Professor
Deva Woodly teaches Political Science at the New School for Social
Research in New York. During a recent talk, she shared that trust in
our nation’s institutions is at an all time low. That is,
perhaps, why that man who currently holds the title of
President-elect was able to prevail over someone far more qualified
in the November election. Using Gallup Poll data from June 2016,
Professor Woodly notes that the military is our nation’s most
trusted institution – 73 percent trust them, while our Congress
is the least trusted with only 7 percent support. Fifty-six percent
of us trust the police, forty-one percent trust the church, just 36
percent support the President, and only 23 percent trust organized
labor or the criminal justice system. One in five trusts television
news or newspapers. In a nutshell, it does not appear that we trust
anybody!
This
lack of trust results in a lack of involvement in civil society. If
you don’t trust the church, how involved will you be in it? If
you don’t trust your union, will you do much more than pay your
dues? Only two in five trust the medical profession – do you
believe your doctors? Just one in four of us trust banks. If we
don’t trust institutions, do we trust each other? And if we
don’t trust each other, how do we come together to organize, to
resist the corrosiveness of the callous, racist, misogynistic
leadership that Mr. Trump offers our nation.
The
man has no regard for the truth, and he has pandered to our
collective mistrust by describing everything as “rigged”.
Now he is saying that he really won the popular vote because
“millions” of people voted fraudulently. He has no proof
of it, and he ought to be ashamed for lying, except for if he had any
shame he never would have run for President. Between fake news and
mistrust, there are those who believe him, which further erodes
institutional trust. Our nation is on a downward spiral, and there
is no soft landing unless we rediscover the ways we once connected,
and revive them.
Professor
Woodly and I joined Michael Eric Dyson and Columbia University
Professor and moderator Fred Harris in a New School-sponsored panel
on Obama, Race and Politics. Anyone who has read Dyson or me would
not be surprised at our analysis. Fred Harris, too, has written
about the Obama presidency in his book, The Price of the Ticket:
Barack Obama and the Rise and Fall of Black Politics (Oxford
University Press, 2012). Professor Woodly’s analysis stood out
for me, though, because she talked about community distrust and ways
it disconnects people from politics, the polls, and outcomes.
Too
many people thought that their actions had no consequences, and that
whatever they did had no meaning. Their impressions may have been
shaped by the smugness many of us saw coming from the Clinton
campaign that behaved as if their victory was inevitable. Just
107,000 votes in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania separated
Hillary Clinton from victory. Recounts are not likely to sway the
election, and the “if I coulda, woulda, shoulda”
post-mortem around the resources that should have been used to
energize the base makes no difference now. The fact is that Hillary
Clinton should have won this election. She didn’t because the
village she says it takes to save a child has been fractured.
Instead of talking to each other, too many are texting each other.
Instead of talking to voters, the Clinton campaign was spending
millions on ads that vilified Trump instead of lifting up Clinton.
The
election is over. Recounts are important for the sake of
accountability, but I’m not sure they will make a difference in
the electoral outcome. I support the recounts, and also an electoral
audit. I support reform that makes it easier, not harder for people
to vote. I believe that there are things that can be done in the
next two years to take our democracy back.
I
refuse to wring my hands and dry my eyes about Mr. Trump and his
“victory” anymore. What must happen now is a return to
community. I was heartened to see so many millennial at the New
School panel, young people asking what to do next. The answer –
we must rebuild community. We must organize, organize, organize, and
agitate, agitate, agitate. The man who calls himself our
President-elect is an unabashed liar who some say “deserves a
chance”. Give him a chance, if you will, but hold him
accountable for his lies, his conflicts of interest, and his racist
appointments of Steve Bannon and Senator Sessions (D-AL). Our
community, revived, can do no less.
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