“Change
will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the
ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.”
NOTE: Title changed on 12/5 from "2016 US Election: Why Democrats Lost and the Choice They Need to Make".
Barack
Obama
Anyone who believes Mrs. Clinton lost because she is a woman
needs to wake up. There is no question that misogyny played a role, but
she needed to win in spite of this because she was attempting to break a glass
ceiling in what is, for now, still a man’s world. The facts clearly show
that women did not unite against Mr. Trump because of his lewd and misogynistic comments,
just to vote for a woman. “Instead, they voted more or less as they
always have: along party lines.” (NYTimes).
Also, consider that Trump won white working class voters in “many of
the areas where Mr. Obama fared best in 2008 and 2012. In the end, the linchpin
of Mr. Obama’s winning coalition broke hard to the Republicans." (Source: NYTimes).
He also won almost 30% of Hispanics (more than Romney or McCain did); and overall did “…better than Romney among
blacks, Latinos and Asian Americans, making it more difficult to claim that
racial resentment was the dominant factor explaining Trump’s support
nationally.” (Source: Washington Post).
Let’s be clear that people don’t suddenly wake up one morning, turn
on a racist switch and vote for hate. If that is true then we may as well pack
our bags and abandon this great experiment called democracy. If we can get past the
media’s hysteria and selective narrative, we will see that simply dismissing
Mr. Trump’s victory as racism and misogyny (there was absolutely an element of it)
is not just an over-simplification but dangerously naïve.
The next step is trying to understand, and fix, why Democrats and Mrs.
Clinton lost, despite the fact that Mr. Obama had a higher approval
rating than Mr. Reagan did at end of in his second term; another fact that makes it hard to blame racism. So, why did
Mrs. Clinton lose?
She lost because the Democratic Party showed it had been taken over by a
mafia and they were willing to use brute force to propel her candidacy,
even though the base was clearly screaming for a different voice to
represent them.
She lost because she came across like a Queen seeking a political
coronation and someone who had become a member of the special interests and
wealthy elites she
promised
to fight.
She lost because
the majority of the world has lost faith in
politicians of all stripes, and they are looking for outsiders who will use
brute force to break the system, not politely try to navigate
it.
She lost because she was complacent and took for granted that changing
demographics would work in her favour. She simply assumed that
minorities, women upset with Trump’s irresponsible and bombastic
statements, and left-leaning millennials would carry the day for
Democrats.
She lost because she changed her position numerous times on the minimum
wage, on TPP and on trade; issues that most mattered to
her voters.
She lost because she was completely tone deaf to the screams of the
wider electorate,
an electorate screaming for economic
dignity. The kind of dignity that only a well-paying job can provide, and a
sense of self-worth that comes from being able to provide for your family and
promise your children a good education and a bright future.
The reason she lost is because she did not offer a vision for how she
would help create decent jobs for all Americans; she forgot that it’s still
“the economy, stupid”.
Her campaign was entirely rooted in trying to convince voters that Trump
was an evil demagogue who is unfit to govern. But people needed to know how
she would help them put food on the table, afford healthcare, find a job, get
an education and lift themselves and their children from economic indignity; Mrs. Clinton failed to provide
this narrative.
Instead, Mrs. Clinton and Democrats chose to stay in their bubble
and ignore the growing working class cries for help. As a result the Democrats not
only lost the White House, Senate and the House,
but were also decimated across the board in Governor and state legislative races. Voters clearly and soundly
rejected current party policies at every level of government; Democrats would
be wise to take heed.
Democrats now have a clear choice to make. They can waste time
and energy filing futile petitions, funding protests and calling for vote
recounts. They can continue to scream and cry about Trump being racist and
misogynist and refuse to accept that he is the President-elect and they
can also refuse to work with him once he takes office. By doing this, they
will once more bury their heads in the sand and, like
the GOP has done, become a party with no vision, no rallying cause and end up
with an internal civil war of their own, led by various extreme factions within
the party.
Or they
can come out of their bubble and spend time trying to
understand why so many blue collar voters and minorities, who have historically
been a guaranteed part of their base, felt so excluded and isolated that they
needed to find such an extreme alternative.
They can work with President Trump to further the
economic cause of all Americans while ensuring that hate never
permeates the mainstream arteries of our democracy, and they can champion an
alternative vision to his, one that must be more economically inclusive of
all voters in 2020.
NOTE: Title changed on 12/5 from "2016 US Election: Why Democrats Lost and the Choice They Need to Make".