Saturday, October 27, 2018

BEHIND THE MID-TERMS: A FIGHT FOR AMERICA’S SOUL

Culture Wars, Self-governance, and America’s Future

In 1837, as Doris Kearns Goodwin writes in her new
book, Leadership in Turbulent Times (Simon & Schuster 2018), twenty-seven year old Illinois state legislator Abraham Lincoln said the “founding fathers noble experiment – their ambitions to show the world that ordinary people could govern themselves had succeeded” and now it was up to his generation to preserve this “proud fabric” of freedom. Perhaps the 2018 mid-term elections present another challenge to
show the world ordinary people can govern themselves since these elections will determine control of Congress, numerous governships,   and the balance of power in state legislatures in the largely unprecedented circumstances of the Trump presidency.  

This year’s campaign demands examination of two very different political approaches, approaches that will likely continue in the 2020 Presidential campaign, given Donald Trump’s almost certain presence on the ballot. The difference in the approaches of the two major parties generates as much interest for us as any individual campaign. Which wins will say much about the social, political, and cultural direction of the country in the next few years. Woodson would go so far as to say “who prevails will speak to the capacity of ordinary people to govern themselves and decide who benefits from democracy and who does not.” In any event, the elections reflect a battle for the nation’s soul. 
  
Some background reading
Two books provide a good starting point for understanding what’s going in the 2018 campaign -- What’sthe Matter With Kansas by Thomas Frank (Holt & Co. 2004) and That Used to be Us by Tom Friedman and Michael Mandelbaum (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux 2011). Frank’s book reveals the game plan for most Republicans. Democrats, at least many of them, are trying to follow the advice laid out by Friedman and Mandelbaum. 
 

In a nutshell, What’s the Matter With Kansas details how Republicans have persuaded many white, low and middle income Americans to vote against their economic  interests. Rather than supporting candidates who favor tax, wage, and government spending policies that benefit them, these voters have often helped elect candidates who oppose those policies. They pass tax cuts tilted toward the rich, nominate and confirm judges who favor corporate interests at the expense of workers and consumers, and reject as too expensive infrastructure and job training programs that provide work for ordinary people or help them cope with the effects of globalization. Republicans have accomplished this by running cultural issue campaigns that appeal to the fears of low and middle income white America.

That Used to be Us isn’t as direct as What’s the Matter With Kansas and it’s not as much a template for Democratic campaigns. Nevertheless, the policy prescriptions in That Used to be Us on issues like health care, infrastructure, immigration, and economic innovation form the foundation for many Democratic campaigns we’ve seen this year and some Democratic gubernatorial campaigns.

The campaigns we have
As the election draws near, Republican use of the What’s the Matter With Kansas playbook has become all the more apparent. Increasingly, GOP television commercials rely on fear of hordes of brown people pouring across the southern border. Many ads are deceptive, implicitly or explicitly racist, and anti-democratic. Some Republicans, for example, present disingenuous positions on the
Affordable  Care Act, claiming support for its popular requirement that insurers cover pre-existing conditions, while signing on to lawsuits attacking that very provision or opposing it in Congress. Others run anti-immigration ads that dog whistle to whites worried about brown people coming to the United States from Latin America, supposedly bent on taking over the country.   
   
Republican candidates are not running on the 2017 tax cut (which is generally unpopular, given it’s favorability toward the wealthy) or the relatively good economy. Instead, Republicans invoke images of “uppity” (black) National Football League players
disrespecting the flag by kneeling during the national anthem, gangs of Hispanic youth terrorizing American citizens, and fears sensible gun safety laws will result in hunters losing their guns. Republicans ride that horse, hoping it takes them across the finish line first. They also now rig the system in places like Georgia, Texas, and North Dakota by changing voting rules, intending on suppressing the black, brown, and Native American vote. 
    
PhotCred: BrennanCenter.org

Democrats emphasize health care, especially pushing Medicaid expansion in states that declined that opportunity when introduced as part of the Affordable Care Act, economic wage fairness through a $15 minimum wage, and a transportation and infrastructure program that includes government funding for road and bridge repairs. Even if Friedman and Mandelbaum didn’t support every one of these polices in That Used to be Us, the book advocated the kind of bold governmental action underlying many of them because the authors saw the United States falling behind the rest of the world in innovation and economic development. 

A sign of just how different an approach the parties take in 2018 resides in the fact Democrats seldom campaign on immigration policy (except opposing splitting up immigrant families at the border) while few Republicans leave aggressive anti-immigration enforcement out of their pitch. Something has to give.

Who wins?
On the eve of the election, polls suggest Democrats will take the House, Republicans will hold a narrow Senate majority, and the intriguing gubernatorial races remain too close to call. Such a split decision would fit with our polarized politics. Regardless of who wins, however, the question of which approach best serves America won’t go away. Abraham Lincoln said America reached a point in the 19th Century where the nation was called upon and succeeded in showing the world ordinary men and women could govern themselves. It seems we have reached such a point again, though Rob thinks that while we’re approaching that kind of crossroads, we’re not quite there yet. 

We want to know what you think.
 

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

THE WONDER OF FRIENDS: Friendships and Restoring Broken Relationships


Today we explore friendship, its dimensions, its value, its wonders. All three of us cherish one another’s friendship immensely and share enriching and enlightening friendships with numerous others. We begin with Henry’s remembrances of lifetime friendships.

Henry -- How marvelous are friends
Often, in the rat race of life, we forget friendships that extend to our early years and how they make life so much more than mere existence. As a kid, I promised myself I would remember a special time I wrote about much later:

We didn’t know
We would remember
We didn’t know
How special it was

We didn’t know
It was the best time ever
Not knowing the simplicity
Of thoughts forever
Not understanding the complexity
Of memories forever

Three kids sat on an old shed roof
Breathing the freshest air ever
Carrying a future that we never ---

Never caring of forever

I remembered this description in June 2017 as my train pulled slowly out of Washington’s Union Station, headed for New Haven, Connecticut with my 1963 Yale freshman roommate. Neither of us could contain our excitement about our 50th year class reunion.


“Jones,” Mike asked, “what are the odds of two people meeting 50 plus years ago at the beginning of college, remaining friends, and traveling together like this now?”
“Not great,” I replied, leaning forward in my seat and looking over at him. “I’m not sure how we got here.”

His eyes widened and he spread his arms. “Even our wives have become close. And remember, there’s Norman and George and their wives.”

“It’s amazing,” I said. “And wonderful.”

George and Mike roomed together later. We all remained friends, convening from time to time for momentous occasions in our own lives and in the life of the world, as when we shared Barak Obama’s inauguration.

As my career – college at Yale, political work in Little Rock, law school at Michigan, clerkships in Little Rock and Duluth, practice and the bench in Little Rock – unfolded, Mike remained a constant presence. Neither his service in the Navy nor his work in New York and Washington broke the bond we formed beginning in 1963.

We also came to know each other through family. I stayed in touch with Mike through his dad. When I called to locate him, his father gave me his new number, saying, “You need to call that boy.” He understood our friendship and recognized the need we had to stay in touch. He knew we’d be there for each other.

Mike was with me the only time in my life I was ever intoxicated, as I reacted badly to the breakup with my fiancée. Years later, he was with me and my sister-in-law as my wife underwent surgery in Little Rock while I struggled to find a flight home.

Then there are friends from elementary and high school who’ve helped me remain connected with my formative years. We made special journeys together to celebrate one another’s achievements -- like the trips to change-of-command ceremonies for a classmate as he took charge of two naval vessels. Another special friend from high school informs us of the accomplishments and needs of our classmates, providing a link that keeps us greater than the sum of our parts.

The train ride helped me appreciate how continuing, caring relationships – friendships – can buoy and invigorate us as we deal with life. They represent real power. In fact, they keep things real.

Rob – Friends for all seasons    
I divide my life into eras – childhood, broadcasting, politics, law practice – as a way of reminding myself of what this journey has been like. In each part, there’ve been friends who defined the era and made it meaningful. Thinking of those friends makes me acknowledge I did very little alone. I should always give thanks for those who’ve been part of this trip.
 
I haven’t stayed in touch with all of them. Few people do that as well as Henry, and my circumstances differed. I grew up in many places, not one, as he did. Attending commuter colleges made developing friendships harder during that time. Still, in everything I’ve done, friends made the trip easier.

I’ve learned it’s never too late to form meaningful friendships. Some of my greatest pleasure now derives from time I spend playing golf with four sixty-and seventy-somethings I’ve bonded with in the last five years. Henry is right. Friendships buoy and invigorate us. They not only keep things real, they are real.

Woodson – Perhaps I can go home
I’ve devoted much of my adult life to making a living and less to making a life. I spent my time practicing law, engaging in politics, and otherwise advancing my career. I didn’t remain connected with important friends from childhood. But, I’ve now learned a different way.

During the most difficult time of my professional life, facing loss of a career and financial security, John, a childhood friend, offered, “You can always come home.”  Tyrone, another childhood friend, invited me to the Conway County NAACP’s Frank W. Smith Freedom Fund Banquet as guest speaker. There, grade school and high school friends – a basketball teammate, two puppy loves -- enveloped me.


John’s willingness to reach out during that difficult time, Tyrone’s invitation to speak at the banquet, and the reception I received told me one can “come home.” Like too many things in life, with friends there’s usually no do-over.  Friends, though, can make it feel so. I have friendships from college, law school, and my professional years I want to reinvigorate. I’m going to work on it, one at a time.