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The New Village, Same as the Old Village

The Hunters in the Snow by Pieter Bruegel the Elder (1565)

Perry Bacon at the Washington Post has written a smart column about what he calls “performative centrism.” He describes a phenomenon that I and other members of what we used to call the Netroots have been railing about for years — the reflexive impulse of the political establishment to downplay the radicalism of the right, overplay the the threat from “the left” and generally distort the political environment in reaction to a conscious right wing strategy to elicit exactly that response. And one of its most effective tactics is to conscript liberal and centrist members of establishment institutions to pooh-pooh anyone who points out what they are doing or observe that the sky is, in fact, falling.

This has been happening since the 1970s, growing to extreme proportions during the early aughts, when the post 9/11 political establishment completely lost its collective mind. But it’s never gone away and the last year shows that the impulse still runs deep.

Bacon comes at this from the perspective of a Black columnist, which is very interesting and brings its own set of urgent concerns. But I think the general thesis applies to any of us who have been sounding the alarms about this for years:

In basically every major institution in America, there are powerful figures who I doubt voted for Donald Trump but nonetheless play down the radicalism of the Republican Party, belittle those who speak honestly about it or otherwise act in ways that make it harder to combat that radicalism. That needs to change. Americans desperately need leaders and institutions that are fully grappling with Republicans’ dangerous anti-democratic drift.

In tech, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg have fought efforts to get right-wing misinformation and conspiracy theories off their platform. On the Supreme Court, Justice Stephen G. Breyer dismisses the (accurate) contention that the court has been captured by a group of conservative justices who are essentially Republican partisans. In the legal world, Harvard Law professor Noah Feldman and former acting Obama solicitor general Neal Katyal wrote fawning articles during the confirmations of Trump Supreme Court nominees who have since helped gut the Voting Rights Act and defend GOP moves to make it harder to vote.

On Capitol Hill, Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin III (W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.) have cast liberal critics of the filibuster as overly partisan even as state-level Republicans pass voting restrictions that Democrats can’t override without ending the filibuster. In the media, journalists like NBC’s Chuck Todd and outlets such as Politico at times treat calls to rethink how the media covers politics as demands for it to cheerlead for Democrats.

It’s entirely possible for someone to like the legal positions of Trump’s Supreme Court nominees or think that Republican lawmakers were correct to vote to disqualify the election results in certain states. But there is no indication that those I list above actually hold those views.

So why this posture? Some of it is probably about career and financial incentives. Since the media prizes neutrality and counterintuitive views, Democrats who defend Republicans or cast other Democrats as alarmists get op-eds published in major papers and land on big news shows. Facebook won’t make as much money if Republicans abandon the platform, creating obvious incentives to appease the right.

A related explanation is that this approach distinguishes those who take it from their peers. The left-leaning figures who praised Trump judicial appointees, intentionally or not, communicated: “I am more thoughtful than my hyperpartisan liberal friends who just complain about all Republicans no matter what.”

A third explanation is that, consciously or unconsciously, centrist institutionalists believe the radicalism of the Republican Party is overstated. Centrist institutionalists are often male, upper-income White residents of blue states. Such people did fine when Trump was president, and they aren’t likely to be directly affected if the Supreme Court makes it harder to vote or get an abortion. If the United States moves to one-party Republican rule, those Democrats who haven’t been all that critical of the GOP will fare best.

But I think the most important explanation is simple elitism. Institutionalists worked hard to enter America’s bipartisan elite,and they value that status. Admitting that the Supreme Court has become highly partisan would diminish Breyer’s 27 years there. Admitting that the main divide in the legal world is between conservatives and liberals, not super-smart people and those who aren’t quite as smart, isn’t that useful for a Harvard law professor. Media outlets could lose influence if frank coverage of Republican radicalism cost them access to GOP officials.

Here’s the big problem with all this performative centrism: Real harm is being done. It’s harder to push for changes to the Supreme Court when one of the liberal justices is playing down the danger. It’s harder to get political journalists to adapt to the radicalism of the GOP when some of the most prominent figures in the field suggest that covering Republicans honestly amounts to left-wing activism. It’s harder to prevent false information from reaching millions of Americans when the leaders of the biggest social media companies aren’t fully committed to that cause.

Throughout the Trump era, a pattern has played out over and over: Those in the center or on the left, often women and people of color, warn that Republicans are about to take a radical step. They are cast as alarmist by institutionalists. Republicans take that radical step. The pattern repeats.

Before I became a columnist, I personally felt real tension around this issue: How could I speak honestly about how I see the Republican Party and still advance my career as a nonpartisan reporter? This is something a lot of journalists, particularly those of color, have felt the past several years as institutionalists — disproportionately White — in the media have often suggested that the press is divided between left-wing partisans and neutral observers.

It’s a real problem for journalists working for the big institutions and I don’t envy them. It’s one of the reasons why the blogosphere was created as an independent media space where these observations could be aired and discussed openly by people all over the country and the world. Things have changed somewhat with other forums for independent journalism, crowdfunding etc, but the need still remains. People like Bacon and Dana Milbank may be speaking out about the problem these days from within the institutions they are criticizing, but the problem persists.

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Bacon offers some solutions to the problem, which I think are useful:

How do we deal with these misguided institutionalists?

First, by criticizing them, forcefully and often. Coverage of the radicalism of the Republican Party is getting more honest and frank in part because journalists who engage in both sides-ism are increasingly being scolded by their peers.

Second, by building up and supporting alternative institutions and people. Analysis of the Supreme Court was once dominated by lawyers who regularly argued before the court, former Supreme Court clerks and people who teach at law schools like Harvard and Yale. This legal elite, heavily invested in the court’s legitimacy and power, consistently played down the rightward shift of the court. But a new set of observers, such as the website Balls and Strikes and the Nation’s Elie Mystal, has emerged that describes the court’s conservatives as the Republican partisans that they are. Establishment outlets will have to adapt or lose respect — and potentially their audiences, too.

Third, by reminding them that they, too, will suffer if a Trumpified GOP takes over the country. Trump didn’t quite know how to execute his vision, particularly in his first years in office, so he allowed his administration to be filled with traditional Republicans who adhered to democratic norms. But a similar or second Trump administration would assuredly be staffed with anti-democratic figures from the start. One-party, autocratic governments don’t allow private companies, media outlets and other institutions to operate freely.

I’m not calling for everyone who didn’t vote for Trump to fawningly praise President Biden. What I am asking for is the end of “let me show how not liberal I am” performances from powerful elites. They are disingenuous and lazy and, most important, they harm the real work so many are doing to defend the United States’ democracy in this perilous moment.

Obviously, I am all for supporting alternative institutions and media. 🙂

But I think his advice to point out to many of those establishment figures who persist in defending “norms” even as the other sides dismantles them that they are at the top of the right’s enemies list is particularly important. They will never get the same benefit of the doubt. I don’t think they know that. We must let them know.

I have written about this thesis since the very first week I started this blog. I even came up with a meme that was, for a time, ubiquitous even among the media establishment. (“The Village.”) I will continue observing how this evolves and changes (or doesn’t) over time — as long as you keep reading. If you’d like to support this site as we go into yet another tumultuous, unpredictable year you can hit one of the buttons below.

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Happy Hollandaise, everyone!


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