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Politics

Can We Find Equilibrium?

Two New York Times opinion columns in early October triggered an outburst of optimism during this chaotic election season.

The first, on October 9, by midwestern novelist and essayist Marilynne Robinson, was titled “Don’t Give Up On America.”  Robinson, who calls herself a “liberal, loyal to the country in ways that make me a pragmatist,” is willing to acknowledge the “many flaws” of the previous Democratic administration while also denouncing the contemptible behavior of the current Republican one.

She hoped that we could “find our way back to equilibrium” by “restoring a sense of the dignity, even the beauty, of individual ethical behavior, of self-restraint, of courtesy in all things.” Doing this, she said, “might help us to like one another, even trust one another, both necessary to a functioning democracy.”

The following day the Times ran a column by the more conservative Russ Douthat assuring readers that “there will be no Trump coup” should the Donald lose the election.  Douthat tried to calm liberal Democratic fear of an authoritarian take-over by pointing out that successful authoritarian leaders control the military and the media in their countries and that Trump controls neither.

 “Our weak, ranting, infected-by-Covid chief executive is not plotting a coup,” he wrote, “because a term like ‘plotting’ implies capabilities he conspicuously lacks.”

These two Times opinion writers, one liberal and the other more conservative, are really (in a normal world) moderates who shoot arrows at those on both the Left and Right sides of the political wall separating the parties.  This wall used to be just a fence with gates that opened.

Can we “find our way back to equilibrium” as Robinson hoped? Can we liberals calm our fears enough to put our remaining energy into getting out the vote instead of writing about a possible Trump coup?

Can we Democrats restore even just a small sense of dignity to our political conversations and display a modicum of respect for democratic behavior instead of gloating in the wake of a Biden victory next month?

Perhaps we can, but only if we first secure that victory by removing Trump and his enablers in the Senate, people like McConnell, Graham, and Grassley who now hold power, and electing a Democratic majority to that body.

And in that event, Democrats also need to avoid the overconfidence and hubris (pride) that Douthat says led to Democratic defeat in 2016.

We can only improve America, a better slogan than “making America great again” by solving problems like the spread of Covid-19 and its accompanying economic recession instead of politicizing these problems.

That course of action might even help create the equilibrium that Robinson seeks; it would certainly be more rational. One might even wonder if problem-solving on the eve of an election might secure President Trump a few more votes.  Wouldn’t this be politically wiser than just proclaiming that the virus is disappearing when it clearly is not?

            Not too long ago, it was common to hear people tell their anxious friends to “just chill.”  The national mood could change after a Democratic victory in November, but only if we can all—Republicans and Democrats alike—“just chill” enough to allow that to happen.