Why Politicians Can't Connect with the Middle Class?
Nearly every national political campaign emphasizes the importance of connecting with the middle class. So how come in the 2012 presidential race, none of the candidates are able to make that connection?
A hint may be found in the results of a Rasmussen Reports survey showing that just 27 percent of voters nationwide believe government management of the economy actually helps the economy. Fifty percent think government economic activism does more harm than good.
What is especially interesting about the data is the income demographic. Upper-income Americans are evenly divided as to whether government management of the economy helps or hurts. Middle-income Americans, on the other hand, overwhelmingly view government management of the economy as hurtful.
The affluent, perhaps because they can easily gain access to the policymakers, are OK with government management of the economy. They want it done well, and many want it done in a way to benefit their own interests. That's why a plurality of Americans now believe the United States has a system of crony capitalism rather than free-market competition.
The middle class, without friends in Congress or on Wall Street, has an entirely different view. Broadly speaking, it see the federal government as a burden weighing down both the economy and the middle class. To help the economy, most simply want to reduce the burden. Seventy-seven percent of voters think that the government could help the economy by reducing the deficit. Seventy-one percent think it would help to reduce government spending, and 59 percent think tax cuts would help.
So when a politician talks of helping the middle class with a new government program, it just doesn't ring true.
Most candidates miss this distinction because they tend to hang out with more affluent Americans. They tend to discuss how to make government work rather than how to make the nation work. To some, an issue like the price of gas is primarily a question of how it will impact potential investments in alternative fuels or whether higher gas prices are good because they encourage conservation.
To the middle class, the question of gas prices is much different. Data from the Discover Consumer Spending Monitor shows that half of all Americans don't have any money left over after paying their basic bills each month. For these Americans, rising gas prices force unpleasant lifestyle changes.
To connect with the middle class requires understanding the middle class. Franklin Roosevelt did this in the 1930s. As he expanded the role of the federal government, he explained it in a manner that made sense. His greatest achievement, Social Security, was not sold as a government handout but as an insurance program with people setting aside money during their working years that could be drawn down in retirement. That attitude still resonates with 21st century Americans.
In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan understood the rising frustration with an ever-expanding government. In his first inaugural address, he said, "Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem." Six out of 10 voters still agree.
America is still looking for the 21st century candidate who can connect with the middle class.
To find out more about Scott Rasmussen, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com.
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Comments
"a system of crony capitalism"
Submitted by Newsbubba on Fri, 03/02/2012 - 9:05pm.
Just wait till those "crony capitalists" wake up and realize that they have been a willing participant in the Fascist takeover of this once-great nation.
When that happens, it will be too late for them because the rulers won't need them to shill for the government anymore, and can "eliminate" them.
All the money in the world ain't going to save their sorry asses.
more hope
Submitted by Chuck14 on Sat, 03/03/2012 - 5:35am.
In fact, there are now one in five Americans unemployed or underemployed. One in eight mortgages in default or foreclosed. One in eight Americans on food stamps. Upward mobility has always been at the center of the American dream–a promise that if you work hard and play by the rules, you’ll do well and your children will have the chance to do even better. But now, that promise has been broken, and America’s middle class is now under assault. The American dream is becoming a nightmare, one of our own making. But the book, at its core, is, in fact, optimistic. It’s partly a critique of the many ways things are broken. Hope the situation will change in future.
Ah,
Submitted by Unsane on Mon, 03/05/2012 - 8:26am.
...but there is NO American "middle class." See below.
"CONSUMED DEMOCRACY RETURNS A SOCIALIST REGIME" - Slayer, "Fictional Reality", from Divine Intervention (1994)
Politicians out of touch with the middle class? Noooooo
Submitted by CO2Maker on Sun, 03/04/2012 - 12:03am.
Are you saying that politicians really are not in touch with the common man?
What about Barack and arugula? Or Kerry and Gray Poupon mustard at Wendy's when he did his John Edwards copy-cat move (no, not that move)? Or Barbara Boxer upbraiding the Brigadier General for not showing her sufficient respect for the title she had worked so hard to get? Or Al the Sex Crazed Poodle and his Tennessee mansion with a higher power bill than the homes of 20 mere mortals? Or Bono or some other mega-celeb greenie activist jetting around the world on private planes instead of using commercial travel because his work to spread the Global Warming message was too important to be delayed by flying on a regularly scheduled airlines?
The Marxist folly of "class"
Submitted by Unsane on Mon, 03/05/2012 - 8:25am.
Here is the fundamental flaw in your argument: in this country, there is really no "middle class". Any politician who uses "(fill in the blank) class" in this country is just a politician who thinks he can get ahead by pitting groups of Americans against each other and making them hate one another via envy. This goes for shrieking populists and Leftists/Socialists.
We need to begin referring to "class" to what it really is: for the great majority of citizens in a dynamic economy, they are stages of life, not "classes". People move in an out of them too frequently for there to be such a thing as "class" in this country
"CONSUMED DEMOCRACY RETURNS A SOCIALIST REGIME" - Slayer, "Fictional Reality", from Divine Intervention (1994)