NYTimes blog responses
Stanley
Fish
January
20, 2008, 6:27 pm
Against
Independent Voters
TAGS:
INDEPENDENT VOTERS,
PARTY POLITICS
We’re in that
season now when we hear the same things being said over and
over again, and nothing is said more often by political
pundits than this election (it doesn’t matter which one)
will be decided by independent voters. Accompanying this
announcement is the judgment – sometimes implicit,
sometimes explicit – that this state of affairs is to be
welcomed, even encouraged: it’s good that the independent
voters are making themselves heard and forcing candidates
to think outside their partisan boxes. And this judgment
itself implies another: independent voters are better, in
the sense of being more reflective and less ideological,
than voters who identify themselves strongly with one or
the other of the two major parties. The assumption is that
if we were all independent voters, the political process
would be in much better shape.
This
seems to me to be a dubious proposition, especially if the
word “political” in the phrase “political process” is taken
seriously. Those who yearn for government without politics
always invoke abstract truths and moral visions (the good
life, the fair society, the just commonwealth) with which
no one is likely to disagree because they have no content.
But sooner rather than later someone gives these
abstractions content, and when that happens, definitional
disputes break out immediately, and after definitional
disputes come real disputes, the taking of sides, the
applying of labels (both the self-identifying kind and the
accusing kind) and, pretty soon, the demonization of the
other. In short, politics, which is what independent voters
hate.
They
tend to agree with (and quote) George Washington. In his
farewell address (1796), Washington spoke of the “baneful
effects of the spirit of party,” which includes “ill
founded jealousies and false alarms,” “the animosity of one
part against another” and the propagation of the “belief
that there is a real difference of local interests and
views.” Parties, he concluded, “make the public
administration the mirror of the ill-concerted…projects of
faction rather than the organ of consistent and wholesome
plans digested by common counsels and modified by mutual
interests.”
Consistent,
wholesome, common vs. conflicted, divided, factional.
Mutual interests – interest that are shared – are what we
want rather than special interests. This is the rhetoric
and vocabulary of the independent voter, for whom it is an
article of faith that differences are inessential and that
what unites us is larger and more important than what
divides us. Why can’t we all just get
along?
Washington
himself knows why. The spirit of party, he says,
“unfortunately is inseparable from our nature,” from our
tendency, that is, to identify our passions with what is
right and true. Factionalism is not a deviation from
ordinary human behavior; it is ordinary human behavior.
(That is why checks and balances figure so prominently in
The Federalist Papers.) Human beings are situated
creatures; they see things not from a God’s-eye point of
view, but from the point of view of the beliefs,
allegiances, aspirations and fears they bring with them
into the ballot box.
Floating
independently above the fray and inhabiting the marketplace
of ideas as if were a shopping bazaar rather than a
battlefield is an unnatural condition. The natural
condition is to be political. To be political is to believe
something, and to believe something is to believe that
those who believe something else are wrong, and after all
you don’t want people who believe (and would do) the wrong
things running your government. So you organize with other
like-minded folks and smite the enemy (verbally) hip and
thigh. You join a party.
What
do independent voters do? Well, most of all, they talk
about the virtue of being an independent voter. When they
are asked to explain what that means, they say, “I can’t
stand the partisan atmosphere that has infected our
politics” (forgetting that politics is partisan by
definition); or “we like to make up our own minds and don’t
want anyone telling us what to do (as if Democrats and
Republicans were sheep eager to go over whatever cliff the
leadership brings them to) or (and this was a favorite of
those interviewed in Iowa and New Hampshire), “We vote the
person rather than the party.”
Now,
voting the person rather than the party is about the
dumbest thing you can do for a reason I elaborated
in an earlier column (“Parties
Matter”). The party affiliation of a candidate tells you
what kind of appointments he or she is likely to make. Do
you think that regulations of industry stifle productivity
and damage the economy, or do you think that unregulated
industries endanger the environment? Do you think that
illegal immigrants are just that – illegal – and therefore
should be deported when detected, or do you think that we
should figure out a way to legitimize their status and make
the best of what has already happened? Do you think that
Iran poses a threat that must be countered before it is too
late, or do you think that military action should be
resorted to only after every avenue of diplomacy has been
exhausted, even if it takes years or
decades?
If
you feel strongly about these and other matters, it is
incumbent upon you to take into consideration the positions
of the two major parties, for the successful candidate can
be counted on to appoint to the offices responsible for
answering these questions men and women whose views reflect
the party’s platform. Voting the person, however attractive
or impressive he or she may be, could very well get you
four years of policies you detest. In other words, policy
differences are party differences, and it is hard to see
how you could be a responsible voter if you held your nose
at a whiff of party politics. If you are really interested
in the way things should go in the country, come off the
high pedestal and join the rest of us in the nurturing
(and, yes, dirty) soil of the partisan
free-for-all.
To
this an independent voter might reply that the two-party
structure is the problem, and if we could only elect an
independent candidate, he or she wouldn’t be beholden to
any party and could make appointments on the basis of
merit. But even if this miracle were to occur, the parties
would still be in control of federal and state legislative
bodies, and in order to do anything at all, an independent
president would have to negotiate with the very political
forces he or she beat up on in the course of getting
elected. (There goes independence.) And what leverage would
a president in that position have?
In
the end, there is nothing to be said for independent voters
and a lot to be said against them. Remember, a bunch of
them voted for Ralph Nader. Case closed.