OPINION
DAVID
BROOKS
The Jan. 6 Committee Has Already Blown It
June 8,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/08/opinion/the-jan-6-committee-has-already-blown-it.html
David
Brooks
By David
Brooks
Opinion
Columnist
What is the
Jan. 6 committee for? Committee members and Democratic operatives have been
telling reporters what they hope to achieve with the hearings that begin
Thursday evening. My Times colleagues Annie Karni and Luke Broadwater wrote an
article with the headline, “Jan. 6 Hearings Give Democrats a Chance to Recast
Midterm Message.” Democrats, they reported, are hoping to use the hearings to
show midterm voters how thoroughly Republicans are to blame for what happened
that day.
Other
reports have suggested other goals. The committee members are trying to show
how much Donald Trump was involved with efforts to overturn the election, so he
is forever discredited. They are expected to use witnesses like the former
White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson to show exactly what went on inside the
administration that day and in the lead-up to it. One lawmaker told The
Washington Post that voters have shifted their attention to issues like
inflation and the pandemic, so it is key to tell a gripping story that “actually
breaks through.”
No offense,
but these goals are pathetic.
Using the
events of Jan. 6 as campaign fodder is small-minded and likely to be
ineffective. If you think you can find the magic moment that will finally
discredit Donald Trump in the eyes of the electorate, you haven’t been paying
attention over the last six years. Sorry, boomers, but this is not the
Watergate scandal in which we need an investigation to find out who said what
to whom in the Oval Office. The horrors of Jan. 6 were out in public. The
shocking truth of it was what we all saw that day and what we’ve learned about
the raw violence since.
We don’t
need a committee to simply regurgitate what happened on Jan. 6, 2021. We need a
committee that will preserve democracy on Jan. 6, 2025, and Jan. 6, 2029. We
need a committee to locate the weaknesses in our democratic system and society
and find ways to address them.
The core
problem here is not the minutiae of who texted what to chief of staff Mark
Meadows on Jan. 6 last year. The core problem is that there are millions of
Americans who have three convictions: that the election was stolen, that
violence is justified in order to rectify it and that the rules and norms that
hold our society together don’t matter.
Those
millions of Americans are out there right now. I care more about their present
and future activities than about their past. Many of them are running for local
office to be in a position to disrupt future elections. I’d like the committee
to describe who they are, what motivates them and how much power they already
have.
This is a
movement, not a conspiracy. We don’t need a criminal-type investigation looking
for planners or masterminds as much as we need historians and scholars and
journalists to help us understand why the American Republican Party, like the
Polish Law and Justice party, or the Turkish Justice and Development Party, has
become a predatory semi-democratic faction.
We need a
committee to explore just how close America is to rampant political violence. I
had some problems with Barbara F. Walter’s recent book, “How Civil Wars Start,”
but I wish all the committee members would read it if only to expand their
imaginations.
She
demonstrates that the conditions for political violence are already all around
us: The decline of state effectiveness and democratic norms. The rise of
political factions that are not based on issues, but on ethnic identity and the
preservation of racial and ethnic privilege. The existence of ferocious splits
between urban and rural people. The existence of conflict entrepreneurs — political
leaders and media folks who profit from whipping up apocalyptic frenzies. The
widespread sense that our political opponents are out to destroy our way of
life.
We need a
committee to look at how conditions in America compare to conditions in
countries around the world that have already seen their democracies slide into
autocracy and violence.
We need a
committee to explore what political violence might look like in this country.
Writing in Foreign Affairs, Steven Levitsky and Lucan Way foresee a future of
“endemic regime instability”: frequent constitutional crises, contested or
stolen elections, periods of dysfunctional democracy followed by periods of
authoritarian rule.
Writing in
The Atlantic, George Packer imagines what might happen if a contested election
were finally decided by the Supreme Court or Congress: Half the country
explodes in rage. Protests turn violent. Buildings get firebombed. Law
enforcement officers take sides.
I’m trying
to understand why committee members are not gripped by these realities. After
more than a century of relative democratic stability maybe it’s hard for some
people to imagine precisely how the fits of political violence that bedevil
other nations could hit our shores. Maybe the committee members are imprisoned
in the categories set by past investigation committees — Watergate and 9/11.
Either way,
we need a committee that will be focused not on the specific actions of this or
that individual but on the broad social conditions that threaten to bring
American democracy to its knees.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário