[Quick
reminder: in this first major section of this on-going Frameworks essay, we are
attempting to analyze the strategies of the two major presidential campaigns.
This is not an issue-by-issue policy examination or critique; it's more in the nature of a
look at the animating, or structural, philosophies behind whatever specific rhetoric and policy provisions they have and will put forth.]
As we've
seen with in Pt. 2 and Pt. 3, Trump and the GOP are using controversy and even
fractious conflict to manufacture outrage in the belief it will be sufficient
to drive an expanded and newly energized base to the polls in November.
The
Democrats and Hillary Clinton are pursuing a very different strategy. At their
convention, they trotted out a dizzyingly diverse array of political star
power—the sorts of cabinet members, Governors, Senators, Representatives, and local and regional politicians that were noticeably missing from the Republican convention. They appealed to a broad range of constituencies. Where Trump and the
GOP are directing their efforts specifically to a circumscribed base, Clinton's
approach is more of an "all things to all people" approach.
The Democrats reached
out to the passionately committed supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders' insurgency campaign as well as
to the national security professional class. They spotlighted Black Lives
Matter as well as police unions. They specifically appealed to various individual
identity interest groups: LGBTQ people, African-Americans, Latinos, Arab-Americans,
Jews, Asian-Americans, Native Americans, among others. They actively sought the votes of working and
middle class folks as well as billionaire donors—labor, management, and owners.
They even courted moderate Republicans!
Their hope is
to expand their coalition of constituencies rather than constrict their focus to
their base. Their convention was a
clamorous and somewhat racous cacophany of competing interest groups vying for
attention. It used a grand spectacle replete with a mixture of unabashed
patriotism and specific policy proposals to attempt to ensure everyone who
wanted to be was heard on the issues that matter to them. If the Republicans sought to move toward a more right-wing extremism, the Democrats sought to expand from the middle outward in both directions.
Where the
GOP convention offered a vision of a crumbling, humiliated America, the
Democratic convention proclaimed that America was once again on the rise—a
great nation that will only get greater. The overriding theme had to do with
the progress the country has made since President Obama took office after the
disastrous Republican presidency of George W. Bush in the midst of the deepest
and most serious recession since the 1930's and two seemingly interminable
quagmire wars while admitting that there was more work to be done, more
progress to be made.
Where Trump
is selling outrage in the face of despair, Clinton is selling steady progress and calm continuity.
Clinton's campaign is more policy- and performance-driven. She is running on her
resume, her knowledge, and her competence. She claims that, by virtue of her
vast experience in government, she is ready to hit the ground running on day
one. She offers a smorgasbord of well-developed and well-thought-out and vetted
policies suggested by a broad range of constituencies. And she knows how to
work the levers of power to accomplish those aims.
The
Democratic convention also offered a direct and precise emotional
counterbalance to the Republican's Trumpfest. If Trump projected an image of the pessimistic, stern, domineering, even distant father who always knows what's best for his dependents but who assures them he is there to defend them, Clinton projected an image of the compassionate, empathic grandmotherly figure standing ready with open arms to soothe the emotional
scars and welcome and protect the child from the intemperate outrages of the abusive father. "Love Trumps
Hate," as the slogan goes.
[This may sound like simplistic psychobabble,
but make no mistake about it: infantilizing the electorate is always a part of
both political conventions' emotional subtext. George Lakoff's brilliant essay
"Understanding Trump" explains why this so: "What do social issues and the politics have to do
with the family? We are first governed in our families, and so we grow up
understanding governing institutions in terms of the governing systems of
families." This is the rhetorical frame Republicans are particularly good at exploiting, he asserts, and that Democrats perennially fail at. It is my hope that this series of posts will explain, at least in part from a philosophical point of view, why this is necessarily the case and why that is not necessarily a bad thing.]
If the Democrats' strategy works,
it could be a game-changer, signalling a new political landscape balance and reversing what has been the standard demographic trends since the Reagan
era.
Next: How
does Hillary Clinton hope to carry out this strategy?
1 comment:
The Democrats reached out to the passionately committed supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders' insurgency campaign
I don't feel reached out to, frankly.
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