PART I: THE FOUNDATIONS
In this book we will consider governmental institutions as the product of a mutually transformative interaction between state and society. Politics doesn’t happen in a vacuum. As we will see, the ways in which the American government decides on laws and policies depends upon the mindset of the citizens, which is in turn shaped by their political socialization, their relationship to media, the influence of lobbyist and interest groups that have the money to sway ideas, and so forth. In this book, you will meet a diverse group of voters (and non-voters) who, through their engagement with the ideas central to American politics at a personal level, exemplify the American motto, “e pluribus unum” or “out of many, one.”
AMERICAN POLITICAL CULTURE
We often talk about “American values,” but what are these shared values that set the US apart from other nations? And can we say that there is a definable set of “core values” that most Americans share, given the vast diversity of beliefs and understandings in the nation? While there are many political subcultures in the US, there are indeed certain ideas, institutionalized in the Constitution, that shape how Americans view their economic, political, and personal lives, regardless of their political affiliation. What are some values that are generally shared in the United States?
THE EVOLUTION OF CORE VALUES
These core values have been interpreted differently though history. While the Declaration of Independence (1776) declared that “all men are created equal,” equality in the United States meant something very different at the time of the ratification of the Constitution (1787) than it does today. For example, slavery was not abolished until 1865, 246 years after slaves were first brought to America, and it wasn’t until the passage of the Voting Rights Act (1965) that most African Americans truly gained not just the right but the ability to vote. Before that, “Jim Crow” laws (at the time, “Jim Crow” was a derisive slang term for a black man) in the South were based on white supremacist ideologies, and they enforced segregation between whites and blacks.
POLITICAL IDEOLOGY
While we can identify shared, “core” values that are more or less widely held, there are many values that are interpreted differently by, or are unique to, different groups in society. These values tend to be bundled into a political ideology, which provides a roadmap with which we make sense of our world. A political ideology can be held by an individual or a group, but it tends to contain values, understandings, and beliefs about how the political and social world can and should work. In the United States, as in many parts of the world, we can broadly divide political ideologies into two different camps: liberal (also referred to as “left-wing”) and conservative (or “right-wing”). Both ideologies have economic and social components. Unlike other nations, we do not have widely-shared communist or socialist ideologies.
SOCIAL LIBERALISM
We can divide liberalism in terms of its social and economic components, although the two often go hand-in-hand. Social liberals believe in equality of opportunity – everyone has the same access to economic, social, and political opportunities – and, to some degree, equality of results – opportunity leads to more equal social and material conditions. They feel that government can play a key role in promoting both.
Social policy tends to inform economic policy, as, for example, through government programs to aid poor and marginalized members of society. Social liberals tend to be in favor of affirmative action: government policies that give advantage to groups which have historically faced discrimination. Other key liberal social issues include upholding access to abortion, protecting immigrant rights, restricting gun access, protecting same-sex marriage, abolishing the death penalty, providing universal health care, and protecting the environment.
ECONOMIC LIBERALISM
Modern economic liberalism in the United States is quite different from the “liberalism” of classic economic theory or of other modern nations. Liberal economic theory, based on the ideas of the economist Adam Smith (1723–90), believes in the power of a market entirely free from regulation, with open economic borders, and in the idea that people are naturally inclined to “truck, barter, and exchange.” Modern American liberals deviate from this, believing that the government’s role is to intervene in the market to correct for the human and economic toll of “unbridled capitalism.”
This ideology came to full fruition in the wake of the Great Depression (1929–39). During this time, the economist John Maynard Keynes (1883–1946) inspired what was known as the Keynesian Revolution, and governments around the world (including that of Franklin D. Roosevelt) began to adopt his policy recommendation that deficit spending – where government spending exceeds revenue – was not only okay but necessary for economic recovery and growth.
SOCIAL CONSERVATISM
Generally, conservatism centers around a preference for tradition and social order, and a distrust of change. It can look very different from one country to the next, as what is perceived as “traditional” differs culturally and historically. Universally, social conservatism tends to be rooted in religious moralism. The majority of social conservatives in the US are Christians and tend to vote Republican. They are firmly against abortion and would like to overturn Roe v. Wade (1973), the landmark ruling that affirmed a woman’s right to have access to abortions. They also share an opposition to same-sex marriage and support the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), signed into law by President Bill Clinton, which defined marriage as being only between one man and one woman. (The act was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court ruling United States v. Windsor in 2013.)