Thursday, September 27, 2012

Why worry at all about the working class vote?

A few posts below some clarifying detail - regionalism - was provided about the white working class vote for Obama and Romney. Buried in some of the links provided was a more ominous note about whether their vote was even worth worrying about as a purely policy making matter, this applies to anyone in, or any group representing, the needs of the lower classes (the poor and kinda not so well off).

Policymakers tend to not pay attention to them, and shifts in their attitudes about public policy tend to have little or no impact on policy. This is not true for the wealthy. This seems like an obvious intuitive point, but some research has been published providing empirical proof.

Here's a link to work done by Martin Gilens who claims that inequity in the responsiveness of elected officials threatens the ability of the US to call itself a democracy:

In a democracy, all citizens—the rich, middle-class, poor alike—must have some ability to influence what their government does. Few people would expect that influence to be identical: those with higher incomes and better connections will always be more influential. But if influence becomes so unequal that the wishes of most citizens are ignored most of the time, a country’s claim to be a democracy is cast in doubt. And that is exactly what I found in my analyses of the link between public preferences and government policy in the U.S.
And here's a link to a recent book - the Unheavenly Chorus  - that looks at the nature of organized interest in the nation and come to the same conclusion:


The Unheavenly Chorus is the first book to look at the political participation of individual citizens alongside the political advocacy of thousands of organized interests--membership associations such as unions, professional associations, trade associations, and citizens groups, as well as organizations like corporations, hospitals, and universities. Drawing on numerous in-depth surveys of members of the public as well as the largest database of interest organizations ever created--representing more than thirty-five thousand organizations over a twenty-five-year period--this book conclusively demonstrates that American democracy is marred by deeply ingrained and persistent class-based political inequality. The well educated and affluent are active in many ways to make their voices heard, while the less advantaged are not. This book reveals how the political voices of organized interests are even less representative than those of individuals, how political advantage is handed down across generations, how recruitment to political activity perpetuates and exaggerates existing biases, how political voice on the Internet replicates these inequalities--and more.

In a true democracy, the preferences and needs of all citizens deserve equal consideration. Yet equal consideration is only possible with equal citizen voice. The Unheavenly Chorus reveals how far we really are from the democratic ideal and how hard it would be to attain it.

2301 and 2305 students who have finished reading through Fed 10 and our subsequent analysis of interest groups should not find these allegations surprising.