In last week’s post, said that to win the elections of 2026, take back control of Congress and regain our working class support, Democrats should focus on kitchen table issues rather than on issues of racial equity or gender equity. In this post, I want to expand on that idea and explain what I mean.
What is the Problem?
We live in a very inequitable society in which an outlandish share of the national income goes to a tiny group of wealthy people. Making the distribution of income more equitable is the most important political task of our time, and in order to do that, we need to understand the real nature of the problem. To put it bluntly, the problem is that a few rich people have most of the wealth, while millions of hard-working people own practically nothing. Note that I did not say “a few white people” or “a few white men.” I said “a few rich people.” It is true that most of the rich people are white men, but it is also true that most white men are not rich. It is true that working-class women of all races are among the most oppressed members of our society, but it is also true that there is a substantial number of women who are billionaires. Likewise, it is true that black people earn less than white people on average, but it is also true that that we have a substantial number of black billionaires. So, the problem is not the redistribution of income from male workers to female workers or from white workers to black workers. The problem is the redistribution of income from the owners of capital to the working class.
We Democrats must focus on improving the lives of working-class people of all races. We must fight against the idea that improving the lives of black people means transferring income from white workers to black workers or that improving the lives of women means transferring income from men to women. Instead, we must focus on doing things that improve the lives of all working people. Here are a couple of examples. There are many others.
Policy Proposals
Affordable Childcare
One way to improve the lives of all working people would be to provide tax-supported, affordable
childcare. Today, many families are or could be two-income families, and many
women are single parents. Childcare takes a huge bite out of the incomes of
those who can afford childcare, and those who cannot afford it are condemned to
poverty because they cannot get decent jobs. Affordable childcare would
immediately put a substantial amount of money into the pockets of millions of
working-class people.
In addition, affordable childcare would help to reduce the
income gap between white people and black people because black people are more
likely than white people to be in the working class. Black people have on
average a small fraction of the household wealth that white people have, and
black people earn less than white people at every level of education. So, black
people would benefit disproportionately from a program of affordable childcare.
It would give them a leg up in their struggle to improve their economic
situation.
Baby Bonds
Baby bonds are another possibility. The idea is that each
baby born in the United States would receive at birth a treasury bond that
would be held in trust for the child until he or she reaches adulthood. The
amount of the bond would depend on the wealth of the child’s family. Children
born into wealthy families would receive smaller bonds than children born into
poor families. Darity
and Hamilton, who originally proposed the idea in 2010, suggested that
children in the lowest wealth quartile might receive bonds worth at least
$50,000, while children in the highest wealth quartile would receive a much
smaller amount.
Each bond would be held in trust for the child until it
reached adulthood, and the interest earned would be reinvested. When the child
became an adult, the money would then become available to pay for education, to
purchase a house or for any other approved purpose. While the bond was held in
trust, it would appreciate considerably in value. A $50,000 bond earning 4%
interest would be worth a little over $109,000 when the child reached the age
of 21.
The point of giving children baby bonds would be make
equality of opportunity more real in the United States by making it possible
for a working-class child to obtain professional training without incurring
crippling debts. A person without crippling debts can use her income to accumulate
wealth that can be passed on to her children thus allowing her to join the
patrimonial middle class.
Respect
However, no policy positions will help us to regain our majority unless we start to show respect for working-class people and rural people. The Democratic Party has become the party of the patrimonial middle class, and that comes with cultural baggage. First, we Democrats are by and large well educated, and we look down on people who are less educated. Second, we are mainly urban people (because the jobs for educated professionals are in cities), and we look down on rural people and on rural ways of living.
Our attitudes are visible to everyone. They shine through in places like Hillary Clinton's description of Trump's supporters as "a basket of deplorables" or Barack Obama's remark about people clinging to guns or religion or racism. People hate and resent being looked down on, and they vote their feelings. We will never regain our majority until we come to understand that our obvious sense of superiority bears a large share of the responsibility for the rise of Trump. If we want to win, we will have to deal with our own prejudices, and we will have to nominate a candidate who can talk with working-class and rural people as equals.
Let's get busy! We have a lot to do
I agree with David. Dems should focus on becoming the party of the working class and de-emphasize gender and racial issues. -Jerry Z.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't say "de-emphasize gender and racial issues." Instead, I would say that all races and genders will prosper if we join together to fight our real enemies and to promote policies that benefit all working-class people.
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