Who wants Scott Walker’s failure to graduate from Marquette University to become an issue in the presidential campaign? According to American Prospect blogger Paul Waldman, the answer might well be…Walker’s own party.
In a Tuesday post, Waldman speculated that Republicans want Democrats to remind the public that Walker dropped out because it would lend credence to the idea that left-wingers are “looking down their snooty noses at Walker, and by extension, at the majority of Americans who don't have a college degree.” The GOP would therefore be able to wave “the bloody shirt of liberal elitism.”
Waldman argues that “anti-intellectualism has often been an effective way for Republicans to stir up class resentment while distracting from economic issues. It says to voters…[d]on't aim your disgruntlement at Wall Street, or corporations that don't pay taxes, or the people who want to keep wages low and make unions a memory. Point it in a different direction, at college professors and intellectuals (and Hollywood, while you're at it).”
From Waldman’s post (bolding added):
From what I can tell, the only liberal who has actually said that Walker's lack of a degree is problematic was Howard Dean, in an appearance on MSNBC's Morning Joe. But Dean's one comment keeps getting cited (see Glenn Reynolds or Deroy Murdock or Charles C.W. Cooke or Chris Cillizza) as evidence that "liberals" are looking down their snooty noses at Walker, and by extension, at the majority of Americans who don't have a college degree.
Which leads me to believe that this is a vein Republicans may be tapping into repeatedly, particularly if Walker becomes the GOP nominee...
Anti-intellectualism has often been an effective way for Republicans to stir up class resentment while distracting from economic issues. It says to voters: Don't think about who has economic power and which party is advocating for their interests. Don't aim your disgruntlement at Wall Street, or corporations that don't pay taxes, or the people who want to keep wages low and make unions a memory. Point it in a different direction, at college professors and intellectuals (and Hollywood, while you're at it). They're the ones keeping you down. You got laid off while the CEO took home $20 million last year? Forget about that: The real person to be angry at is a professor of anthropology somewhere who said something mean about Scott Walker because he doesn't have a degree…
Something tells me that somewhere at the RNC there's an intern who just got an assignment to monitor every bit of mainstream and social media she can for any moment where a liberal says something condescending about Walker. Then Republicans can wave it about like the bloody shirt of liberal elitism. It's a lot easier than coming up with an economic plan that doesn't involve upper-income tax cuts.