IDEAS
Biden Gambles That ‘We the People’ Still Exist
Countering Trump’s antidemocratic movement isn’t a
normal political challenge.
By Anne
Applebaum
SEPTEMBER
2, 2022
About the
author: Anne Applebaum is a staff writer at The Atlantic.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/09/democracy-biden-speech-trump-maga/671325/
The
principles of classical liberalism that underlie the American political system
emerged in an era, the late 17th century, when people were exhausted by violent
religious wars. The philosophy that eventually created our democracy was
therefore designed to “lower the temperature of politics,” as Francis Fukuyama
has recently written, to take issues of existential truth off the table so that
people could live in safety. In liberal democracies, citizens were persuaded to
adopt a culture of moderation, restraint, and adherence to the rule of law;
respect for the rights of others to think what they want; support for
independent courts, checks and balances, and neutral institutions such as
election boards. None of that has necessarily been very inspiring to people who
want high emotion, feelings of unity, or moral crusades in public life. In
Liberalism and Its Discontents, Fukuyama argues that the values of liberal democracy
are by definition “thinner than those offered by societies bound by a single
religious doctrine,” and he is right.
This is the
deep source of the most serious problem facing Joe Biden, and not just Joe
Biden: how to energize citizens to defend moderation, how to create excitement
about institutions that were designed not to be exciting, how to build
enthusiasm for the political center—the people of all political beliefs who
still respect the rules and understand why they are important. Above all, how
to get Americans to see that the challenge presented by the “MAGA Republicans,”
as the president called them in his speech last night, is not a normal
political challenge. Trump’s political movement is not a threat to liberal
democracy because of its beliefs about taxes, spending, welfare, immigration,
energy policy, or even abortion, however vehemently some Americans might
disagree with them. Nor is it threatening because it is conservative, for it is
not conservative in the traditional sense at all.
MAGA
Republicans are rather a threat because their leader does not accept the
outcome of elections when he loses them; because he does not believe that the
rule of law applies to him; because he does not adhere to the culture of
restraint, tolerance, and moderation; and because he is now seeking to help
elect other politicians who feel the same way. In their drive to change the
political system, and to ensure that they can retain power even if they lose,
Trump’s followers have verbally and sometimes physically attacked Capitol
police officers, election workers, the FBI, the Department of Justice, and
civil servants. He and his acolytes use violent language, and they inspire
violence in return. As Biden put it last night, they “tried everything last
time to nullify the votes of 81 million people. This time, they’re determined
to succeed in thwarting the will of the people.”
For most of
his presidency, Biden has dealt with this problem by largely ignoring it,
scarcely mentioning Trump at all. Instead, he sought to change the subject, to
speak about infrastructure or climate policy rather than existential issues. As
a way of dealing with violent political division, this tactic has a long
history. It was used in Northern Ireland, for example, where the idea was to
get people to talk about building community centers so that they would stop
talking about killing one another. Some European politicians challenged by the
far-right in their own countries have tried something similar. Pablo Casado,
until recently the leader of the Spanish center right, once told me he wanted
to focus on the economic issues underlying the culture wars. He hoped to build
support among people who wanted a pragmatic conversation, not an ideological
one.
But in a
culture as noisy as ours, and in a world where social-media algorithms
automatically promote the most emotional thoughts and messages, this tactic can
fail. Moderate language gets drowned out. Talk of infrastructure sounds boring;
climate change seems too distant a prospect to matter. Restraint can seem like
weakness or indifference. Another European politician, the Polish center-right
leader Donald Tusk (who is also fighting an antidemocratic political movement),
has told me that he thinks politicians have to be “willing to sacrifice
something, risk something” or their voters won’t take them seriously. In
Biden’s case, moderation can also seem like exhaustion, as if he is too old and
too tired to care deeply anymore.
But clearly
Biden does care. And so he has taken the risky and genuinely brave decision to
use emotional language in defense of our rules-based political system. The
speech he gave last night at Independence Hall in Philadelphia, the place where
a lot of those rules were written, was indeed lit and orchestrated to evoke
drama. It was also meant to evoke strong feelings of patriotism, unity, and
connection. Biden referenced American history—”We, the people, have burning
inside of each of us the flame of liberty that was lit here at Independence
Hall”—as well as American pride. He contrasted Trump’s dark, apocalyptic
worldview with his own: “I see a different America, an America with an
unlimited future, an America that’s about to take off.” The United States, he
said, “is still the beacon to the world, an ideal to be realized, a promise to
be kept. There’s nothing more important. Nothing more sacred.”
Biden, in
fact, used the religious word sacred three other times, speaking of “sacred
ground,” the “sacred flame,” and the “sacred proposition that all are created
equal in the image of God.” But he sought to evoke anger as well as patriotism.
When he excoriated the MAGA Republicans, he did not use the normal political
language of disagreement but called their movement a form of “extremism that
threatens the very foundations of our republic.” Finally, he issued a call to
action, telling Americans what he thought they should do about it: not commit
retaliatory violence but “speak up, speak out, get engaged, vote, vote, vote!”
The use of
political emotion in a deeply divided society carries some dangers. It is
guaranteed to provoke an equally emotional response on the other side, raising
temperatures instead of lowering them. Angry language makes the other side
angry too, and can also galvanize voters. Precisely that reaction rippled
across pro-Trump media and social media last night after the speech. The Fox
News host Tucker Carlson declared that the president had “crossed into a very
dangerous, very dangerous place.” Biden was accused of “criminalizing political
opposition.” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said Biden had chosen “to
divide, demean, and disparage his fellow Americans.” The Republican Party will
undoubtedly start fundraising among those Americans who do indeed feel demeaned
and disparaged. I expect that some Democrats will feel uneasy about Biden’s
speech for the same reason.
Another
danger is that the speech will be seen as partisan, as a plea for people to
vote for Democrats, rather than as a call for all Americans to support liberal
democracy. Clearly the White House was aware of this danger, which is why Biden
addressed himself to “Democrats, independents, and mainstream Republicans.”
That’s also why he went out of his way to note that “not every Republican, not
even the majority of Republicans, are MAGA Republicans. Not every Republican
embraces their extreme ideology. I know, because I’ve been able to work with
these mainstream Republicans.” Unfortunately, the timing of the speech, in the
run-up to the midterm elections, will lead many to dismiss it anyway. So will
Biden’s oblique and (in this context) possibly unnecessary references to
abortion and contraception. Republican politicians and television presenters will
deliberately frame the speech so that GOP voters interpret it as partisan, and
many voters will only ever hear that commentary, and not listen to the words of
the speech at all.
Most
dangerous of all, though, is the possibility that in a tribalized political
system like ours, the Constitution, once it is championed by one political
camp, may itself come to seem like a partisan cause, a thing that Democrats and
maybe Liz Cheney care about, but nobody else. If, to be a fully paid-up member
of the Republican Party, you have to go on pretending that the 2020 election
was stolen and the January 6 insurrectionists were patriots, then you may
eventually come to believe that rule of law is something to be defeated, not
respected. Election laws become something that your enemies care about, not
you.
Biden is
betting that we are not at that stage yet. The language of his speech presumed
that, in making an emotional appeal in favor of liberal democracy, he was still
speaking to a decisive majority of the country. That’s why he kept using the
expression we the people, a phrase that, of course, references the
Constitution, but also expresses a sense of unity—a unity that should, in
principle, still include people with a huge range of political tastes and
views. “We the people,” he said, “accept
the results of free and fair elections.” We the people “see politics, not as
total war, but mediation of our differences.” And once again: “We the people,”
Biden said, “have burning inside of each of us the flame of liberty that was
lit here at Independence Hall.”
That
sentence assumes that the 17th-century ideas debated in Philadelphia in the
18th century still mean something to the citizens who live by them today. Biden
clearly believes they do. The future of liberal democracy in America depends on
whether he is right.
Anne
Applebaum is a staff writer at The Atlantic.


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