Thomas Frank: The Tea Party’s “utopian market populism”
from Salon.com:
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Early in the book, you describe the moment in the spring of 2009 when free-market economics had been so thoroughly discredited that Newsweek could run a cover story proclaiming, Were all socialists now. What happened? Why did that moment dissipate?
I saw that cover so many times [at Tea Party events]. For these people, that rang the alarm bell. I think the AIG moment [when the bailed-out insurance behemoth used taxpayer relief to dole out huge bonuses to its executives] was in some ways the high point of the crisis, when [the politics] could have gone either way. There was this amazing public outrage, and that for me was the turning point. Newsweek had another cover, Thinking Mans Guide to Populism, and I remember this feeling around the country, that people were just furious. Somehow the right captured the sense of anger. They completely captured it. You could say they had no right to it, but they did. And one of the reasons they were able to do it was because the liberals were not interested in that anger.
Im speaking here of the liberal culture in Washington, D.C. There was no Occupy Wall Street movement [at that time] and there was only people like me on the fringes talking about it. The liberals had their leader in Barack Obama
they had their various people in Congress. But these people are completely unfamiliar with populist anger. Its an alien thing to them. They dont trust it, and they have trouble speaking to it. I like Barack Obama, but at the end of the day hes a very professorial kind of guy. The liberals totally missed the opportunity, and the right was able to grab it.
Looking back on it, I feel like people like myself were part of the problem. We sort of assumed with the Democrats in power, the system would correct itself.
One of the problems with liberalism in this country is that its headquartered in Washington and its leaders are a very comfortable class of people. Washington is one of the richest cities in the country, maybe the richest. Its not a place that feels the crisis, that feels the economic downturn. By and large, the real estate market stayed OK. The city continued to boom. The contracts continued to flow. What were talking about here is the failure of modern liberalism. At one time it was a movement of working-class people. The idea that liberals wouldnt feel economic pain was ridiculous. Thats who liberals were. No more. ................(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.salon.com/2011/12/28/the_rise_of_utopian_market_populism/