Democracy Thrives on Immediacy

One of our oldest sayings is “time heals all wounds”. That regardless of what has happened, a scab will form eventually. Of course, we have misguided expectations. We hear the word heal and we assume all will go back to normal.

But there is no “normal”. There is progress and there is stasis, but no normal.

Hatfield & McCoy Dinner Feud

Hatfield & McCoy Dinner Feud (Photo credit: Old Shoe Woman)

One of the things that the Wisconsin Recall has highlighted is the buffer of time: how distance from actions gives the sheen of democracy: that the same ol’ song is being sung. With the passing of time, the battles between the Hatfields and McCoys look normal and routine. That it is business as usual. And the inept media is unable to see its place as anything other than supporter of that status quo.

What kicked off the recall effort was not a normal Republican doing Republicanny things in a normal way. He was a Republican who misrepresented his priorities in the election and in office, moved within his first week to rewrite a balanced budget for 2011 so that it would be out of balance and therefore grant him emergency authority. Within the first three months, he was stripping unions of their rights and thumbing his nose at his political opponents like a schoolyard bully. Any right-thinking person would recognize that this is anything but normal. But, the state’s recall law gave him a year before a recall could be called, which gave him an additional six months (so 1.5 years in total) to campaign for the new election and change the narrative. And by now, his transgressions have been scrubbed into that business as usual, partisan bickering that just goes on between the Hatfields and McCoys. Which plays to his advantage and makes his transgressions disappear.

Despite our preference for reasonableness and coming to fair conclusions, time doesn’t grant us this. Instead, it merely delays our more impulsive selves and allows a vacuum of confusion to mess up our living room. Lost in the recall talk was how Gov. Walker created the budget crisis, as he was able to establish the narrative over the last year and a half as an economic savior, averting disaster of his own making. What a  scoundrel hero!

If we set aside our feelings about recalls or partisanship for a moment and deal with a political structure that seems to reward tricksters and liars and gives them a cushion of four years to manufacture how we perceive them, we must recognize that time does not enhance democracy. Like police that must storm a company before it is able to shred its documents, democracy thrives on immediacy. It operates in the now. Our four-year terms challenge us to actually assess a politician’s tenure because they have had plenty of time to craft their own narrative. Democracy survives on honesty and dies behind curtains of lies and secluded alleyways in which average people are afraid to walk.

This week we watched a man, whose crime was swift, hide it in the fog of time. Eventually a wound like this one will scab over, but its bound to leave a scar. And in a few years, if we’re smart, we’ll look back at the scar and wonder what could have been, and what foolishness brought that wound in the first place. But if the media will have their say, and they already have, that reflection will be more foggy and we’ll forget all about the scar and treat it, instead, as if it has always been there; as if we were born with it. All reasonableness is lost and only misdirection remains.

What are your thoughts on immediacy and democracy?

[See also yesterday's response: Ideologies Do Not Win]

Ideologies Do Not Win

I hate to lose. I know you hate to lose. Losing sucks.

When our surrogates lose, we feel like we lose. When our surrogates win, we feel like we’ve won. And we make a dangerous decision about these wins and losses: that it is ideologies that win and lose on election day. It couldn’t be further from the truth. Ideologies never win. People win. It’s like those bumper stickers that read

Guns don’t kill people, I do.

We aren’t what we believe and our beliefs are never what elections are about. That’s why the media covers the horse race and we have questions like

Which candidate would you rather drink a beer with?

picture via Reuters

And other campaigns win and lose because of pictures like this one:

And as my father bemoans every election year about my grandmother

She voted for Ronald Reagan because she thought he was cute! She thought he was cute!!!

Cropped screenshot of Ronald Reagan from the t...

Cropped screenshot of Ronald Reagan from the trailer for the film Cowboy from Brooklyn. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This statement is always accompanied with a groan and a head tilt that shouts for him

My own mother voted in a presidential election and based that vote entirely on the person’s looks!

And so it might be tempting for well-intentioned people to see an incumbent winning a recall by a few percentage points in which he outspent the challenger nearly 10-to-1 as some kind of referrendum or a declaritive victory for the conservative ideology, I caution you to remember:

File this under “Lessons we refuse to learn”

Ideologies do not win. People do. People who run particular campaigns promising particular things in a particular way. For all those watching Wisconsin yesterday and today, take the campaigns seriously, not their claims about conservatism and the end of labor. Take seriously the anti-recall sentiment. Take seriously the incredible amounts of outside cash that poured in for Scott Walker and how very much more corporate money there was than union money. Take seriously how unbalanced that spending was. Take seriously how narrow that victory is given all the advantages the incumbent started with. Take seriously the truth that a hypothetical recall of Tom Barrett in the state house with a 10-to-1 spending supremacy would no doubt yield a similar result of an incumbent victory.

Make no mistake that conservatism didn’t win last night: the Walker Campaign did. And with it comes a blueprint for the fall. Not a blueprint for ideology, but for campaigning:

And Caesar’s spirit, ranging for revenge,
With Ate by his side come hot from hell,
Shall in these confines with a monarch’s voice
Cry ‘Havoc,’ and let slip the dogs of war;
That this foul deed shall smell above the earth
With carrion men, groaning for burial.

(Marc Antony, Julius Caesar)

If you don’t like it, it won’t matter, until your speech is equal to a millionaire’s.