Opinion Why the working class embraced right-wing populism - Can the left win them back?

What is wrong with the working class? That question has been furiously debated among left-leaning intellectuals since the days of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. Many of them think workers have consistently voted against their own material interests and even—as in the case of anti-mask and anti-vax protests—their own safety. The question has been asked with increasing urgency in the 21st century as the migration of anti-elite populism from its original home on the left side of the political spectrum to the right has accelerated, hitting a crescendo in 2016 with the election of Donald Trump in the U.S. and the triumph of Brexit in the U.K. The short answer usually on offer is: culture.

Whether defined broadly as the entirety of a way of life (the sum of social interactions that distinguish one region or era from another) or more narrowly as something akin to an ideology, culture is widely thought to trump material interest. This is a decades-old concept among academics, and often referred to as “the cultural turn.” The idea was to shift the emphasis in socioeconomic debates from objective reality (however defined and disputed) to the meaning humans derive from that reality, the way they make sense of their world and assume their identities. Much of the scholarship has been dispassionate, but many of the most prominent voices have not.

As early as 2004, historian Thomas Frank’s seminal What’s the Matter With Kansas answered the titular question in a dismissive, often angry, tone. Misled by a right-wing media ecosystem that stokes racial resentment and xenophobia, and pushes other hot-button issues such as reproductive and transgender rights, the American working class focuses its populist anger on cultural and not economic elites, according to Frank: “Strip today’s Kansans of their job security, and they head out to become registered Republicans,” he wrote. “Push them off their land, and next thing you know they’re protesting in front of abortion clinics.” Democratic presidential hopefuls Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton also, to their political regret, chimed in, the former with his 2008 comments on how “bitter” displaced workers were inclined to “cling to guns or religion,” the latter with her “basket of deplorables” remark eight years later.

There is truth in all those comments, says sociologist Vivek Chibber, but they still miss the point. The core argument in his new book, The Class Matrix, is that workers haven’t so much consented to a resurgent market economy, with its concomitant shrinking of the welfare state, as they have become resigned to it. “That’s the society we live in,” Chibber says by phone from New York. “When we on the left ask that what’s-the-matter-with-Kansas question, we’re not considering the choice set that faces workers, the bread-and-butter decisions they make every day—how do I find a job, how do I keep it—and [the fact that] they make those quite rationally, on an individual basis.” There is not much reason to think collectively, and even fewer pathways to collective action. “The vaccines are a good example,” Chibber continues. “You’re told to take them by people you have good reason to think despise you for your way of life.”

The left-wing intelligentsia, centred in universities, tends to focus on its own issues, says Chibber, from “gender fluidity to white privilege.”
In the same fashion, the university-educated members of middle-class unions—workers who essentially share the worldview of their managers—focus on theirs. And, as anyone who has been involved in a middle-class union—as I have, in a journalists’ guild—can attest, those issues are far more about improving severance packages than fundamentally altering the relationship between workers and bosses.

That is a sea change from the relatively recent past, Chibber contends. “From the early 1900s into the 1970s, labour parties had two things in common,” he says. “One was they were all based physically inside working-class neighbourhoods. Social, working, private, political life [was] wrapped together. If union or party people told you the vaccines were good for you, you’d probably believe [them, because they are] the people who fought for your jobs, housing and medical care. The second thing was that the party candidates elected to office were themselves working class.”

Now, the largest company workforces are geographically dispersed, and legislatures, as Michael Sandel notes in his 2020 book The Tyranny of Merit, resemble their 19th-century forebears—more diverse in race and gender, but just as stratified in socioeconomic status. In terms of being dominated by well-off professionals, Chibber says, “I think the NDP is going the same way in Canada, though it’s not as far along as the Democrats, who are basically a party of millionaires.”

It’s only rational, says Chibber, that “working-class confidence in any basic institution is close to zero.” For him, the first step toward writing “a new script” for the revival of labour politics is realizing that the problem is the economy, stupid, and not the workers.

 
West Virginia was solidly Democrat due to KKK Grand Cyclops Robert Byrd bringing in the massive amounts of pork. To where most of the buildings in the state are named after him. Then Bryd did the rest of the country a favor by dying.

If I am wrong on any of this I do unsarcastically want to be corrected on it.
They voted for Truman and Stevenson and Humphrey before him.
Also Robert Byrd loved blacks apparently but thats probably part of your joke.
 
The working class has embraced populism because the professional-managerial class are despicable and smug fucking turds.


The main class divide in America is between rich white-collar cocksuckers living in cities who have armies of immigrant slaves making their coffee, walking their dogs, and sucking the cheese off their fucking toes, and middle-class people in the suburbs and rural areas who do all of the productive labor. The aforementioned white-collar cocksuckers have come up with every measure they possibly can to downsize on and liquidate the productive industries in America's heartlands and send them off to China, to avoid the expense of employing Americans.

They preach environmentalism at us and they whine about our big trucks and our scant vacations out of one side of their faces, while suggesting we compensate for our declining wages by re-mortgaging our houses or taking on credit card debt to buy useless plastic shit made in sweatshops halfway across the globe and shipped to us on giant container ships burning filthy bunker fuel out of the other side of their lying, hypocrite faces.

We would have more faith in institutions if all of those institutions were not arrayed against us and interested in destroying our quality of life, stripping us of our wages, and giving the surplus to some Wall Street parasite.
 
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It's because they learned Democrats are lying sacks of shit the hard way, now that their industries are destroyed by illegals and green energy.
If only other certain demographics would finally catch wise after getting screwed.
Unfortunately wasn't until Clinton declared the USA is no longer an industrial economy but now a service economy right before signing NAFTA, giving ChiCom most favor trade status, enacting the "Peace Dividend" and etc. before the working class finally noticed they're got screwed.
 
If you had a buddy whose wife did nothing but tear him down, insult him, humiliate him, nothing he does is right, she thinks she married beneath herself, she isn’t hot, she won’t get a job, she’s a terrible mother and doesn’t do anything around the house, turns the kids against him, and she won’t even have sex with him, would you be surprised if he had an affair and/or divorced her? No you would not.
 
The contemporary left is globalist, and globalism hurts the working class. It’s as simple as that. If the left- Socialists, all- wants the working class back, they’re going to have to abandon globalism as a core of their platform.

Globalist socialism taxes the working class to pay for those that do not work. It offshores jobs to drive costs down. It imports the poor and desperate from other places to stifle wage growth. And it’s used by the elites in their war on those that oppose them. Sadly, most people who identify as leftists don’t recognize that Marxist socialism’s insistence on globalism has been perverted by the richest people on the planet.

Nationalist socialism, on the other hand, supports and protects the working class of its nation against the elites, ensures a fair wage for fair work, and prevents immigration and offshoring being used to disempower the working class for the benefit of the capitalist elites.

I believe in Nationalist Socialism, and so should anyone else who truly supports the working class.
 
Because the right has a at least basic understanding of economics, which effects middle class citizens far harsher, while those on the left literally have no concept of it and end up costing everyone more ( such as artificial inflation)...

Usually when I explain this out the leftist hearing it always go "But trickle down economics doesn't work." Then I realize anything about economics is above their pay (and intelligence) grade.
 
What is wrong with the working class?

Fuck you. That's the only response an opening like that merits.

West Virginia was solidly Democrat due to KKK Grand Cyclops Robert Byrd bringing in the massive amounts of pork. To where most of the buildings in the state are named after him. Then Bryd did the rest of the country a favor by dying.

If I am wrong on any of this I do unsarcastically want to be corrected on it.
Well I believe the rank he held was "Exalted Cyclops" not "Grand" but apart from that, yes.

Good God Klan titles are cringe.
 
At some point it turned out that Marxists and other leftists were more concerned about spreading transsexuality and faggotry than about the 'proletariat.' Further, they anathematised everyone who doesn't share these concerns by calling them 'fascists.'

Now they are mystified that the working class doesn't care about them.
 
Something that I wonder is why do coastal small towns vote Democrat or liberal though.

Like all those small towns even on north coastal California or parts of Maine and Vermont vote very liberal despite being so uber white that some non whites could think they have entered a mini white ethnostate.
Think of it in terms like how a county is the same as a state just on a smaller scale. So just like how a state like Illinois can, and is dominated by a city like Chicago, a county usually has an enclave, usually the county seat, that is liberal because that's where all the local services are located surrounded by the conservative hinterland that is largely ignored by the county government. All the local poor people that are dependant on gibs, or work in the local bureaucracy gravitate towards the county seat, and the non leeches stay where they always stayed.
 
I think the working class is voting against the left, not necessarily for the right. The left could win them back by creating an America with a future for Americans.
I'm afraid that ship had sailed a while ago when the current left embraced the so-called "progressism" and LGBT rights and lots of old leftists feel then they didn't left the left, it's the left who left them just like Ronald Reagan who said "I didn't left the Dems, it's the Dems who left me".
 
Why would the working class abandon a party that has done everything in it's power to destroy their lives, that tells them they are the cause of all of society problems, told them they are useless and obsolete, and is now openly going after their kids by trying to groom them into their weird communist pedophile gender cult. To top it all off when the working class complains about losing their jobs to child labor overseas they are told learn to code. or that food and gas prices are to high they are told buy an electric car. Why would the working class vote for a party made up of smug rich elitists that absolutely hate them and their way of life?
 
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