Tuesday, September 16, 2008

America's Disingenuous Political System by Matias Bulnes, NYC

I have yet to hear an explanation of Ms. Palin's potential contribution as vice president of the US (and, let us not forget, possible president). All I hear is “women will vote for her,” “she is a hockey mother,” “it’s a smart move given the Democratic primaries,” etc. If we focus on her political credentials, the picture is rather unflattering. She has some political experience at the middle administrative level and none at the high level. Her academic training is far from impressive and she acquired her first passport a few months ago. As a result, she seems to be notoriously unprepared on international politics and diplomacy. Why would anyone think that she can be a good vice president? Except for a few million voters I suspect that nobody thinks she would be a good vice president. In fact, I should suspect that not even republicans believe so, on pain of disrespecting their political acumen.

But despite my suspicion the media has mostly welcomed Palin’s nomination (fortunately with some exceptions). Everybody seems to be celebrating the cleverness of the McCain campaign in making this move. And yet I can’t help the feeling that there is something deeply wrong with decisions like this. In this article I will explore what possible justification can ground a decision that by all informed standards jeopardizes the future of the country. I want to pay special attention to the insincerity of decisions such as McCain’s where the politician who makes them knows that they won’t benefit the country. I do not intend to mount a critique of the Republican Party in particular since I believe democrats acquiesce in the same logic—though perhaps with some more scruples. Ultimately I want to invite reflection on what kind of democracy can be built upon such a disingenuous political system and whether it is worth having.

Rightly or wrongly, making political decisions on purely instrumental grounds is widely condoned in the American media and, derivatively, by American society. It is, for example, assumed that politicians care more about winning elections than about principles such as authenticity or sincerity. Journalists and political analysts would not talk about the “real motive” underlying a political move ever so lightly if it wasn’t routinely accepted by the audience that politicians are usually insincere about their real motives. But as much as authenticity and sincerity are normally considered values, the obsession with winning elections has been justified in the liberal tradition in terms of a consumer-based conception of the political system (sometimes also called interest-group politics). According to this view, voters are consumers and political parties are suppliers of political projects designed to fit their preferences. As a consequence, the real motives of politicians are irrelevant; what matters is that their projects satisfy the consumers, hence that they win elections. This view of the political system relies on the hope that by pursuing politics in this market-like way the best optimum will be achieved—and moreover, in a way that doesn’t required a debate about the good.

But I doubt that McCain’s decision (as many others from all parties) can be justified in terms of this consumer-based model. For it would be analogous in an economic market to the case of a supplier selling a defective product to a costumer that he knows wants it out of ignorance or confusion. McCain should know perfectly well that Ms. Palin is hardly qualified for the US presidency in times of an unmanageable war, a looming economic crisis, an empowering China, etc. But instead of warning American voters of their crucial mistake he is happy to use it in his own benefit. Even raging liberals should agree that there is something deeply problematic about economic relations with such a crucial disparity in information.

One way in which the liberal could reply is by setting the responsibility on the Obama campaign to overlook McCain’s decisions and expose their flaws to the public light. Hence, should McCain’s choice of Palin be ultimately harmful to the US, the political system will react to it and eventually punish McCain with a defeat. But like with so many liberal arguments, their faith in the control power of the market is based on an ideal of social organization that is rarely instantiated in reality. In practice, this blind faith has earned the US 8 years of an erratic political leadership that has brought a previously healthy country to a state of tremendous economic and political uncertainty. But more important for the purposes of this essay is the observation that the political agents themselves know that the consumer-based model is at best a rough approximation to reality and bet on its imperfections. There can be little doubt that if the McCain campaign did after all choose Palin for instrumental reasons, they were aware of her profound political deficiencies and banked on the fact that the Obama campaign will not be able to turn the public attention to them in the short time before the general election. Not only doesn’t the political system guarantee an optimum outcome of the democratic process but politicians exploit the naïve expectation that it will.

The alternative to the liberal conception of political systems is unsurprisingly the social democratic one. The contrast between these views is usually brought out in terms of two opposite conceptions of political freedom introduced by Isaiah Berlin. But McCain’s decision can also make for a good illustration of the contrast. I suspect McCain chose Palin knowing that to be an overall bad decision for the country but based on public acclaim. This could be deemed acceptable only if we see the job of the politician as being the representation of the people’s preferences. But in the social democratic conception, rather than the people’s preferences, the job of the politician is to represent the people’s interest. In particular, making a political decision that goes against the interest of the nation but that has public approval is a violation of the duty of the politician. This together with the inevitable feeling that McCain is patronizing the people of the US, is perhaps what explains my discomfort with the choice of Palin. A democracy where politicians carry themselves in such a disingenuous way and voters are treated like means to seize political power sounds to me like a sham or, in any case, like a democracy not worth having.

5 Comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm having a difficult time understanding your criticism. Neither Palin nor McCain have actually been elected, so why are you blaming the American system for electing choosing them? It is still too early to tell whether Palin is going to help McCain or hurt him, but if she does end up hurting his chances, or even if McCain is not elected, that would seemingly be evidence of the success of the U.S. system--consumers and all.

Matias Bulnes said...

You are right about that speculative piece of evidence. But let's not overlook other, more concrete pieces of evidence such as George w. Bush. A clearly underprepared president, he was brought to office by the American system because "he looks like the kind of guy you can have a beer with"--or so many people explained their vote. We all know the result of the U.S. political system in that case.

PC said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
PC said...

Mr. Bulnes, could you compare or contrast the political system of the US to the a political system of a country you hold in higher esteem?

The truth is, I don't really understand the thesis of this post. Is this another piece indicting the stupidity of Americans? Is this an objection to liberal democracy because it cannot safeguard against the stupidity of Americans? Is this an objection for what passes as political analysis in the media coverage of American politics? Are you lamenting the cynicism of politicians?

What, in the end, are you advocating in this piece?

Matias Bulnes said...

PC: regarding your request, I think the problems I try to illustrate in the case of the political system of the US are quite common in the world. I didn't mean to suggest that the US is worse than other countries in this respect. I think that the political system of the US has many strenghts over most countries. But nevertheless I think that there is a problem and that reflexion upon it can potentially bring about correction and perfection of the system. Ultimately I think it healthy for any country to revise its political workings.

What is the thesis of the article is something not absolutely clear to me either. I admit that it's an unfinished project and that there is still work to be put in the piece in order to make it as clear and sound as the issue requieres. But I do hope I managed to illustrate a plausible problem about the US's political system (as well as those of many other countries). Ultimately I sense something wrong with such extreme instrumentalism in politics within a democracy. This worry is by no means novel in theory, but my intention was to analyze Palin's nomination and the current election in general against the backdrop of this worry. As you suggest, I do lament the cynicism of some politicians and more importantly the neutral stance of the public toward it.

I don't understand your reference to an alleged stupidity of Americans. I think the issue has nothing to do with how intelligent Americans are. I do believe, on a different vein, that part of the political capital of this country is that people reflect and write on these issues generating a constant process of revision and adjustment. In that respect the US is ahead of most countries in the world because it has very intelligent people doing this.

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