Crisis!: When Political Parties Lose the Consent to Rule
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American voters have long been familiar with the phenomenon of the presidential frontrunner. In 2008, it was Hillary Clinton. In 1844, it was Martin Van Buren. And in neither election did the prominent Democrat win the party’s nomination. Insurgent candidates went on to win the nomination and the presidency, plunging the two-party system into disarray over the years that followed.
In this book, Cedric de Leon analyzes two pivotal crises in the American two-party system: the first resulting in the demise of the Whig party and secession of eleven southern states in 1861, and the present crisis splintering the Democratic and Republican parties and leading to the election of Donald Trump. Recasting these stories through the actions of political parties, de Leon draws unsettling parallels in the political maneuvering that ultimately causes once-dominant political parties to lose the people’s consent to rule.
Crisis! takes us beyond the common explanations of social determinants to illuminate how political parties actively shape national stability and breakdown. The secession crisis and the election of Donald Trump suggest that politicians and voters abandon the political establishment not only because people are suffering, but also because the party system itself is unable to absorb an existential challenge to its power. Just as the U.S. Civil War meant the difference between the survival of a slaveholding republic and the birth of liberal democracy, what political elites and civil society organizations do today can mean the difference between fascism and democracy.
Nancy Isenberg
Nancy Isenberg is the Mary Frances Barnard Chair in History at the University of Tulsa.
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Crisis! - Nancy Isenberg
Crisis!
When Political Parties Lose the Consent to Rule
Cedric de Leon
STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Stanford, California
STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Stanford, California
© 2019 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University.
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system without the prior written permission of Stanford University Press.
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free, archival-quality paper
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Names: Leon, Cedric de, author.
Title: Crisis! : when political parties lose the consent to rule / Cedric de Leon.
Description: Stanford, California : Stanford University Press, 2019. | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019004977 (print) | LCCN 2019006598 (ebook) | ISBN 9781503610651 (ebook) | ISBN 9781503603554 (cloth; alk. paper)
Subjects: LCSH: Political parties—United States—History. | Crises—Political aspects—United States—History. | Legitimacy of governments—United States—History. | United States—Politics and government.
Classification: LCC JK2261 (ebook) | LCC JK2261 .L455 2019 (print) | DDC 324.273—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019004977
Cover design: Rob Ehle
Cover images: Nineteenth-century political cartoons via Wikimedia Commons
Text design: Kevin Barrett Kane
Typeset at Stanford University Press in 11/15 Brill
CONTENTS
1. The Crisis Sequence
2. The Appeal of Manifest Destiny
3. The Tug of Unionism
4. The End of the Slaveholding Republic
5. The Contradictions of the New Deal
6. The Miseducation of Barack Obama
7. The Election of Donald Trump
8. The Paths out of Crisis
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index
1
THE CRISIS SEQUENCE
To hear Martin Van Buren tell it, losing the 1840 presidential election was the best thing that ever happened to him. The former president returned to his farm in upstate New York and watched his potatoes grow after directing a troubled economy for four years. Three of his sons lived nearby and his first grandson was born later that summer.
But Van Buren was either fooling himself or putting on a show, for his actions suggested that he was carefully planning a political comeback. He went on a national tour in early 1842, not even a year after his removal from office, to lay the groundwork for the next presidential campaign. This was no mean feat: Americans did not then have the modern conveniences of air or even train travel. On the first leg of his trip, the former president traveled overland down the Eastern Seaboard and then turned west across the Deep South. On the last leg, he traveled north through the Midwest and became the first former president to visit the boomtown of Chicago.¹
Van Buren returned to his farm on July 28, 1842, having traveled some seven thousand miles. He had reestablished his relationships with the heads of all the major local and state Democratic Party machines and in the process burnished his credentials as a leader with nationwide appeal. No other Democrat came close to his stature midway through the opposition’s administration, and it was clear to any casual observer that he was the party’s presumptive nominee in 1844. Soon after the national tour, the Democratic Review published a sonnet to him. It began, Fallen? No thou art not!
²
Martin Van Buren therefore had good reason to believe that he would prevail at the 1844 Democratic National Convention. A majority of the party’s delegates had pledged themselves to him by 1843. The opposition only helped to strengthen his self-assurance. President William Henry Harrison, leader of the Whig Party, had died in the first weeks of his administration, leaving the White House to his vice president, John Tyler, whose accidental tenure was marked above all by gross ineptitude. Democrats in Congress shared their leader’s confidence, so much so in fact that they counted their chickens before they were hatched, electing a staunch Van Burenite, John W. Jones of Virginia, Speaker of the House to push through their presumptive leader’s legislative agenda.
Since the 1840s, American voters have become well acquainted with the phenomenon of the frontrunner. The perennial frontrunner in our own time has been Hillary Clinton. Like Van Buren before her, Senator Clinton headed into the 2008 Democratic primary elections with the swagger of an odds-on favorite, while Barack Obama bore the mantle of the quixotic challenger. In January 2007, Mrs. Clinton announced her candidacy for the highest office in the land from the living room of her home in Washington. Seated comfortably on her couch in her trademark pantsuit, the senator from New York said, I’m in, and I’m in it to win.
One reporter for the influential online magazine Politico expressed what was on everyone’s minds when he called her Hillary the inevitable.
³
This was not just a theme imposed upon the race by a cynical mass media, for the Clinton campaign itself deliberately cultivated the air of inevitability. Indeed, this seemed to be the core of the campaign’s strategy: to shock and awe the American public into a Clinton coronation. The Obama campaign countered by painting Senator Clinton as just another candidate. In one instance of this back-and-forth, Obama strategist David Plouffe released a memo saying that Senator Clinton’s advantages were similar to those of an incumbent, whose support was broad but thin. Clinton strategist Mark Penn responded with his own memo, citing over forty polls in which his candidate was not only winning but widening her lead over the Democratic field. Penn wrote, Hillary’s electoral strength has grown in the last quarter and she is better positioned today than ever before to become the next President of the United States.
⁴
The Clinton campaign had plenty of reason to crow. Their candidate was a U.S. senator, heir-apparent to the throne of the Democrats’ leading faction, the centrist Democratic Leadership Council, and First Lady to the hugely popular president Bill Clinton, the party’s newest patriarch. George W. Bush had by that point led the country into the quagmire that was the Iraq War and bungled the rescue and resettlement of Americans in Hurricane Katrina. In 2006, the voters issued a signal rebuke to the Bush administration by turning both houses of Congress over to the Democrats for the first time since the early 1990s. It was clear to most observers that whoever became the Democratic nominee would almost certainly become the next president, and no one stood a better chance of winning the nomination than Hillary Clinton.
Of course, we now know that neither frontrunner did what they set out to do. James K. Polk, who was by all accounts a washed-up politician in 1844, was drafted in the last minute to break a deadlocked Democratic convention. The original dark horse
candidate, he defeated Van Buren and went on to beat Henry Clay by the thinnest of margins to become president. Barack Obama, though certainly the star of his party’s convention in 2004, was a first-term senator and a long shot for the nomination, yet he defeated the most powerful Democrat in America to become the nation’s first black president.
This book is about the events that followed the unanticipated victories of presidents Polk and Obama and that led in each case to a crisis of hegemony,
a moment in which the party system disintegrates into factions and the people withdraw their consent to be governed by the establishment. The major parties of the nineteenth century were coalitions of northern and southern states that united on either side of economic issues, in large part to avoid the politicization of slavery. Keeping the electorate’s eyes on the tyranny of banks and tariffs meant that voters and legislators paid less attention to the scourge of bonded servitude. Mr. Polk’s election was a mandate for Manifest Destiny,
a program of aggressive territorial expansion that promised cheap land to less affluent white men and a life of economic independence out West. Far from delivering on that promise, however, the further colonization of indigenous lands and what was then still northern Mexico led instead to a toxic debate over whether slavery would be permitted in the new territories. That dispute led to the factionalization of the two-party system, the secession of eleven southern states from the Union, and eventually to the Civil War in 1861.
I use the case of the Civil War to help us make sense of our own time. The nineteenth and twenty-first centuries are by no means historical twins, but there is a shared logic or pattern at work in which the politics of race and economics backfires on the political establishment. Until recently, the contemporary party system studiously avoided the politicization of racial inequality and neoliberal economic policies like free trade and deregulation. That globalization was good, that government was bad, and that the struggle for civil rights was settled became received wisdom. To run afoul of those conventions was to commit political suicide. The Great Recession of 2008, the worst economic downturn since the 1930s, created the conditions for a break with the status quo, and Barack Obama came to symbolize that break. Though he steered clear of civil rights policy, Mr. Obama promised an ambitious regulatory overhaul of Wall Street and an unprecedented expansion of government spending to update the country’s ailing infrastructure and thereby put the unemployed back to work. Far from welcoming this challenge to politics-as-usual, the establishment moved in to suppress the New New Deal.
The failed promise of the Obama agenda, in turn, factionalized the major parties, rendering them incapable of stopping Donald Trump’s epic rise in 2016. The Trump phenomenon, in other words, is not the beginning of the story but the end result of party polarization and fracture since the Great Recession.
The sequence of partisan reactions and counter-reactions to insurgent political programs—Manifest Destiny in the nineteenth century and the New New Deal in the twenty-first century—eventuated in a crisis of public confidence. Though party politics were at the center of these watershed moments, commentators tend to downplay the importance of parties and politicians in causing such crises, instead attributing them to changing social and economic dynamics on the ground. With few exceptions, students of electoral realignments,
for example, explain shifts in power from one political party to another by pointing to shocks like depressions or wars.⁵ Similarly, prominent historians argue that the U.S. Secession Crisis reflected the social conflict over slavery, especially the threat that abolitionism posed to the largest slave owners’ economic interests.⁶ Today debates on populism and the rise of the Far Right focus on the social disruption caused by economic downturns, changing moral values, and mounting class inequality.⁷ In few instances do political parties play a role.
One key problem with these theories is that they cannot explain the timing of political crises. Changes like globalization have been playing out for at least two generations: so why is the Far Right coming to power only now? The conflict over slavery was at least a century old by the time of the Civil War, going back to the American Revolution and the colonial period before that. If the threat to the largest slave owners’ economic interests was the root cause of the Civil War, then why did the South secede in 1861 and not before?
The Puzzle of Time
To solve the puzzle of timing I focus on the back-and-forth dynamic that follows an unexpected challenge to the party system. Such a challenge has the potential to touch off a crisis sequence,
a chain of partisan reactions and counter-reactions that destabilizes the relationship between political parties and their constituents and ends in a crisis of hegemony.
The basic idea is this. Party systems typically want to debate some things but not others and in doing so tend to reinforce a particular kind of social order.⁸ Since its founding as a white settler colonial state, the United States government has maintained certain racial, class, and gender compromises that form the basis of American society. Thus, the political elites of the slaveholding republic promised universal white manhood suffrage at the expense of the rights of people of color and women. Similarly, the postracial neoliberal order of 1968–2008 conceded civil rights but resisted the desegregation of schools, neighborhoods, and workplaces; at the same time, establishment politicians conceded the right of workers to organize and bargain collectively, even as they dismantled the social safety net and either outsourced union jobs overseas or destroyed jobs through automation.
Every once in a while, however, politicians and social movement activists insist on debating issues that the major parties want to avoid. This unanticipated challenge to the status quo convinces politicians and voters alike to defect from the mainstream parties. But the establishment does not take a challenge to its power lightly, and rather than yield to the insurgency it tries to reabsorb the defectors—that is, to lead them back to politics-as-usual. If the establishment succeeds, then the story ends there and the political crisis is contained; but in a crisis sequence the process of reabsorption backfires and leads to a full-blown crisis of hegemony. In brief, the four episodes of the crisis sequence are (1) unexpected challenge, (2) defection, (3) failed reabsorption, and (4) crisis.
The timing of the U.S. Secession Crisis makes sense if we think about it as the endpoint of a political back-and-forth that went awry. The crisis sequence in this case began with the unexpected challenge to the status quo posed by James K. Polk, whose candidacy shifted public debate from economic issues, which Van Buren employed deliberately to depoliticize slavery, to territorial expansion, which was the pet project of Mr. Polk, southern Democrats, and a new generation of party leaders called Young America
Democrats. The resulting colonization of northern Mexico, from Texas to Northern California, led to a bitter debate over whether or not slavery would be permitted there. To cool the ensuing strife between the North and South, the political establishment passed the Compromise of 1850, thereby settling the debate over slavery for good, or so they thought. But the dynamics of compromise unintentionally led to a second defection that emboldened the secessionist Southern Rights
faction of the Democratic Party, gave rise to the Republican Party in the North, and permanently destroyed the Whig Party. The destruction of the existing two-party system in turn led to the exodus of eleven southern states from the Union in 1861.
The election of Donald Trump also makes sense if we think of how it might also represent the endpoint of a crisis sequence. That sequence began with the campaign and election of Barack Obama and his advocacy of the New New Deal, which challenged the free market fundamentalism of the post–Civil Rights era. That vision inspired voters and politicians alike to defect to Mr. Obama’s insurgent campaign and vault him past Hillary Clinton and John McCain to the presidency. The neoliberal establishment refused to roll over. Clinton Democrats infiltrated the Obama transition team and administration from the inside, while congressional Republicans, with the initial support of the Tea Party, stonewalled the president’s legislative agenda and defeated him in the 2010 midterm elections. Not even halfway through his administration, then, Mr. Obama had bowed to the establishment and traded the New New Deal in for a tax-cutting neoliberal agenda. But the reabsorption of the president’s self-styled insurgency did not ultimately save the establishment, for the reabsorption strategy backfired badly, fueling infighting across the political spectrum. On the left, Barack Obama’s neoliberal turn meant that economic and racial inequality festered, touching off successive insurgencies from Occupy Wall Street to Black Lives Matter and the Bernie Sanders campaign. On the right, the Tea Party shut down the government in 2013 and inspired a rebellion of disgruntled factions within the Republican Party from birthers,
evangelicals, and libertarians, ensuring that no two candidates could unite with sufficient strength to defeat Donald Trump in the 2016 Republican primaries. With the party system in crisis, Mr. Trump was able to capture the Republican nomination and defeat a weakened Democratic Party. In the Rust Belt in particular, those who had voted for Barack Obama’s New New Deal in 2008 defected in the thousands: white union members voted for Donald Trump’s economic nationalist agenda, while black voters in city centers stayed home on Election Day.
In both instances, we see a pattern of unexpected challenge, defection, failed reabsorption, and crisis. Each step in the sequence is a necessary condition for the next. An unanticipated challenge to the status quo is necessary to prompt a defection. Otherwise politics-as-usual would be sufficient to maintain party loyalty. Defection is necessary to prompt reabsorption—absent a defection, the political establishment would not need to reabsorb anyone. Finally, the failure to reabsorb is a necessary condition for the last event in the sequence, which is a crisis of hegemony, because a party that reabsorbs the power that was slipping from its grasp by definition regains the people’s consent to govern.⁹
The Setting
Of course, making the U.S. Secession Crisis the reference point for understanding our present crisis is tricky, and comparisons between the Civil War and contemporary politics extend only so far. The two crises take hold at different moments in the development of American politics, race relations, and capitalism, a fact that limits just how much we can say in the comparison. We can, however, suggest that political crises in general evince shared features, namely, the fracturing of the political system and a corresponding shift in the allegiances of regular people who were once loyal to the system. We can also safely say that this has something to do with the ability of the establishment to hold on to its power. Finally, as recent controversies involving police violence and immigration make clear, both crises share a racial logic owing to the fact that America was founded as, and remains, a white settler colonial state.
But to the degree that we can outline the dynamics of political crisis, we run into another problem, which is that these changes happen not just at the national level but at local, state, and regional levels. This is especially true of pre–Civil War or antebellum politics, when the national parties were coalitions of local and state party machines. To balance these various concerns, I ground the story of southern secession, which takes up the first half of the book, in the state of Alabama, with special attention to Tuscaloosa County.
There are several reasons for this choice. The first set of reasons has to do with the symbolic importance of the town and state in the development of the secessionist agenda. The town of Tuscaloosa was the capital of Alabama for much of the antebellum period. Tuscaloosa connected, via plank road and the Black Warrior River, the poorer hill counties of northern Alabama and the affluent plantation counties of the southern half of the state. Indeed, the county itself was very much a cross-section of Alabama, for its hilly eastern half was home to small farmers and herdsmen, whereas its western half, particularly the southwest, housed sprawling plantations (and now houses the University of Alabama). With respect to states, it was important for me to choose a case other than South Carolina, which has received so much attention to the exclusion of other states that supposedly seceded in a herd once South Carolina took the first fateful step. In this, one could do no better than Alabama. Alabama was in the vanguard of the South as the national crisis over slavery deepened. It was an early seceder and a member state of the so-called Deep South. Alabama was distinguished even in this group, for the country’s leading secessionist, William L. Yancey, was an Alabaman and Alabama hosted the first capital of the Confederacy, Montgomery. If Illinois was the Land of Lincoln,
then Alabama was the Heart of Dixie.
The second set of reasons has to do with addressing the dominant explanation for secession within the social sciences, which is that the largest slaveholders led the South out of the Union in order to protect their property.
As we shall soon see, the Whig Party and its base among the largest planters actually resisted secession until the mid-1850s. In their view, slavery was safer within the Union than it was outside of it. It was only because of a series of strategic missteps that southern Whigs and their wealthy constituents were at last maneuvered into supporting secession, and then only grudgingly. This will run counter to what many social scientists and laypeople think they know about the Old South (historians will know better). Accordingly, I will have to first show that southern planters and Whigs resisted secession and second explain why they resisted secession only to give in. Doing so requires local voting data because of the secret ballot and the absence of individual-level survey or polling data (pollsters started doing voter surveys in the 1930s). The best we can do is look at voting by precinct or beat
and watch as planter-dominated neighborhoods give their ballots to one party and then another. Whenever possible, I will provide electoral returns for every county in Alabama and try to point out patterns in how planter counties voted in contrast to less affluent hill counties. However, because a county is much bigger and more diverse than a precinct, it is harder, at least on the basis of secret ballot returns, to say definitively how planters were responding to party politics if at all. This is why the precinct-level vote from Tuscaloosa County is so important.
All data on Alabama and the U.S. Secession Crisis were collected from the Hoole Special Collections Library at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa and the Alabama Department of Archives and History in Montgomery. For the leadership’s public statements, I use speeches, letters to the editor, and where party elders were also the editors of local party newspapers, their editorials. For insight into party leaders’ behind-the-scenes maneuvers, I rely upon their correspondence, memoirs, and diaries when available. The behavior of Tuscaloosa County planters tracked closely with the actions of four prominent Whig politicians: U.S. Congressman George W. Crabb, Congressman William R. Smith (Crabb’s protégé and successor to Crabb’s congressional seat), State Senator Robert Jemison Jr. (also the second-largest planter in the county), and Congressman Henry Hilliard (former professor at the University of