies that would reduce the Administrative State, which is the goal of the Claremont folks. But even on this point, some of the Trump supporters (for example, Stephen Balch of Texas Tech University) admitted that Trump's bad character might ultimately prove more damaging to American conservatism than anything that Hillary Clinton might have done as President.
So far, the harm that Trump can do has been mitigated by his incompetence. But even an incompetent narcissistic demagogue can be so dangerous that we might hope for his impeachment, or (more likely) his resignation to avoid impeachment.
My earlier post on "Straussians for Trump," with links to other posts, can be found here.
Larry, you say, "Similarly, Tom West suggested that protecting American identity might require closing the borders to all but white European immigrants."
ReplyDeleteI don't believe I said that. If I did, it is not what I meant. I do not favor a policy of admitting whites only.
The whole point of my presentation on the APSA panel on "The Future of Conservatism" was that conservatives should return to their earlier "equal rights conservatism." They should give up their half-acceptance of Rawlsian liberalism. They should stop talking about how government can best serve the disadvantaged. They should once again talk about how government can best protect the life, liberty, and property of ALL Americans--all races, both sexes, and rich and poor alike.
My long-held personal preference in regard to immigration policy is very simple: the common good of Americans of all races would be best served by an immigration moratorium. I would suggest at least 40 years. It is going to be hard enough to assimilate the massive number of immigrants we have had since 1965. Let's not make it any harder.
After the 14th amendment, naturalization was opened to persons of African descent as well as whites. America was no longer going to be a nation for whites only. The inclusion of blacks as full citizens makes perfect sense as part of the post-Civil War settlement.
I favor that settlement. You incorrectly imply that I am against it.
You describe the founders' view correctly. I will let the founders speak for themselves. Please do not assume that their views are my views.
I am persuaded that evolved human nature is inclined to tribal thinking, so that we naturally categorize people as us and them, and we naturally favor our group over others.
ReplyDeleteRemarkably, I did not hear any political scientist defend Trump's fitness for the office.
Remarkably?
Lots of people voted for Trump because the Left has gone completely insane. Trump gave exciting fired-up speeches, and Hillary was a horrible candidate.
ReplyDeleteAnd yet Clinton received almost 3 million more votes than Trump! Doesn't that show the depth of Trump's unpopularity?
ReplyDeleteYou asked why people voted for Trump, not why they voted against him. Plus, those 3 million votes were mostly all accounted for in California. Take that as you will.
ReplyDeleteNow you may return to your regularly scheduled programming of attacking the Right, never the Left.
The electoral college elects the President, not the popular vote. That was the logic to win the game, so Trump played by that set of rules. So when you look at California where there were no state wide races where an active Trump run in that state could help aid a Republican US Senate or State Electoral Office candidate. So not putting any energy to push increased voter turn out will not give a clear Win it made sense to not spend money or time motivating voters to go out and vote Republican.
ReplyDeleteIf the popular vote was the set of rules, Trump would have modified his campaign to get maximum advantage there as well. If you control for California, Trump actually wins the Popular vote by the same relative margin he won the Electoral College Count.
Also one needs to understanding that the creation of the cognitive elite, that Charles Murray warned about in the Bell Curve seem to have come into being, as shown by his recent book Coming Apart and this new elite and the way they peruse their interests have created the current stasis by which the electoral divide given the states and their demographics vs the centralization of this new cognitive elite in the few metropolian urban areas. This is why Aristotle would argue that the US Supreme Court's ruling in Baker vs Carr in 1965 was a revolution in the regimes of the US States, throwing electoral and legislative power to larger urban areas. The differences between the urban poor and the rural poor effect the very nature of the democratic regime. So it is ironic that the rural democratic classes have sought to use someone like Trump to oppose the urban democratic regime is rather interesting in and of itself--and would argue against the Trump as demagogue argument.
True: Trump won under the rules that both candidates understood going in.
ReplyDeleteTrue: Clinton got almost 3 million more votes than Trump.
Highly speculative: If the rules going in were that a majority of votes determined the winner, the Trump campaign would have been different enough to turn that 3 million vote deficit into a surplus.