When people's mistrust of their elected officials and the parties reaches these levels, there is little for political leaders to do but take counsel from their own anger and anxieties -- and, these days, the popular mood fairly seethes with both those things. Discontent with the present and apprehension about the future have become the background noise of our politics, yet both sides of the congressional aisle seem deaf to the din.
In one of his magisterial explorations of German politics between the wars, the historian Ian Kershaw mused that "there are times -- they mark the danger point for a political system -- when politicians can no longer communicate, when they stop understanding the language of the people they are supposed to be representing."
It would be reckless not to insist that this country and its politics remain, in crucial ways, far distant from Weimar. It would be rash, though, to pretend that the distance remains as great as it once was.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Party misrust
This article comes out of the LA Times. Not something I read on a regular basis, but I found this article really interesting. There is a growing trend in America of truly mistrusting all political authority. I personally don't think that either Democrats or Republicans really care about the American people. Sure it's something they think about and it's something they say but I think it's more of a front to support their political drive.
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