The latest from Robert Reich. Please follow link to original.
Pray he's accurate.
For almost forty years Republicans have pursued a
divide-and-conquer strategy intended to convince working-class whites
that the poor were their enemies.
The big news is it’s starting to backfire.
Republicans told the working class that its hard-earned tax dollars
were being siphoned off to pay for “welfare queens” (as Ronald Reagan
decorously dubbed a black single woman on welfare) and other nefarious
loafers. The poor were “them” — lazy, dependent on government handouts,
and overwhelmingly black — in sharp contrast to “us,” who were working
ever harder, proudly independent (even sending wives and mothers to
work, in order to prop up family incomes dragged down by shrinking male
paychecks), and white.
It was a cunning strategy designed to split the broad Democratic
coalition that had supported the New Deal and Great Society, by using
the cleavers of racial prejudice and economic anxiety. It also
conveniently fueled resentment of government taxes and spending.
The strategy also served to distract attention from the real cause of
the working class’s shrinking paychecks — corporations that were busily
busting unions, outsourcing abroad, and replacing jobs with automated
equipment and, subsequently, computers and robotics.
But the divide-and-conquer strategy is no longer convincing because
the dividing line between poor and middle class has all but disappeared.
“They” are fast becoming “us.”
Poverty is now a condition that almost anyone can fall into. In the first two years of this recovery, according to new
report from Census Bureau, about one in three Americans dropped into poverty for at least two to six months
.
Three decades of flattening wages and declining economic security have taken a broader toll. Nearly
55 percent
of Americans between the ages of 25 and 60 have experienced at least a
year in poverty or near poverty (below 150 percent of the poverty line).
Half of all American children have at some point during their childhoods relied on food stamps.
Fifty years ago, when Lyndon Johnson declared a “war on poverty,”
most of the nation’s chronically poor had little or no connection to the
labor force, while most working-class Americans had full-time jobs.
This distinction has broken down as well. Now a significant
percentage of the poor are working but not earning enough to get
themselves and their families out of poverty. And a growing portion of
the middle class finds themselves in the same place — often in part-time
or temporary positions, or in contract work.
Economic insecurity is endemic. Working-class whites who used to be
cushioned against the vagaries of the market are now fully exposed to
them. Trade unions that once bargained on behalf of employees and
protected their contractual rights have withered. Informal expectations
of lifelong employment with a single company are gone. Company loyalty
has become a bad joke.
Financial markets are now calling the shots — forcing companies to
suddenly uproot, sell out to other companies, transfer whole divisions
abroad, liquidate unprofitable units, or adopt new software that
suddenly renders old skills obsolete.
Because money moves at the speed of an electronic impulse while human
beings move at the speed of human beings, the humans — most of them
hourly workers but many white collar as well — have been getting
shafted.
This means sudden and unexpected poverty has become a real
possibility for almost everyone these days. And there’s little margin of
safety. With the real median household income continuing to drop, 65
percent of working families are living from paycheck to paycheck.
Race is no longer a dividing line, either. According to Census Bureau numbers,
two-thirds of those below the poverty line at any given point identify themselves as white.
This new face of poverty — a face that’s both poor, near-poor, and
precarious working middle, and that’s simultaneously black, Latino, and
white — renders the old Republican divide-and-conquer strategy
obsolete. Most people are now on the same losing side of the divide.
Since the start of the recovery, 95 percent of the economy’s gains have
gone to the top 1 percent.
Which means Republican opposition to extended unemployment insurance,
food stamps, jobs programs, and a higher minimum wage pose a real
danger of backfiring on the GOP.
Just look at North Carolina, a bell-weather state, where Democratic Senator
Kay Hagan, up for re-election, is doing well by attacking Republicans
back home as “irresponsible and cold-hearted” for slashing unemployment
benefits and social services. The state Democratic Party is highlighting
her Republican opponent’s “long record of demeaning statements against
those struggling to make ends meet.” (Tom Tillis, the speaker of the
State, had spoken of the need “to divide and conquer” people on public
assistance, and called criticisms of the cuts as “whining coming from
losers.”)
The new economy has been especially harsh for the bottom two-thirds
of Americans. It’s not hard to imagine a new political coalition of
America’s poor and working middle class, bent not only on repairing the
nation’s frayed safety nets but also on getting a fair share of the
economies’ gains.
No comments:
Post a Comment