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Democrats and Republicans need new champions

For the love of God, go. Credit: Getty

July 14, 2022 - 6:03pm

These are strange times in American politics. Slowly but surely, the Democrats have been losing their historically working class and multi-racial base, with Hispanics in particular drifting Right. This shift was starkly evident in the recent New York Times/Siena poll which showed that, for the first time ever, Democrats had a larger share of support among white graduates than among non-white voters, achieving effective parity with Republicans over the Hispanic vote.

The shift has unsettled each party in less than attractive ways. The Democrats’ growing reliance on college-educated affluent white people reflects the policies pursued by the Biden Administration, which is both inept and widely unpopular. Although there are the de rigeur calls to help the middle class, the President has identified himself with the issues that animate the activist element in the upper classes. These include aggressive climate change policies, near limitless abortion access, lax immigration controls (opposed by two-thirds of Americans) and the implementation of critical race theory in schools. Amid soaring inflation, working class voters have been worst affected, many of which include the increasingly influential Latino voter as well small business owners, whose confidence is at a near half-century low.

Yet the Republicans, as the late Rodney Dangerfield would put it, “are no bargain either.” Despite a gain in support among Latino and ethnic minority voters in the 2020 election, Donald Trump is hurting the GOP brand. As his role in the Jan 6 chaos becomes increasingly apparently, it would be wise for the party to separate from its former leader before it’s too late. In addition, the party’s embrace in some states of total bans on abortion and laissez-faire gun policies, threatens its base in suburbia, especially among women.

Clearly, both parties need new champions. Two examples already stand out. For the Republicans recently elected Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin represents a tolerant and reasoned conservatism that has shown appeal in even affluent suburbs. Of course, not having a manic temperament like Trump’s helps.

The Democrats, meanwhile, have a potential new role-model in Rep. Tim Ryan, now running for Senate in the pivotal state of Ohio. His campaign is focused on bread-and-butter issues that appeal to working-class voters, as well as an endorsement of Trump’s China and trade policies. These positions may not appeal to the tech oligarchs linked to China, but they could help restore some of the party’s base.

The fundamental reality is this: nearly two-thirds of Americans don’t have a BA, much less a PhD from Harvard. In fact, college enrollment has dropped by 1.3 million over the past two years and professor’s salaries are dropping. Demographically it’s the working class, not college graduates, that is ascendant. In other words, the political future of America rests on the people who work in places like Home Depot, drive trucks, build houses, work as aides in nursing homes and hospitals. They are increasingly what Franklin Roosevelt called “the forgotten” but the winning party will be the one that remembers them. Whichever party captures this coalition, they will be the victor.


Joel Kotkin is the Hobbs Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University and author, most recently, of The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class (Encounter)

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Julian Farrows
Julian Farrows
1 year ago

If DeSantis runs he will have my vote. He is one of the few politicians who dares speak up about all the nonsense going on.

Paul O
Paul O
1 year ago
Reply to  Julian Farrows

Wish we had a DeSantis in the UK. Alas, we are not blessed with any politicians with his courage and integrity.

Matt M
Matt M
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul O

I like the look of Kemi Badenoch. Seems to me to be cut from the same cloth as DeSantis.

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
1 year ago
Reply to  Julian Farrows

I’m not sure Ron DeSantis, an elite lawyer-politician, can do deals like Donald Trump. The art of the deal isn’t taught in law school, but learned through experience in the real world where one has skin in the game. Ron DeSantis has none of that kind of experience.
Donald Trump is a politician of a type never seen in my lifetime. Whether Ron DeSantis has anywhere near his talents remains to be seen.

Matt Hindman
Matt Hindman
1 year ago

Really Mr. Kotkin? Your suggestion for the Republicans is to go with another classic establishment neocon? Why do you think voters went with Trump in the first place? I guarantee you the party will immediately start losing the working class and minority support they have started to gather if they do such a thing. Have you met many American voters?

J Bryant
J Bryant
1 year ago

I hope Mr. Kotkin is right, and I agree it’s time both Trump and Biden stepped away from politics. Whether they will do so (or can be forced to do so) is another question.
There is, indeed, a huge swathe of “forgotten” people in America, but the so-called “elites” seem to control the levers of power and certainly the media (both social and traditional). I will be very interested to see how blatantly big tech tries to control/censor the narrative in the run up to the US mid-terms.
The sad reality also seems to be that “the forgotten”, that huge block of lower/middle class Americans, don’t seem to turn out in large numbers to vote anymore. Maybe they’ve lost faith in the political process. But if they want to neuter the elites they’ll have to go to the ballot box.
I’m cautiously optimistic about the mid-terms, but the pandemic taught us just how powerful the elite-driven establishment really is.

Brian Villanueva
Brian Villanueva
1 year ago

The future of the GOP is a Wall Street banker turned Northeast governor who walked out of Bush Inc central casting? I’m pretty sure we’ve seen this show before. Ever heard of Mitt Romney?
Anyone who writes an article about working class GOP champions without mentioning JD Vance or Ron DeSantis clearly isn’t interested in the actual working class.