Let
Them Eat Arugula
Hillary sure has become a populist these
last few weeks--a conservative populist
By Jonathan Chait, The New Republic, May 08, 2008
The
dying days of the Hillary Clinton campaign have brought the
breathtaking spectacle of a candidate lashing out at every element
of public life that has nourished her career. The über-wonk
has disparaged economists and expertise. The staunch ally of
black America has attacked her opponent for lacking support
of "working, hard-working Americans, white Americans."
People who thought they knew Hillary Clinton have gazed in astonishment:
What has she become? The answer is, a conservative populist.
Conservative
populism and liberal populism are entirely different things.
Liberal populism posits that the rich wield disproportionate
influence over the government and push for policies often at
odds with most people's interest. Conservative populism, by
contrast, dismisses any inference that the rich and the non-rich
might have opposing interests as "class warfare."
Conservative populism prefers to divide society along social
lines, with the elites being intellectuals and other snobs who
fancy themselves better than average Americans.
Consider
this analysis recently offered by Bill Clinton in Clarksburg,
West Virginia: "The great divide in this country is not
by race or even income, it's by those who think they are better
than everyone else and think they should play by a different
set of rules." This is precisely the dynamic that allows
multimillionaires like George W. Bush and Bill O'Reilly to present
themselves as being on the side of the little guy. A more classic
expression of conservative populism cannot be found.
Historically,
the conservative populist's social divide ran along racial and
ethnic lines. In recent years, overt racism has all but disappeared
from mainstream political life, and even racial hot button appeals
like the 1988 Willie Horton ad have grown rare. What remains
is a residue of nostalgia about small towns--whose residents
are said to have stronger values and work harder than other
Americans, and who also happen to be overwhelmingly white. In
2004, after John Kerry declared that some entertainers supporting
him represented "the heart and soul of America," George
W. Bush embarked upon a national tour of small- and mid-sized
cities, where he would say, "I believe the heart and soul
of America is found in places like Duluth, Minnesota,"
or other such places.
Likewise, Bill Clinton recently declared, "The people in
small towns in rural America, who do the work for America, and
represent the backbone and the values of this country, they
are the people that are carrying her through in this nomination."
The corollary--that strong values and hard work is in shorter
supply among ethnically heterogeneous urban residents--is left
unstated. Hillary Clinton's statement about "hard-working
Americans, white Americans" simply made explicit a theme
that conservative populists usually keep implicit.
Liberal
populism is mostly harnessed to a concrete legislative program
aimed at broadening prosperity. Al Gore's "people versus
the powerful" campaign focused on his differences with
Bush over issues like regulation of HMOs and progressive taxation.
Conservative populism, by contrast, is a way of exploiting the
grievances it identifies without redressing them. It has an
ever-shifting array of targets--Michael Dukakis's veto of a
law requiring students to recite the Pledge of Allegiance, or
the rantings of Jeremiah Wright--but no way to knock them down.
Conservative populists sometimes ape liberal populism by promising
material benefits to average people. But the promise is structured
so as to pose no threat to any wealthy economic interest. George
W. Bush offered tax cuts to the middle class, but paired them
with far larger tax cuts for the rich, so that, ultimately,
the middle class bore a larger proportion of the tax burden.
Hillary Clinton's embrace of the gas tax holiday is a miniature
example of the same pattern. Her plan, which rests upon the
political principle that high gasoline prices are unacceptable
and that the federal gas tax is a burden on hard-pressed Americans,
is highly congenial to the interests of oil companies. Yet she
presents it as an assault on Big Oil, much as Bush presented
his tax cuts as a way to force the rich to pay a higher share
of the burden of government.
If
economists or other social scientists dispute the conservative
populist's claims, that is only because they, too, are elitists.
Bush would dismiss objections to the upper class tilt of his
tax cuts by picking a middle class family (in this case, the
Muellers) and saying, "Oh, some of the sophisticates will
say that $2,700 doesn't matter to the Muellers. 'It doesn't
sound like a lot to me.' It's a lot to them. That's what counts."
And
so, when Tim Russert said that economists believe the gas tax
holiday won't lower prices at the pump, Clinton campaign chairman
Terry MacAuliffe replied, "Maybe for Barack Obama and for
many of your economists, Tim, who you may talk to, you know
what, maybe an extra hundred bucks for them isn't a big deal.
But I can tell you this, it is a big deal for most Americans."
Social
science analysis is the mortal enemy of conservative populism.
The liberal populist sees politics as a series of quantifiable
trade-offs between competing interests. The conservative populist
offers an appeal that can't be quantified: Who shares your values?
Who is more manly? (James Carville: "If she gave him one
of her cojones, they'd both have two.")
If
a liberal populist cites experts or numbers to back his position,
that only proves to the conservative populist that he is out
of touch. It's the intellectual equivalent of buying arugula
from Whole Foods. A Clinton endorser addressed a rally last
month, "You didn't go to Harvard! You weren't born with
a silver spoon in your mouth!" (Never mind that Clinton
graduated from Yale Law School and had a far more stable, middle
class upbringing than Obama.) In the liberal populists' world,
the locus of evil is K Street. In the conservative populists'
world, the locus of evil is Cambridge, Massachusetts.
In Clinton's defense, she obviously does not believe her own
social conservative rhetoric. But neither do Republican social
conservatives. She is not running for president so she can suspend
the gas tax any more than George H. W. Bush sought the office
on order to increase the rate of flag-saluting.
One
conceit of the conservative populist style is that its practitioners
are "real," while its targets are "fake."
For years, Hillary Clinton put herself forward as the earnest
liberal policy wonk she actually is, while conservatives lambasted
her as a phony. Since she started campaigning as the enemy of
all she once held dear, some conservatives have started to appreciate
her, even lauding her authenticity. The Weekly Standard's Noemie
Emery gushed that after March 4, Hillary "began to seem
real." Indeed, she is now real in exactly the same way
the conservative populists imagine themselves to be.
Jonathan
Chait is a senior editor at The New Republic.