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Title: Elections 2000 Author: Noam Chomsky Date: January 2001 Language: en Topics: Elections, United States of America, George W Bush Source: Retrieved on 23rd June 2021 from https://chomsky.info/200101__/ Notes: Published in Z Magazine.
The most striking fact about the November 2000 elections is that they
were a statistical tie (for Congress as well, virtually). The most
interesting question is what this shows, if anything, about the state of
functioning democracy. For many commentators, the fact that the
presidency âis hinging on a few hundred votesâ reveals the extraordinary
health and vigor of American democracy (former State Department
spokesperson James Rubin). An alternative interpretation is that it
confirms the conclusion that there was no election in any sense that
takes the concept of democracy seriously.
Under what conditions would we expect 100 million votes to divide 50â50,
with variations that fall well within expected margins of error of 1â2
percent? There is a very simple model that would yield such
expectations: people were voting at random. If tens of millions of votes
were cast for X vs. Y as president of Mars, such results would be
expected. To the extent that the simplest model is valid, the elections
did not take place.
Of course, more complex models can be constructed, and we know that the
simplest one is not strictly valid. Voting blocs can be identified, and
sometimes the reasons for choices can be discerned. Itâs understandable
that financial services should overwhelmingly support Bush, whose
announced plans included huge gifts of public resources to the industry
and even more commitment than his opponent to the demolition of quasi-
democratic institutions (Social Security in particular). And it is no
surprise that affluent white voters favored Bush while union members,
Latinos, and African-Americans strongly opposed him (âsupported Gore,â
in conventional terminology).
But blocs are not always easy to explain in terms of interest-based
voting, and it is well to remember that voting is often consciously
against interest. For example, in 1984 Reagan ran as a âreal
conservative,â winning what was called a âlandslide victoryâ (with under
30 percent of the electoral vote); a large majority of voters opposed
his legislative program, and 4 percent of his supporters identified
themselves as âreal conservatives.â Such outcomes are not too surprising
when over 80 percent of the population feels that the government is ârun
for the benefit of the few and the special interests, not the people,â
up from about half in earlier years. When similar numbers feel that the
economic system is âinherently unfairâ and working people have too
little say, and that âthere is too much power concentrated in the hands
of large companies for the good of the nation.â Under such
circumstances, people may tend to vote (if at all) on grounds that are
irrelevant to policy choices over which they feel they have little
influence. Such tendencies are strengthened by intense media/advertising
concentration on style, personality, and other irrelevancies (in the
presidential debates, will Bush remember where Canada is?; will Gore
remind people of some unpleasant know-it-all in 4^(th) grade?).
Public opinion studies lend further credibility to the simplest model.
Harvardâs Vanishing Voter Project has been monitoring attitudes through
the presidential campaign. Its director, Thomas Patterson, reports that
âAmericansâ feeling of powerlessness has reached an alarming high,â with
53 percent responding âonly a littleâ or ânoneâ to the question: âHow
much influence do you think people like you have on what government
does?â The previous peak, 30 years ago, was 41 percent. During the
campaign, over 60 percent of regular voters regarded politics in America
as âgenerally pretty disgusting.â In each weekly survey, more people
found the campaign boring than exciting, by a margin of 48 percent to 28
percent in the final week. Three-fourths of the population regarded the
whole process as largely a game played by large contributors
(overwhelmingly corporations), party leaders, and the PR industry, which
crafted candidates to say âalmost anything to get themselves elected,â
so that one could believe little that they said even when their stand on
issues was intelligible. On almost all issues, citizens could not
identify the stands of the candidatesânot because they are stupid or not
trying.
It is, then, not unreasonable to suppose that the simplest model is a
pretty fair first approximation to the truth about the election, and
that the country is being driven even more than before towards the
condition described by former President Alfonso Lopez Michaelsen of
Colombia, referring to his own country: a political system of power
sharing by parties that are âtwo horses with the same owner.â
Furthermore, that seems to be general popular understanding.
On the side, perhaps the similarities help us understand Clintonâs great
admiration and praise for Colombian democracy, and for the grotesque
social and economic system kept in place by violence. The fact that
after a decade in which Colombia was the leading recipient of U.S. arms
and military training in the hemisphereâand the leading human rights
violator, in conformity with a well-established correlationâit attained
first place worldwide in 1999, with a huge further increase now in
progress (Israel-Egypt are a separate category).
When an election is a largely meaningless statistical tie, and a victor
has to be selected somehow, the rational procedure would be some
arbitrary choice; say, flipping a coin. But that is unacceptable. It is
necessary to invest the process of selecting our leader with appropriate
majesty, an effort conducted for five weeks of intense elite dedication
to the task, with limited success, it appears.
The five weeks of passionate effort were not a complete waste. They did
contribute to exposing racist bias in practices in Florida and
elsewhereâwhich probably have a considerable element of class bias,
concealed by the standard refusal in U.S. commentary to admit that class
structure exists, and the race-class correlations.
There was also at least some slight attention to a numerically far more
significant factor than the ugly harassment of black voters and
electoral chicanery: disenfranchisement through incarceration. The day
after the election, Human Rights Watch issued a (barely- noted) study
reporting that the âdecisiveâ element in the Florida election was the
exclusion of 31 percent of African-American men, either in prison or
among the more than 400,000 âex-offendersâ permanently disenfranchised.
HRW estimates than âmore than 200,000 potential black voters [were]
excluded from the polls.â Since they overwhelmingly vote Democratic,
that âdecisivelyâ changed the outcome. The numbers overwhelm those
debated in the intense scrutiny over marginal technical issues (dimpled
chads, etc.). The same was true of other swing states. In seven states,
HRW reported, âone in four black men is permanently barredâ from voting;
âalmost every state in the U.S. denies prisoners the right to voteâ and
âfourteen states bar criminal offenders from voting even after they have
finished their sentences,â permanently disenfranchising âover one
million ex-offenders.â These are African- American and Latino out of any
relation to proportion of the population, or even to what is called
âcrime.â
âMore than 13 percent of black men (some 1.4 million nationwide) are
disenfranchised for many years, sometimes for life, a result of felony
convictions, many for passing the same drugs that Al Gore smoked and
George W. snorted in years gone by,â University of New Mexico Law
Professor Tim Canova writes. The few reports in the mainstream U.S.
press noted that the political implications are highly significant,
drawing votes away from Democratic candidates. The numbers are large. In
Alabama and Florida, over 6 percent of potential voters were excluded
because of felony records; âfor blacks in Alabama, the rate is 12.4
percent and in Florida 13.8 percentâ; âIn five other statesâIowa,
Mississippi, New Mexico, Virginia and Wyomingâfelony disenfranchisement
laws affected one in four black menâ (NY Times, November 3, citing human
rights and academic studies).
The academic researchers, sociologists Jeff Manza (Northwestern) and
Christopher Uggen (Minnesota), conclude that âwere it not for
disenfranchised felons, the Democrats would still have control of the
U.S. Senate.â âIf the Bush-Gore election turns out to be as close as the
Kennedy-Nixon election, and Bush squeaks through, we may be able to
attribute that to felon disenfranchisement.â Re-examining close Senate
elections since 1978, they conclude further that âthe felon vote could
have reversed Republican victories in Virginia, Texas, Georgia,
Kentucky, Florida and Wyoming, and prevented the Republican takeoverâ
(Los Angeles Times, September 8).
Citing the same studies, the Santa Fe New Mexican (November 19) pointed
out that 5.5 percent of potential voters in New Mexicoâwhere the
election was also a statistical tieâwere disenfranchised by felony
convictions. âAs many as 45 percent of black males in the state canât
voteâthe highest ratio in the country,â though the total figures are not
as dramatic as Florida. Figures were not available for Hispanics, who
constitute 60 percent of the stateâs prisoners (and about 40 percent of
the estimated population), but the conclusions are expected to be
comparable. âNeither party seems interested in addressing the issue,
Manza said. Republicans feel they have little to gain because these
voters are thought to be overwhelmingly Democratic. And, he added,
âDemocrats are sufficiently concerned about not appearing to be weak on
crime that Iâm sure they would not be jumping up and down on thisâ.â
The last comment directs attention to a critically important matter,
discussed prominently abroad (see Duncan Campbell, Guardian, Nov. 14;
Serge Halimi and Looc Wacquant, Le Monde diplo- matique, December 2000;
also Earl Ofari Hutchinson, Christian Science Monitor, December 14). For
the past eight years, Clinton and Gore disenfranchised a major voting
bloc that would have easily swung the election to Gore. During their
tenure in office, the prison population swelled from 1.4 to 2 million,
removing an enormous number of potential Democratic voters from the
lists, thanks to the harsh sentencing laws. Clinton-Gore were
particularly devoted to draconian Reagan-Bush laws, Hutchinson points
out. The core of these practices is drug laws that have little to do
with drugs but a lot to do with social control: removing superfluous
people and frightening the rest. When the latest phase of the âwar on
drugsâ was designed in the 1980s, it was recognized at once that âwe are
choosing to have an intense crime problem concentrated among minoritiesâ
(Daniel Patrick Moynihan, one of the few Senators who paid attention to
social statistics). âThe warâs planners knew exactly what they were
doing,â criminologist Michael Tonry wrote, reviewing the racist and
class-based procedures that run through the system from arrest to
sentencingâand that continue a long and disgraceful tradition (see
Randall Shelden, Controlling the Dangerous Classes: A Critical
Introduction to the History of Criminal Justice).
Twenty years ago, the U.S. was similar to other industrial countries in
rate of incarceration. By now, it is off the spectrum, the worldâs
leader among countries that have meaningful statistics. The escalation
was unrelated to crime rates, which were not unlike other industrial
countries then and have remained stable or declined. But they are a
natural component of the domestic programs instituted from the late
Carter years, a variant of the âneoliberal reformsâ that have had a
devastating effect in much of the third world. These âreformsâ have been
accompanied by a notable deterioration in conventional measures of
âeconomic healthâ worldwide, but have had a much more dramatic impact on
standard social indicators: measures of âquality of life.â In the U.S.,
these tracked economic growth until the âreformsâ were instituted, and
have declined since, now to about the level of 40 years ago, in what the
Fordham University research institute that has done the major studies of
the topic calls a âsocial recessionâ (Marc and Marque-Luisa Miringoff,
The Social Health of the Nation; see Paul Street, Z Magazine, November
2000). Economic rewards are highly concentrated, and much of the
population becomes superfluous for profit and power.
Marginalization of the superfluous population takes many forms. Some of
these were the topic of a recent Business Week cover story entitled âWhy
Service Stinksâ (Octember 23). It reviewed refinements in implementing
the 80â20 rule taught in business schools: 20 percent of your customers
provide 80 percent of the profits, and you may be better off without the
rest. The ânew consumer apartheidâ relies on modern information
technology (in large measure a gift from an unwitting public) to allow
corporations to provide grand services to profitable customers, and to
deliberately offer skimpy services to the rest, whose inquiries or
complaints can be safely ignored. The experience is familiar, and
carries severe costsâhow great when distributed over a large population,
we donât know, because they are not included among the highly
ideological measures of economic performance. Incarceration might be
regarded as an extreme version, for the least worthy.
Incarceration has other functions. It is a form of interference in labor
markets, removing working-age males, increasingly women as well, from
the labor force. Calculating real unemployment when this labor force is
included, the authors of an informative academic study find the U.S. to
be well within the European range, contrary to conventional claims
(Bruce Western and Katherine Beckett, American Journal of Sociology,
January 1999; also Prison Legal News, October 2000). They conclude that
what is at issue is not labor market interference, but the kind that is
chosen: job training, unemployment insurance, and so on, on the social
democratic model; or throwing superfluous people into jail.
In pursuing these policies, the U.S. has separated itself from other
industrial countries. Europe abandoned voting restrictions for criminals
decades ago; in 1999, the Constitutional Court of South Africa gave
inmates the right to vote, saying that the âvote of each and every
citizen is a badge of dignity and personhood.â Prior to the âneoliberal
reformsâ and their âdrug warâ concomitant, the U.S. was heading in the
same direction, the National Law Journal (October 30) comments: âThe
American Bar Association Standards on Civil Disabilities of a Convicted
Person, approved in 1980, state flatly that â[persons] convicted of any
offense should not be deprived of the right to voteâ and that laws
subjecting convicts to collateral civil disabilities âshould be
repealedâ.â
Without continuing, the Clinton-Gore programs of disenfranchising their
own voters should be understood as a natural component of their overall
socioeconomic conceptions. The elections themselves illustrate the
related conception of the political system of two horses with the same
corporate owner. None of this is new. There is no âgolden ageâ that has
been lost, and this is not the first period of concentrated attack on
democracy and human rights. Insofar as the November 2000 elections are
worth discussing, they should, I think, be seen primarily from these
perspectives.