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Robert Reich

Robert Reich

Posted: November 24, 2010 04:38 PM

Monday night, Sarah Palin watched from the audience as daughter Bristol danced on ABC. Twenty-three million other Americans joined her from their homes. Tuesday, the former vice-presidential candidate started a 13-state book tour for her new book, America By Heart, which has a first printing of 1 million. Her reality show on TLC, "Sarah Palin's Alaska," is in its third week. Last Sunday she was the cover story in the New York Times magazine.

It's all part of The Palin Strategy for becoming president in 2012 -- or 2016 or 2020.

Republican leaders don't believe it. "If she wanted the Republican nomination she'd be working on the inside," one influential Republican told me a few days ago. "She'd be building relationships with Republican Senators and representatives, governors, and state party officials. She'd be smoothing the feathers she ruffled by backing Tea Party candidates. She'd be huddled with GOP kingmakers." When I suggested she has a different strategy, the influential Republican smiled knowingly. "That's how it's done -- how McCain, Bush, and everyone has done it. That's the only way to do it. But all she really wants is celebrity."

The Republican establishment doesn't get it. Celebrity is part of The Palin Strategy -- as is avoiding the insider game. She doesn't want to do what Huckabee, Pawlenty, Gingrich, or Romney have to do. She has an outside game.

Palin's game plan is directly related to America' white working class, and the economy it faces -- and the economy it's likely to continue to experience for years.

No prospective candidate so sharply embodies the anger of America's white working class as does Palin. And none is channeling that anger nearly as effectively.

White working class anger isn't new, of course, nor is the Republican Party's use of it. Apart from the South, where the anger came in response to the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s, the more widespread working-class anxiety began in the late 1970s when the median male wage that had been rising for three decades began to stagnate.

As I noted in Aftershock, families responded by sending wives and mothers into the paid workforce, working longer hours, and then, finally, going deep into debt. These coping mechanisms allayed but did not remove the growing anxiety.

Over the years, Republicans have channeled the anxiety into anger, through overt appeals to a so-called "silent majority" that were overlooked by Democrats and liberals; through "tax revolts" by working and middle-class families that couldn't afford to pay more; and in subtle and not-so-subtle appeals to racist fears (Willie Horton).

But now that the Great Recession has eliminated the last coping mechanism -- ending the easy borrowing, and ratcheting up unemployment -- the working class's economic insecurities have soared. A recent Washington Post poll showed 53 percent of homeowners worried about meeting their mortgage payments. Home foreclosures have slowed largely because of bad paperwork on the part of banks, but the threat remains. Housing prices are still dropping.

The white working class has not benefited from the recent rise in corporate profits and stock prices. To the contrary, both have been fueled by foreign sales of goods made abroad and by labor-saving technologies that have allowed American companies to do more with fewer workers here at home.

Joblessness among the white working class is far higher than the 9.6 percent average for the nation. While the unemployment rate among college grads (most of whom are professionals or managers) is around 5 percent, the average unemployment rate for people with only a high school degree or less (blue-collar, pink-collar, clerical) is almost 20 percent.

All of this is spawning a new and more virulent politics of anger in the nation's white working class, stoked by Republicans -- anger against immigrants, blacks, gays, intellectuals, and international bankers (consider the latest Fox News salvos against George Soros).

According to the right-wing narrative, the calamity that's befallen the white working class is due to the global and intellectual elites who run the mainstream media, direct the government, dispense benefits to the undeserving, and dominate popular culture. (The story and targets are not substantially different from those that have fueled right-wing and fascist movements during times of economic stress for more than a century, here and abroad.)

Sarah Palin has special appeal because she wraps the story in an upbeat message. She avoids the bilious rants of Rush, Sean Hannity, and their ilk. But her cheerfulness isn't sunny; she doesn't promise Morning in America. She offers pure snark, and promises revenge. Over and over again she tells the same snide, sarcastic, inside joke, but in different words: "They think they can keep screwing us, but (wink, wink), we know something they don't. We're gonna take over and screw them."

The Palin Strategy is to circumvent the Republican establishment, filled as it is with career Republicans, business executives, and Wall Streeters. That's why her path to the Republican nomination isn't the usual insider game. It's a celebrity game -- a snark-fest with the nation's entire white working class. Vote for Bristol and we'll show the media establishment how powerful we are! Buy my book and we'll show the know-it-all coastal elites a real book directed at real people! Tune into my cable show and we'll show the real America -- far from the urban centers with immigrants and blacks and fancy city slickers!

As I believe will become clearer, The Palin Strategy will involve a political threat to the GOP establishment: Deny her the nomination she'll run as independent. This will split off much of the white working class and guarantee defeat of the Republican establishment candidate. It will also result in her defeat in 2012, but that's a small price to pay for gaining the credibility and power to demand the nomination in 2016, or threaten another third-party run in 2020.

Once nominated, her campaign for the general election will be purely populist. She'll seek to broaden her base to become the candidate of the people, taking on America's vested Establishment.

More than anything else, The Palin Strategy depends on the continuing fear and anger of America's white working class. She's betting that their economic prospects will not improve by 2012, or even by 2016 and beyond.

Sadly, this is likely to be the case. On Tuesday, the Fed issued a gloomy prognosis. Even if the U.S. economy began to grow at a rate more typical of recoveries than the current anemic 2 percent, unemployment won't drop to its pre-recession level for 5 to 7 years. A minority of the Fed thought this was too optimistic.

The disturbing truth is the bad economy is likely to continue for most Americans beyond 7 years -- maybe for ten or more -- because of a chronic lack of aggregate demand. Apart from inevitable inventory replacements and the necessary replacements by consumers of cars, appliances, and clothing that wear out, nothing will propel the U.S. economy forward. So much income and wealth have now concentrated at the top that the broad middle and working class no longer has the buying power to do so. The top will resume buying but their purchases won't be nearly enough.

Japan lost a decade of economic growth after its real estate bubble exploded. It seems entirely probable that the United States will suffer the same fate. Our economic structure -- how we now allocate the gains of growth, the yawning gap between Wall Street and Main Street, the incentives operating on large corporations to pare American payrolls and expand abroad -- almost dictates it.

We might change that structure, of course. But at this point that doesn't seem in the cards. The president seems unable or unwilling to provide the clear narrative that explains what's happened and what needs to be done, and Republicans are at this moment ascendant.

It all fits into Sarah Palin's strategy.

Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America's Future, now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org.

 
 
 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Louis Bloom
04:49 PM on 11/28/2010
"No prospective candidate so sharply embodies the anger of America's white working class as does Palin." Really? Oh, please! No national political figure is more dedicated to destroying the working class, of whatever color. That every American does not revile this woman and her god-forbid-I-know-anything attitude is a testimony to the very poor quality of public education in this country.
01:33 PM on 11/28/2010
Her strategy is to make sure she gets ready all of her excuses for the NUMEROUS screw-ups that will occur with her speaking more in public
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ashish Srivastava
05:16 PM on 11/27/2010
one of the silliest assessment of who and what Sarah Palin is. A 'quitter' who left her state governorship to chase money and celebrity is nothing but a diva. Can you even imagine a debate between her and republican candidates during primary fight? I will give an example...
Question: Why did you resign after 2 years when people trusted you with their vote? what is the guarantee that you won't do it again as the President of US?
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pasc
Willfully Ignorant: The New Normal.
05:45 AM on 11/27/2010
Palin enrages because so many people reward her for being willfully uneducated, shows real signs of being genuinely MEAN, and embodies only the myths of what makes America successful, not at all the reality.

Myths of success: originality, "common sense," stand up to elites, beauty, unconventionalism, divisiveness, disrespect, dishonesty, disregard for evidenciary critical thinking...I could go on and on. Reality of success: inventiveness (originality that produces something), education (common sense is useless if you know nothing about the world beyond your own personal experiences), "eyes on the prize" (which is to become one of the elite through one's accomplishments), beauty (which is only skin deep and therefore meaningless to EARNED success), using convention to one's own advantage (unconventionalism is a disadvantage if it is unproductive as well), divisiveness (Palin doesn't even try--not even giving "lip service"--to the idea that unity in times of strain is important; instead, it's all "us against them" with her), honesty (itself a sign of courage--the courage to tell the tough truths instead of saying what people want to hear), logical and judgement (the opposite of a disregard for evidence)...
serena1313
Condemnation w/o investigation is hgt of ignorance
01:06 AM on 11/27/2010
While I agree that the "Palin Strategy" probably involves running as an independent outsider -- if the establishment does not rally behind her -- will likely split the white middle-class vote, I disagree she would have a real shot at winning in 2012, 2016 or beyond.

First of all, inciting anger and fear are only effective up to a certain point. People want real answers & substantive policy proposals. To date Sarah has only given them boiler-plate answers, talking points and platitudes.

Second, people need to cling onto more than god, guns and the flag; they need hope. What hope does Sarah give them?

Third, granted many are angry about their economic situation and blame it on President Obama, but inciting more anger & fear only goes so far. It does not translate into majority votes.

And fourth, Sarah's main focus is beating President Obama; in-fact she is consumed by it. So if she runs and ends up losing, which is highly likely, it is doubtful she will run again because without President Obama on the ticket in 2016, Sarah has little, if anything to gain.

Furthermore celebrity status, money and bumper-sticker slogans are not qualifications Americans are looking for in a presidential candidate to run the country in 2012, 2016 or beyond.

If Sarah wants to convince Americans to vote for her, she needs to find a winning strategy complete with both substance and hope. Having neither, the Palin Strategy will fail time and again.
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GaiasChild
loves oregon & a green portfolio . . .
01:03 AM on 11/27/2010
Sarah Palin has special appeal because she wraps the story in an upbeat message. She avoids the bilious rants of Rush, Sean Hannity, and their ilk. But her cheerfulness isn't sunny; she doesn't promise Morning in America. She offers pure snark, and promises revenge. Over and over again she tells the same snide, sarcastic, inside joke, but in different words: "They think they can keep screwing us, but (wink, wink), we know something they don't. We're gonna take over and screw them."


Not sure she entirely avoids bilious rants but I guess you are right, all things being relative. She's not as biliously ranty. I think this is a brilliant insight and maybe one the Republicans will hear if they read it. I can understand that they don't take her seriously but also that they should because her followers can give her a LOT of clout within the party even if she is not nominee. She accumulating enough new money to run in 2012 2016 and til hell freezes over. I agree that she's serious about wanting the white house. And that this is her strategy. I think she can be a spoiler but not a successful candidate.
08:53 PM on 11/26/2010
What if Palin was just paid by the democrats to keep the Republican's busy misunderstanding what she's doing, and in messing with the press daily, she puts herself in an important position for both parties?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pattiepcomedy
Funny IT gal
08:52 PM on 11/26/2010
America is in a bad state if we are talking about a majority of people voting for Sarah Palin for ... anything, but in reality 'President'. I have watched more of George Bush lately and it was amazing that he was elected considering his intellect and gift of gab. I realize it is because American respond to ... yokels ... however, yokels don't run the government; they act as puppets. It would be interesting to find out who is really running the government - maybe that is why President Obama is not coming across with the things he promised ... maybe even he is somebody's puppet.
04:13 PM on 11/26/2010
only dems hope she wins the repub primary as that gives obama the win in 12
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wolfwoman
04:08 PM on 11/26/2010
Mr. Reich, was your motivation for writing this article to help boost Sarah Palin? Or was it quite a different motivation?
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GaiasChild
loves oregon & a green portfolio . . .
01:05 AM on 11/27/2010
he would not boost her.
03:57 PM on 11/26/2010
Folks, She is going to run for the next decade or so. 2016, 2020, not necessarily just 2012. She wants to become a household name. She is in our house - insinkerator.
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02:29 PM on 11/26/2010
Please Mr. Reich, don't dignify this woman by writing about her. Remember, only 1 percent of the U.S. population supports her.
03:32 PM on 11/26/2010
Totally agree. Robert Reich is too good for this.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
52tucker
Captain of trashpile sleeping.
07:33 PM on 11/26/2010
Agreed, agreed, agreed. Fanned and Faved.
Dogvane
Here, smell this.
01:54 PM on 11/26/2010
Go Sandra Palin! Run, run! Please...
01:44 PM on 11/26/2010
This is all part of her vainglorious attempt to convince the world that she is something that she is not. By "co-writing" two books and all of the other publicity-inducing stunts, she hopes to create an image that is diametrically opposed to reality and the public's perception. Wisdom,, knowledge, gravitas, intellect, and humility are qualities that cannot be obtained through spin or sheer willpower. Sorry, Sarah, you will only remain relevant as Critic in Chief - until America becomes sickened by your ubiquitous image. For the country that you love so much, this cannot happen too soon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
52tucker
Captain of trashpile sleeping.
07:39 PM on 11/26/2010
Well put, and spot on. Thanks!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
desidid
12:59 PM on 11/26/2010
So if I've got this straight Reich just said what many Black people have long understood, many whites (working class or not) believe the level playing field is one in which they have a clear advantage, and when it tilts in any direction that doesn't favor them they become angry. That isn't news or new that's called entitlement, it is the only entitlement you will never hear any politician rail against, for fear of offending the thinned skinned believers that equality is given to all and they just happen to work harder for it. OMG Dream On by Areosmith just became more meaningful for me.