Know-Nothing Politics
So the G.O.P. has found its issue for the
2008 election. For the next three months the party plans to keep
chanting: “Drill here! Drill now! Drill here! Drill now! Four legs
good, two legs bad!” O.K., I added that last part.
And the debate on energy policy has helped me find the words for
something I’ve been thinking about for a while. Republicans, once
hailed as the “party of ideas,” have become the party of stupid.
Now, I don’t mean that G.O.P. politicians are, on average, any
dumber than their Democratic counterparts. And I certainly don’t mean
to question the often frightening smarts of Republican political
operatives.
What I mean, instead, is that know-nothingism — the insistence that
there are simple, brute-force, instant-gratification answers to every
problem, and that there’s something effeminate and weak about anyone
who suggests otherwise — has become the core of Republican policy and
political strategy. The party’s de facto slogan has become: “Real men
don’t think things through.”
In the case of oil, this takes the form of pretending that more
drilling would produce fast relief at the gas pump. In fact, earlier
this week Republicans in Congress actually claimed credit for the
recent fall in oil prices: “The market is responding to the fact that
we are here talking,” said Representative John Shadegg.
What about the experts at the Department of Energy who say that it
would take years before offshore drilling would yield any oil at all,
and that even then the effect on prices at the pump would be
“insignificant”? Presumably they’re just a bunch of wimps, probably
Democrats. And the Democrats, as Representative Michele Bachmann
assures us, “want Americans to move to the urban core, live in
tenements, take light rail to their government jobs.”
Is this political pitch too dumb to succeed? Don’t count on it.
Remember how the Iraq war was sold. The stuff about aluminum tubes
and mushroom clouds was just window dressing. The main political
argument was, “They attacked us, and we’re going to strike back” — and
anyone who tried to point out that Saddam and Osama weren’t the same
person was an effete snob who hated America, and probably looked French.
Let’s also not forget that for years President Bush was the center
of a cult of personality that lionized him as a real-world Forrest
Gump, a simple man who prevails through his gut instincts and moral
superiority. “Mr. Bush is the triumph of the seemingly average American
man,” declared Peggy Noonan, writing in The Wall Street Journal in
2004. “He’s not an intellectual. Intellectuals start all the trouble in
the world.”
It wasn’t until Hurricane Katrina — when the heckuva job done by the
man of whom Ms. Noonan said, “if there’s a fire on the block, he’ll run
out and help” revealed the true costs of obliviousness — that the cult
began to fade.
What’s more, the politics of stupidity didn’t just appeal to the
poorly informed. Bear in mind that members of the political and media
elites were more pro-war than the public at large in the fall of 2002,
even though the flimsiness of the case for invading Iraq should have
been even more obvious to those paying close attention to the issue
than it was to the average voter.
Why were the elite so hawkish? Well, I heard a number of people
express privately the argument that some influential commentators made
publicly — that the war was a good idea, not because Iraq posed a real
threat, but because beating up someone in the Middle East, never mind
who, would show Muslims that we mean business. In other words, even
alleged wise men bought into the idea of macho posturing as policy.
All this is in the past. But the state of the energy debate shows
that Republicans, despite Mr. Bush’s plunge into record unpopularity
and their defeat in 2006, still think that know-nothing politics works.
And they may be right.
Sad to say, the current drill-and-burn campaign is getting some
political traction. According to one recent poll, 69 percent of
Americans now favor expanded offshore drilling — and 51 percent of them
believe that removing restrictions on drilling would reduce gas prices
within a year.
The headway Republicans are making on this issue won’t prevent
Democrats from expanding their majority in Congress, but it might limit
their gains — and could conceivably swing the presidential election,
where the polls show a much closer race.
In any case, remember this the next time someone calls for an end to
partisanship, for working together to solve the country’s problems.
It’s not going to happen — not as long as one of America’s two great
parties believes that when it comes to politics, stupidity is the best
policy.