|
Red and Blue America
By Hans Zeiger
I spent
the past week driving with some friends across the country from
the upper Midwest to California. It was a geographical overview
of what political scientists call Red and Blue America (Republican
and Democrat). Culturally and religiously, America is divided and
has been for many years. As a reflection of that moral divide, in
this election year, the political divisions are incontrovertibly
intense.
In this campaign season, George W. Bush must be
a conservative, and John Kerry must be a liberal, for such are the
disparate identities of the people from whom the candidates will
respectively anticipate their victories. It is a good thing that
we will finally see some contrast in our presidential candidates,
but it is an awful thing that the political divisions that motivate
the contrast symbolize a deeper rift in the cultural life of America.
According
to an article in Monday's Washington Post, the political mirroring
of America's cultural divide is a mostly new phenomenon. Gone is
the recent year of the conservative "Reagan Democrat"
or the liberal "Rockefeller Republican"; those breeds
still exist but they cannot control their parties. This too is a
good thing, because parties ought to stick to a coherent platform.
And gone is the era of the Big Tent; parties are
coming to recognize that they alienate more than they attract when
they are wishy-washy and watered down.
Thus, for the first time in generations, the philosophical
labels of liberal and conservative correspond with near precision
to Democrat and Republican. University of California Los Angeles
political scientist Hans Noel points out, "It has taken 40
or 50 years to work itself out, but the ideological division in
America - which is not new - is now lined up with the party division."
Washington Post writer David Von Drehle reports
that most American voters are fiercely committed to one party or
another, even this early in the election cycle. According to Drehle,
70 percent of Americans can identify themselves with a candidate
already. "From Congress to the airwaves to the best-seller
lists, American politics appears to be hardening into uncompromising
camps, increasingly identified with the two parties," writes
Drehle. "Politics in red-blue America is less the art of compromise
than a clash of cultures."
Far from being dominated by one party, American
politics is split 50-50. It was split most certainly in 2000 when
the election came down to a few hundred votes in Florida. And this
year, polls consistently show a nearly equal split in support for
Bush and Kerry. When one or the other candidate takes a lead in
a nationwide poll, it is by a negligible percentage.
The same trend carries among young voters. According
to a Newsweek poll of 351 voters aged 18 to 29, 44 percent of young
Americans would vote for Kerry if the election were held today while
a close 42 percent would vote for Bush.
Red and Blue America is not about to go away. Generation
Next wants a political race that is cut and dry, candidates who
are independently minded, in other words, a real choice. I know
this from the experience of youth political activism, and statistics
in the Newsweek poll seem to verify it.
I'm
no political scientist, so I'm not out to wage grand academic analysis
of the American political scene. But I'm intrigued by the equalizing
of Left and Right on the political spectrum. It is the age of conflict
and controversy, something we haven't quite experienced perhaps
since the Civil War. The issues are no less critical than they were
then. Abortion is our modern day slavery. Gay marriage is only in
its nascent stage. Budgets, taxes and spending matter too. As in
the days of the Civil War, we struggle to define the role of government
in our nation. On our capacity to choose rightly in these matters,
we will rise or fall.
Politics
is as divided as the culture, and this generation is in for a long
and hard-fought battle.
Hans
Zeiger is a student at Hillsdale College and president of the Scout
Honor Coalition. www.hanszeiger.com
|