http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/19618-the-revolt-of-the-lower-middle-class-and-the-stupidity-of-the-elites

Mike Lofgren | The Revolt of the Lower Middle Class and the Stupidity
of the Elites

Monday, 28 October 2013 10:30 By Mike Lofgren, Truthout | Op-Ed



Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) speaks to reporters after a Senate meeting on
Capitol Hill in Washington, Oct. 16, 2013. (Photo: Doug Mills / The
New York Times)

We read in the aftermath of the government shutdown and near default
on the country's sovereign debt that the US Chamber of Commerce is
clutching its pearls. "We are going to get engaged," said a mouthpiece
for the chamber. "The need is now more than ever to elect people who
understand the free market and not silliness." The chamber is the top
lobbying organization in America, and it gave 93 percent of its
political contributions to Republican candidates in the 2010 election
that birthed the Congressional Tea Party Caucus. Apparently it is now
having buyer's remorse. Politico, the newsletter of the Beltway
illuminati, reports similar tidings: Rich Republican mega-donors like
hedge fund vulture Paul Singer are expressing frustration with
Republican office holders, even though Singer has been a major
financial backer of the Tea Party-oriented Club for Growth, which
egged on the politicians who forced the shutdown. Even the Koch
brothers have been distancing themselves from the shutdown.

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Most Democrats, needless to say, are rubbing their hands with glee,
and predictions of doom for the GOP are too numerous to count. The Tea
Party, according to this narrative, has taken over the Republican
Party and will lead it to inevitable electoral oblivion: The sheer
irrationality of their demands constitutes electoral suicide. Others
are not so sure. Michael Lind has advanced the theory that the Tea
Party is an aggregation of "local notables," i.e., "provincial elites
[disproportionately Southern] whose power and privileges are
threatened from above by a stronger central government they do not
control and from below by the local poor and the local working class."
He links it to a neo-Confederate ideology that is "perfectly rational"
in terms of its economic objectives - a stark contrast to the
prevailing description of the Tea Party as irrational. Lind further
contends that progressives have misread the Tea Party, downplaying the
element of elite control and obsessing over the anger and craziness of
its followers.

There is some truth in this. The Tea Party definitely is
disproportionately Southern, as Lind stipulates, and any movement that
seeks to hobble the functioning of the federal government naturally
will advance themes and tactics that sound a lot like the template of
the Confederacy: states' rights, disenfranchisement of voters, use of
the filibuster and so forth. Some Tea Party candidates look an awful
lot like neo-Confederate sympathizers. But Lind misconstrues some of
the data. If, as he says, 47 percent of white Southerners express
support for the Tea Party, how does that square with his "local
notables" theme: That the "backbone" of the movement is "millionaires
[rather than] billionaires?" It is doubtful that 47 percent of the
white population in the poorest region of the country consists even of
local notables, much less millionaires.

That a fair number of local big shots is involved in the movement is
unsurprising and natural, given their economic interests; what is more
interesting from a sociological point of view, as well as more
significant from a political perspective, is the millions of non-rich
people, including those dependent on federal programs like Social
Security and Medicare, who pull the lever for Tea Party candidates.
The fact that 144 of 231 voting Republican House members opted for
shutdown and default is not explained by the Svengali-like influence
of a relatively small, regionally based group of Lind's "second-tier"
affluent people, especially because the first tier, the people that
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce represents, was opposed strongly to the
shutdown and to allowing a default. The most plausible answer is that
there is a mass popular movement (albeit working in carefully
gerrymandered Congressional districts) that would throw these members
of Congress out of office if they had voted otherwise. If big-shot
money were the sole criterion, the office holders would never have
threatened default in the first place.

In advancing his thesis that Tea Party adherents are more affluent and
more educated than average, Lind cites a New York Times/CBS News poll
from early 2010 that claims those findings. This poll is frequently
quoted in characterizations of the Tea Party, and there has been
relatively little work done on the demographics of the movement since
then. But one study found slightly lower levels of education in GOP
Congressional districts than in the country as a whole. Given the
paucity of reliable data, it is not unreasonable to use GOP district
demographics as a rough surrogate for Tea Party demographics if 62
percent of House Republicans are voting the Tea Party line on shutdown
and default.

While it may be true that the Tea Party was originally about fiscal
issues and initially attracted more affluent people, what appears to
have happened is that the Religious Right, always on the lookout to
infiltrate and take over organizations (see your local school board)
gradually became the demographic center of gravity of the movement.
That would explain why the Tea Party initially described itself as
wholly con­cerned with debt, deficit and federal overreach but
gradually became almost as theocratic as the activists from the
Religious Right. If anything, they were even slightly more disposed
than the rest of the Republi­can Party to inject religious issues into
the political realm. According to an academic study of the Tea Party,
"[T]hey seek 'deeply religious' elected officials, approve of
religious leaders' engaging in politics and want religion brought into
political debates." A glance at the bios of the steering committee for
Tea Party Unity suggests a strong theocratic bias. That probably
explains why Tea Party darling Ted Cruz took time from obstructing
Senate proceedings to be the marquee speaker at the Values Voter
Summit, whose straw poll he won handily. There is plenty of anecdotal
evidence of low-church zealotry, rather than typical plutocratic
manners and mores, to be gained simply by watching Tea Party protests.
Economic elites just might comport themselves like this, this, this,
this or this when publicly expressing their political views, but -
with the possible exception of Donald Trump - I doubt it.

It is more likely that however the Tea Party initially presented
itself, it is no longer a group of mainly affluent, well-educated
people whose primary obsessions are the deficit, debt or health care
policy. This became evident in the later stages of the shutdown, when
it was obvious that Tea Party-influenced office holders had no
coherent strategy for achieving concrete, tangible political goals.
This confusion was memorably expressed by Rep. Marlin Stutzman, a Tea
Party favorite: "We're not going to be disrespected. We have to get
something out of this. And I don't know what that even is."

As Dr. Freud knew, sometimes we say more than we intend. While the
media collectively pounced on Stutzman's ignorance of his goal, they
did not ask why he did not have a goal that he could express. And they
let pass his comment about being "disrespected," an idee fixe of
outsiders like teenage gang members who have self-esteem issues.
Stutzman could not articulate a policy goal because he did not have
one that he could utter. He was channeling the unfocused cultural rage
of the principal body of his constituents: predominately white,
lower-middle-class Americans who feel "disrespected" because the main
currents of American life, economically, demographically and
culturally, are passing them by. This accounts for the fevered,
emotional, irrational tenor of their complaints, a hyperbolic
resentment that cannot be explained by the fact that the federal
budget is not in balance[i] or that the Affordable Care Act is costly
and creates an unwieldy bureaucracy - features that did not seem to
concern them when the Medicare Prescription Drug Act passed in 2003
under a Republican administration. It also explains the weird
preoccupations, such as denying contraception to women and rolling
back legal protections for children, of North Carolina Republican Mark
Meadows, a Tea Party caudillo who helped lead the charge to shut down
the government. None of those preoccupations are on the agenda of the
wealthy funders of the Tea Party; rich Republicans have a tendency to
be socially somewhat liberal, or at least more socially liberal than
the Republican voting base. For the wealthy, delving into private
consensual matters is at best a distraction from their own
preoccupation with maintaining their economic hegemony over society
and, at worst, as in the case of the Tea Party voters' fixation with
Obama’s alleged foreign birth, it is a positive embarrassment.

In periods of political crisis or threatening social change, the lower
middle class[ii] often has been the demographic segment most
susceptible to militant authoritarian movements - such as the Klan or
the Coughlinites in earlier times in American history. In other
countries as well, the lower middle class has been the basis of
fascist movements. As Richard J. Evans documents in The Coming of the
Third Reich, the original electoral backbone of the National
Socialists was the lower middle class, exemplified by petty
shopkeepers, the lower rungs of the white-collar professions and
land-poor farmers. As the great economic calamity of 1929 intensified,
these groups feared, above all, sinking into the despised proletariat.
It was this emotion that caused them to identify the source of their
problems less in the banks, corporations and cartels that were the
proximate cause of the crash than in the contaminating presence of
foreigners and the underclass. France has had periodic bouts of this
phenomenon, with movements like Action Francaise, the post-World War
II Poujadists (the definitive small shopkeepers movement) and, more
recently, the anti-immigrant party of Jean-Marie Le Pen, whose
psychologically penetrating political catchphrase was "I say what you
are thinking." Capitalists are of course more than willing to fund
such parties if they are on the brink of success and can be useful to
capital, just as the German cartels began to fund the Nazis after
their breakthrough election in September 1930. Nothing succeeds like
success: University professors and intellectuals flocked to the Nazi
Party once it gained power. But the motivating energy of the movement
sprang, above all, from the fear and resentment of those tenuously
situated a couple of rungs above the actual poor.

Lind will have none of this. In a follow-up piece further advocating
his thesis, he takes swipes against those who see cultural
deformations among ordinary people as a strong factor in the rise in
authoritarian movements. Every critic of reactionary populism - Max
Weber, H.L. Mencken, Richard Hofstadter, Theodore Adorno, C. Wright
Mills - comes in for scorn as being a sniffish elitist. But Mencken's
(and the some of the others') disdain for the Southern Baptists and
Methodists of the day certainly had a basis in fact, given that these
organizations had plunged America into the long national nightmare of
Prohibition, as well as having revived the Ku Klux Klan. And it is
nothing other than Weber's "status politics" (meaning politics closely
entwined with cultural issues) rather than purely elite economic
concerns that explains the slogan "take back our country!" Populism
certainly has had its progressive aspects. But in attempting to
salvage a populism - particularly Southern populism - that does not
have some seriously debilitating flaws, Lind overshoots the mark.

Lind provides data that do not really make his case. He cites a PRRI
poll as follows: "White working-class voters in households that make
less than $30,000 per year were nearly evenly divided in their voting
preferences (39% favored Obama, 42% favored Romney). However, a
majority (51%) of white working-class voters with annual incomes of
$30,000 or more a year supported Romney, while 35% preferred Obama."
He construes this as proof that the extreme rightward tilt of the GOP
(of which the Tea Party is mostly the symptom, rather than the cause)
is a result of the work of wealthy elites. Certainly the elites have
bankrolled the Tea Party up to this point; only a fool would deny it.
But that would not translate into more than a few percent of the vote
if people in quite modest circumstances were not prepared to vote for
Tea Party policies. If nearly 40 percent of white working class voters
making less than $30,000 a year (with many of them eligible for
government income maintenance programs) were willing to vote for
Romney, who famously expressed his disdain for "the 47 percent," that
is significant. Regardless of the official poverty line, an annual
income less than $30,000 represents straightened circumstances. By his
own admission, Romney should not have carried anything more than a
negligible percentage of these voters. And the fact that an actual
majority of white working class voters making more than $30,000 per
year voted for Romney is the clincher. Had they represented all of
America, Romney would have won comfortably. Unfortunately the PRRI
poll does not indicate the upper bound of incomes for those persons,
but people likely would not describe themselves as working class if
they were making six-figure incomes. And we may assume anyone
described as working class would not be one of Lind's "local
notables."

Many observers have puzzled over the tendency of Tea Party adherents
to favor policies that are often directly counter to their economic
interests: Why would a disproportionately older group that is
accordingly more dependent of Social Security and Medicare opt for
candidates who want to "reform entitlements" (i.e., privatize Social
Security and voucherize Medicare)? This line of analysis dates in its
contemporary American form to Thomas Frank's What's the Matter with
Kansas?, in which he marveled at this self-defeating syndrome. He
located the source of the problem in the cultural anxieties that have
driven the culture wars of the past 40 years and how cleverly the
right wing and its business allies have exploited that anxiety. Frank
identified the culture wars as trumping economics, but the fascinating
question he never sufficiently answered is how this mechanism works at
the granular level.

In 1933, psychologist Wilhelm Reich attempted to answer that question
in The Mass Psychology of Fascism. His answer: The virus is all around
us, because it is latent within ourselves. But it flourishes in rigid,
punitive and authoritarian upbringings, whereby a person's early
domestic circumstances foreshadow his future relationship with state
and society. In a home life filled with punishments, taboos and guilt,
Reich saw the kernel of the future fascist: repressed, conformist and
outwardly submitting but filled with a rage over his humiliation whose
source could never be admitted. This dilemma accounts for the
curiously contradictory psychology of the adherents of authoritarian
movements. They are highly suggestible followers of some strong leader
whom they can masochistically adore, yet at intervals they become
anarchic and rebellious. And as they cannot admit the roots of their
rage, they displace it onto others: Hence the xenophobia, the
militancy, the endless search for scapegoats. It is no coincidence
that this kind of personality finds an outlet on the Tea Party - which
overlaps so heavily with followers of the Religious Right, whose lives
are often a catalogue of commandments, taboos and shibboleths.

All this unhealthy energy usually does not find a unified political
objective unless coaxed along by money and organizational skill from
outside. Frank's identification of business interests as the nurturers
of cultural resentment for their own political and financial gain is
of course correct, and we have seen this pattern more and more vividly
illustrated since the 2004 publication of his book. But that thesis,
which is now common knowledge, seems to implicitly assume that the
business interests know what they are doing, and that the dupes are
under the firm control of the plutocrats. As we have seen with the US
Chamber of Commerce, the plutocracy has gotten more than it bargained
for. Local business interests are beginning to be appalled by the
berserker antics of Tea Party stalwarts like Justin Amash and Mike
Lee.

It was ever thus; there are always not a few businessmen willing to
finance an ostensibly populist movement so as better to manipulate it,
and who then get an unpleasant surprise. In the most infamous example,
the German industrialists convinced themselves that it was so
important to crack down on the left that it was worth holding their
noses and bankrolling a déclassé Austrian corporal. They could even
tolerate him as chancellor; after all, he would be easily controllable
because his Cabinet had "sensible, pro-business conservatives" such as
Hugenberg and von Papen who would shape the new chancellor's intended
policies in the preferred direction. But sometimes Frankenstein's
monster does not respond to the commands of its master, and money does
not invariably dictate the wayward course of ideas and emotions. In
short, our elites, for all their Machiavellian wire-pulling, can be
stupid and shortsighted.


________________________________

[i] It is always instructive to ask such persons to estimate the size
of the federal budget, list the half dozen programs that make up the
bulk of spending and to guess at what percentage of the budget
consists of foreign aid.

[ii] In America, where everybody likes to think of himself as middle
class, there is a hopeless blurring of class definitions (which always
seems to accrue to the benefit of the super-wealthy). Traditionally
the working class in every society was poor or near-poor. It was only
in the early post-World War II United States that the working class
began to exhibit middle-class lifestyles and attitudes. After 35 years
of de-industrialization, however, the working class is now beleaguered
and, at best, hanging on to the lower rungs of middle-class status.
One can accurately call them lower middle class, although this term
connotes somewhat different things in different countries. The
American working class is not the English lower middle class of George
Orwell's prewar novels such as Keep the Aspidistra Flying or Coming Up
for Air.

Copyright, Truthout. May not be reprinted without permission.

Mike Lofgren

Mike Lofgren is a former Congressional staff member who served on the
House and Senate budget committees. His book about Congress, The Party
is Over: How Republicans Went Crazy, Democrats Became Useless, and the
Middle Class Got Shafted, appeared in paperback on August 27, 2013.

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