The Ezra Klein Show - Are We on the Cusp of a New Political Order?
Episode Date: November 1, 2024Our politics are increasingly divided on fundamental issues like the legitimacy of elections and the nature and integrity of the basic systems of American government. That’s the most important fact ...of this election. But strange new zones of agreement have been emerging, too — on China, outsourcing and health care. What should we make of that?In his book “The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order” the historian Gary Gerstle describes these shifts in consensus in terms of political orders — these eras that stretch for decades, when both parties come to accept a certain set of ideas. In this conversation he walks me through the political, economic and social factors that shaped two political orders in the last century: the New Deal order and the neoliberal order. And we apply this lens to what’s happening in our politics right now.It may seem strange to take a step back in time right before the election. But I think Gerstle’s framework helps uncover an overlooked dimension of the 2024 race and where politics might go next.Book Recommendations:The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory by Tim AlbertaUnderground Asia by Tim HarperThe Known Citizen by Sarah E. IgoThoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com.You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-klein-show-book-recs.This episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” was produced by Annie Galvin. Fact-checking by Kate Sinclair and Mary Marge Locker. Our senior engineer is Jeff Geld, with additional mixing by Aman Sahota. Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Rollin Hu, Elias Isquith, Michelle Harris and Kristin Lin. Original music by Isaac Jones. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From New York Times opinion, this is the Ezra Klein show.
So back in 2020, this is January of 2020, way before the election actually took place
before COVID for that matter, I published a whole book about political polarization.
It was called Why We're Polarized.
And I've been thinking a lot about how the polarization of this year is different than
what I was tracking when I was writing that book.
I mean, the divisions was writing that book.
I mean, the divisions are much more fundamental.
When I was writing that book, so much of the arguments were about Obamacare and taxes.
And now the fight is over the very legitimacy of elections.
The going after enemies using the power of the federal government, the nature
and integrity of the basic systems
of American government.
I think that is the most important fact of politics right now.
It has been the subject of many, many of our episodes this year.
But it is interesting, I think, that the policy issues on which there once seemed so little
room for compromise are now so much more open. From free trade to antitrust, from healthcare to outsourcing,
from China to unions, there is suddenly a lot more overlap in at
least the rhetoric of the two parties.
Not always a policy, but the rhetoric.
And sometimes the overlap really is substantive.
The Trump administration, it really was a break with the Obama administration on China. But the Biden administration was not a reversion back to where Obama was. The
Biden administration, they took what Trump did on China and they went a lot further.
What does that tell us? In his book, The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order,
the historian Gary Gerstle introduced me to this concept of political orders, these structures of political consensus that stretch over decades.
There were two across the 20th century, the New Deal order, which ran from the 1930s to the 1970s,
and the neoliberal order, which stretched from the 70s to the financial crisis.
And I wonder if part of what is unsettling politics right now is that we're in a
moment between orders, a moment where you can just begin to see the hazy outline
of something new taking shape.
And both parties are in internal upheavals as they try to remake themselves to grasp
at it and respond to it.
And I know where we are in the election cycle. I know where everybody's minds are.
I got nothing to tell you about the polls.
There's nothing I can say that is going to allay your anxiety
for a couple days from now.
And I know that within this feeling of the moment,
it feels weird to talk at all about zones of possible agreement or compromise rather
than disagreement and danger.
But I think it's worth doing this episode in this conversation now because I think they're
important to understanding why this election has played out the way it has.
And I think it's important for thinking about where politics might be going next.
As always, my email, azra Klein show at nytimes.com.
Gary Gerstle, welcome to the show.
Thank you for having me.
So let's begin with the big concept here.
What is a political order?
A political order is a way of thinking differently
about political time in America.
We focus so much on two, four and six-year election cycles.
A political order is something that lasts beyond particular elections.
It refers to the ability of one political party to arrange a constellation of policies,
constituencies, think tanks, candidates, individuals who come to dominate politics for extended
periods of time.
And their dominance becomes so strong that the opposition party feels compelled, if they
still want to remain real players in American politics, it compels them to acquiesce and
to come aboard the other political parties' platform.
They don't get established that often.
They usually last 30 or 40 years.
Economic crisis is usually involved in the emergence of a new order and the breakup of
the old.
Every political order also has not only an ideology, but a vision of a good life in America.
What constitutes a good life? Because that becomes really important in terms of selling
the virtues of that political order to a mass base, which is something that has to be won and sustained
in American politics in order for a political order to exist and thrive.
Let's talk a bit about the New Deal and then the neoliberal orders.
And I want to focus here on the parts of your theory or the parts of your
description that I found more revelatory.
So I think people have a sense of the New Deal.
There's a Great Depression, FDR is elected, the sort of New Deal period begins.
Something you really focus on though, is that what coheres of the New Deal is
that the Republicans eventually submit to it.
And that happens when Eisenhower beats Taft.
So tell me a bit about the counterfactual there that you think almost happened.
What led to Taft losing prominence in the Republican Party?
And what might have happened if he hadn't?
It's the Soviet Union and the threat of communism.
And he was very slow to grasp the nature of that threat.
When I teach young people today, it's hard for them to grasp the magnitude and the seriousness
of the Cold War and how it shaped every aspect of American life.
And the Soviet Union represented an existential threat to the United States.
It was a revolutionary power that wanted to end capitalism everywhere, not just in the
Soviet Union, but all over Asia and Africa, North America, South America.
They were gaining a lot of support in the decolonizing societies of Africa and Asia.
America was not confident in the ability of its economy to have a permanent recovery from
the Great Depression.
They needed foreign markets.
America wasn't sure whether it would have them.
And the capitalist class in America was scared to death by the communist threat, and it had
to be met everywhere.
And America mobilizes for the Cold War to contain communism
everywhere where it appeared. And that required a standing army in quasi peacetime of a sort that
America had never experienced before. And Taft was profoundly uncomfortable with this. He was
a Republican in a classical sense, small central government, devolved power to
the states, suspicious of foreign entanglements, believing that America was protected by the
two vast oceans and thus did not need a strong standing army, did not have to be involved
in world affairs.
And he was opposed to the New Deal.
He thought it was a form of tyranny, it was
going to lead to collectivism, Soviet style, and he was poised in the 1940s to
roll back the New Deal and he was looking forward to the post-war period
after the war emergency had passed. Of course the war emergency would require a
very strong state to mobilize armed forces, to mobilize the economy for the
sake of fighting a world war. And he was slow to get on the bandwagon in terms of
the threat of China, the threat of communist expansion. And that opened up
an opportunity for another candidate by the name of Dwight D. Eisenhower to
enter the presidential race in 1952 and to present a very different vision.
And my counterfactual is that absent the Cold War, the New Deal, which we now regard as
such a juggernaut, would be seen as a momentary blip like so many other progressive moments
in American politics.
And we would see it as a blip and not for what it became, which was a political order
that dominated politics for 30 years.
So there's been this conventional story of the New Deal era, which is that the fear of
communism, the fear of being painted as soft on communism or soft on socialism, leads progressives
to trim their sails, moderates the sort of left flank of
New Dealism.
You argue that that story misses what's happening on the right.
You say, quote, if we look carefully at the politics of the late 1940s and early 1950s,
we could see that the imperative of fighting the communists caused Republicans to make
even larger concessions than the Democrats did.
What were those concessions?
Well, the biggest concession was agreeing to an extraordinary system of progressive
taxation.
The highest marginal tax rate in the 1940s during World War II reached 91%, a level that
is inconceivable in America of the 21st century.
Eisenhower wins the election in 1952.
He has both houses of Congress.
And quite extraordinarily, Eisenhower maintains the 91% taxation rate.
One simply can't imagine a Republican Party in the 21st century, anyone in it,
doing that today. Why did he do it? Well, there were suspicions on the part of some Republicans that he was a closet Democrat. His partisan loyalties weren't that clear, but I think he was a
Republican. And I think what mattered to him was the Cold War. And the Cold War had to be fought
on two fronts. It had to be fought militarily,
international containment of communism, and that required enormous expenditures
on national defense, which meant not simply a conventional army, but the nuclear arms race.
And the other aspect of that, which he appreciated, was that in the 1950s it was not clear whether the Soviet Union or
the United States could provide a better life for its average citizen. The Soviet
Union was still doing quite well in the 1950s. There was an extraordinary debate
that occurred in Moscow in 1959. Vice President Nixon debated Khrushchev about
who could deliver better kitchens to their consumers.
And the Americans imported all the most recent household
appliances from the United States,
reassembled them on a stage in Moscow,
and Nixon and Khrushchev went at it,
including a dishwasher for the first time,
when it wasn't a common feature of American homes.
What was this about?
This was the United States admitting
that the Soviet Union was a serious rival, not
simply militarily, but economically as well.
America had to prove that it had the better system, and that meant you could not return
to unrestrained American capitalism.
You had to regulate it in the public interest.
Eisenhower understood that in order to win the ideological struggle of the Cold War,
which was not simply an American-Soviet struggle, but it was a global struggle to convince all the peoples of what was then called the Third World
to come with the capitalist way, to come with the American way. In order for that to happen,
America had to demonstrate that it could give its ordinary citizens a good life.
And that meant taking money from the rich and redistributing it,
And that meant taking money from the rich and redistributing it,
narrowing the inequality between rich and poor.
It meant supporting powerful labor movement
and not trying to roll back the Wagner Act,
which the labor movement regarded as its Magna Carta,
a very strong piece of federal legislation
that gave it unambiguous rights to organize
and obligated employers to bargain collectively with them.
He felt that this had had to be the way that America went maintenance of social
security, really all the key new deal reforms he ended up maintaining because
he thought this would be a critically important instrument for convincing not
just ordinary Americans, but people around the world, that this would prove
the superiority of the American way. That is why he acquiesced to the New Deal order.
And you describe this as being, of course, more than just Eisenhower. It's a pervasive
recognition among America's business class. You say, quote, the fear of communism made possible
the class compromise between capital and labor that
underwrote the New Deal order.
And you say it wasn't just here, that this was also true in many of the social democracies
in Europe after the Second World War.
Tell me a bit about that class compromise and the role the Cold War played in it.
It is often said that socialism was weaker in America than it was elsewhere.
And in many respects
that has been true.
The corollary of that is that the American business class historically has been bigger,
more powerful, more unencumbered than the business classes of other nations, especially
in Western Europe among America's industrial rivals.
There was no shortage of labor protests
in America, but rarely could labor achieve what it wanted to achieve because the resistance
was extraordinary. The resistance was legal. It was extralegal. The history of industrial
relations in America was very violent. The business class in America had a reputation of being very powerful and aggressive
and unwilling to share its power with its antagonists.
So what was it that got them to share that power?
I argue that it was the fear of the Soviet Union.
And what did the fear of the Soviet Union represent?
The expropriation of all corporate capital in the world.
That was the communist dream.
And that was deeply felt.
And it was felt not simply in a global setting,
it was felt within the United States itself,
where there was a communist movement,
not on the size of the magnitude
of what was occurring in Europe, but significant nonetheless.
And the business class felt that it was in its interests to compromise with organized
labor in a way that it had never done before.
That was the grand compromise.
It was symbolized in a treaty in Detroit between the three automobile makers, then among the
biggest corporations in America and the United Auto Workers, the Treaty of Detroit, purchasing labor peace by granting unions good wages,
good conditions, good pensions, good health care.
Absent the threat of communism, I think that grant compromise either would not have been
arrived at or it would have been scuttled
much sooner than it was.
I also find it striking how much this made its way into political language.
I feel like it has passed a bit into political cliche that the interstate highway system
was labeled in the bill, quote, the national system of interstate and defense highways.
You write that supporters of it argued
that building 41,000 miles of new roads
would facilitate both the quick transfer of military units
to parts of the United States under attack
and rapid evacuation of people from areas
threatened by atomic bombs.
I'm doing work in this book I'm working on
that sort of revolves around invention
and the rise of the R&D state.
And it's really remarkable to look at how closely the R&D state was designed and sold
in terms of its ability to keep America ahead for national defense.
It has its roots in World War II and it continues building much off of that rhetoric.
And so there's this interesting way I think we think of the New Deal in terms of social security, we think of it in terms of some of these
individual programs, but it is this thorough going expansion of the
government into all kinds of areas of American life and the thing that allows
the Republican Party to get on board with a lot of that is this idea that if
you don't do that, well the Soviets are gonna do to do it, and they're going to have the highways,
or they're going to have the technological
or scientific superiority.
They're going to make it to the moon, et cetera,
and then America's going to be left behind.
The national security argument is crucial
to getting large segments of the Republican Party on board.
For them, the greatest threat, both internationally
and domestically, was the communist threat. threat and thus they were willing to extend themselves
Beyond a point where they otherwise would have gone and the national highway system is one manifestation of that
The vast education bills that are going to propel the tremendous growth of American universities in the 1960s and 1970s
What you mentioned
about R&D, has a similar propulsion.
That doesn't mean that there weren't other forces within the Democratic Party who were
doing this for classically progressive reasons.
It's the obligation of the government to deliver goods to its citizens.
But the scale of this would not have reached the point that it did without getting a lot of Republicans on board.
The critical argument for them was national security.
A critical event was Sputnik when Soviet Union shocks the United States by putting into orbit
a satellite before the United States had done it.
That is a shocking moment.
Oh my God, America is falling behind. We must bend every
muscle to beating the Soviet Union in every way. And that requires tremendous investments
because of satellite technology and R&D. And also that becomes the foundation of what is
going to become the IT industry and the IT revolution, also a product of the Cold War.
So I just want to draw out some pieces of the theory here that maybe flesh out the political
order.
So I think people have in their minds, you have the Great Depression, you have a big
government response, but then you have the acquiescence of Eisenhower and the Republican
Party to both the premises of the New Deal, which is a much more expansive government
regulating the market, trying to create a better life for workers and building a stronger
national security state.
And you have the continued pressure of the Soviet Union, which kind of keeps holding
this in place.
How does that order end?
There are three factors that pull this order apart.
The first is race, the second is Vietnam, and the third is the major economic recession
of the 1970s.
Every political order has tensions within it in the United States.
And the great contradiction in the New Deal party of Franklin Roosevelt was the treatment
of African Americans.
In order to have a new political economy of a big state managing private capital and the
public interest, Roosevelt had to get the South on board.
And the South meant the white South.
The South was a one-party state.
The Democratic Party was the only party that mattered.
Congressmen and senators from the South would get elected again and again and again, and
they would rise through seniority.
They'd be the most powerful figures in Congress.
And they said, we will support you, Roosevelt, with your broader political economy, as long
as you leave the racial hierarchies of the South intact.
Don't touch Jim Crow. Don't
touch segregation. Don't promote an anti-lynching bill. And Roosevelt assented to that. But
this was also a time, especially in the 1940s, when African Americans were migrating in huge
numbers to the North and they were becoming a constituency in the Democratic Party.
This was the first point of crisis and the Democratic Party found itself unable to contain
the racial conflicts that exploded in the 1960s.
That was then complicated by Vietnam, a vastly unpopular war, inaugurated and presided over by Democratic presidents
who were perceived by their own constituents to not be telling the truth about this awful quagmire.
It swallowed up a president who otherwise would be regarded as a great president in American history,
Lyndon Johnson, and it deeply split the Democratic Party. It also inaugurated trade-offs between funding a war and funding
Johnson's beloved Great Society. Inflation began to take off. And then the third element
was profound changes in the international political economy. One of the reasons why
America was able to enter its grand compromise between capital and labor and pay labor very
high wages was that America had no serious industrial competition in the world from the 40s to the
60s.
Most of the industrialized world had been destroyed.
The US is actively helping the recovery of Western European economies, Japan promoting
development in Southeast Asia.
And in the 1970s, these economies begin to challenge American supremacy economically.
The symbol of that is the rise of Japanese car manufacturers who suddenly begin competing
very seriously with the US.
And the entire promise of Western Europe prosperity and American university had been premised
on the flow of unending supplies of very cheap Middle Eastern
oil, most of them controlled by US and British oil companies.
And Saudi Arabia and other oil producing nations in the 1970s say, no, these are our resources.
We will determine how much is drawn out of the ground and the prices that they will be
charged. drawn out of the ground and the prices that they will be charged and the
quadrupling of oil prices leads to a profound economic crisis along with competition
from European nations against the United States and this plunges the United States into a very unexpected and profound and long
economic crisis known as stagflation
Inflation and unemployment are going up at the same time.
None of the textbooks say this should be happening.
The tools are no longer working and it's in this moment of crisis,
the Democratic Party, this is a third strike against it,
opens up an opportunity for alternative politics,
an alternative party, and alternative plan for American political economy.
I want to zoom in on something here that I've become more sensitive to.
I think the standard account of what we now call neoliberalism or we might call conservatism
or the new right is you have Barry Goldwater runs against Lyndon Johnson, gets crushed.
Then you have Richard Nixon, the sort of turn to the right.
And then you have Ronald Reagan, the fruition of the
Goldwater Nixon movement.
And then Ronald Reagan leads in a way to Bill Clinton.
And that sort of leaves out something that is happening
among Democrats at this time, that there's a movement inside
of liberalism, right?
There's the new deal democratic order, but you develop this new left. And there is a movement of
liberals against big government, young liberals for reasons of self-expression, for reasons of
civil rights, for reasons of this feeling that they're being fed into a bureaucracy and giant soulless
organizations and eventually into the meat grinder of Vietnam. Older liberals who are
angry about the sort of reckless growth and the poisoning of streams and the building
of highways through their communities and the sort of tiki-taki, you know, rise of these
suburbs. And this predates Reagan, right?
It's actually in some way something Ronald Reagan ends up running again.
So can you talk a bit about the sort of troubling of the liberal consensus
in the run up to this period?
Yes.
The New Left erupts on university campuses in the 1960s,
and the two primary issues in the beginning are race in Vietnam.
But they also quite quickly develop a critique of the established order.
There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart,
that you can't take part. You can't even passively take part. And you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers,
upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop.
And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless
you're free, the machine will be prevented from working at all.
What was called at the time, the system, it's hard to believe that the system could do so
much work, such an anodyne term.
But it was a powerful term that was thrown around in the 1960s and 70s.
And what was the system?
The system was large American corporations who were no longer under control.
And one reason why they were no longer under control is because they were being aided and abetted by a large
federal state that was supposed to manage them in the public interest. And
thus the system was meant to identify not just the corporations who were doing
ill in America, but it was meant to identify a federal state that was birthed
in the optimism of the New Deal and had been corrupted. And so you have this fissure within the Democratic Party itself.
The other element of this is this profound search for personal freedom and autonomy that
was intensely felt by members of the New Left.
The battle cry of the free speech movement in Berkeley in 1964,
arguably the first mass moment of protest on the part of the New Left,
was, I will not be folded, spindled, or mutilated.
Where does that phrase come from?
That was a phrase printed on every IBM card.
IBM was the dominant computer maker of the time.
The computers were these enormous machines, mainframes, and they were seen
as stultifying to human creativity. And the personal computer movement was born
on as part of the New Left. Steve Jobs, Stuart Brand imagined a personal computer that would be free of the IBM
mainframe, free of big corporations, big corporate power, that it would be the authentic voice
of only every individual who would be using that machine. It was a profound expression of
It was a profound expression of a desire for personal autonomy, individuality, expressiveness, unconstrained by larger structures.
This cry or creed occur came from the left.
It was a very powerful part of the new left.
But one can see how it might suit the purposes of a rising neoliberal order,
because the rising neoliberal order was also intent on deregulating, freeing individuals from
the grip of large institutions and allowing them to go their own way. Neoliberalism is a slippery
term. It's often just an epithet. How do you define what its tenets are?
What do you need to believe to be a neoliberal of the period you're talking about?
Neoliberals believe that the best economic program is one that frees capitalism from
its shackles, that allows people to truck, barter, and exchange
goods that gets the government out of economic life.
And the only role for government is to ensure that markets can function freely and robustly.
So it runs opposite to the New Deal.
If the core principle of the New Deal was capitalism left to its own devices would destroy
itself, the core principle of neoliberalism, remove the shackles from capitalism, that
will bring us the most productive and freest world we can imagine.
I have a shorthand for describing the neoliberal world that was envisioned by neoliberal thinkers
and brought by policymakers into existence. It's what I sometimes call the four freedoms
of neoliberalism. Freedom of movement, people. Freedom of goods to move across national boundaries, the free flow of information, and the free flow of
capital across all boundaries.
In a perfect neoliberal world, people, goods, information, and capital are moving freely
without constraint.
If we can imagine a perfect world that the Wall Street Journal wants,
this would be pretty close to it. I do not want to suggest for a moment that the New Left
intentionally created
neoliberalism, but it turned out that the cries of freedom, personal freedom, personal autonomy that were emanating from them
turned out to be very conducive
to the economic philosophy of neoliberalism. One thing that I'm curious to get your thoughts on though is something that feels like more
of a miasma when I read it.
So going back to Johnson, you begin having, I don't quite know how to describe it. I would sort of describe
it in the political memoirs I've read as a growing allergy to bigness and conformity
in a lot of different contexts, right? A growing allergy in the context of the government,
but also in the way society is organized, right? There's a lot of fear becoming the
organization man, right? These like grave faceless cogs in the corporate
wheel. But you have Lyndon Johnson giving these speeches about the ugliness of America,
how it has become a somewhat grotesque society visually. You have John Kenneth Galbraith,
one of the great economists of the New Deal era, writing The Affluent Society, which is
all about the problems of the society where now there is much more
plenty, but what makes life worth living has been eroded.
And then you have Jimmy Carter.
And I always think Carter is just a much more ideologically interesting president than people
give him credit for.
And he really channels a lot of this.
And I want to play a clip from his 1978 State of the Union that you note
in your book.
The government cannot solve our problems.
It can't set our goals.
It cannot define our vision.
Government cannot eliminate poverty or provide a bountiful economy or reduce inflation or
save our cities or cure illiteracy or provide
energy and government cannot mandate goodness.
Later on, Bill Clinton will say the era of big government is over. But in some ways,
this to me is a much more striking statement, both because it's earlier, but it's so much
more specific about what government cannot do. What is he channeling here? What do you make of it?
Well, first salute to President Carter, who's a hundred years old and seriously
ailing and has had a more successful post presidency than just about any other
president I can imagine. So hats off to him.
It matters that he's a Southern governor.
Southern governors on the one hand accepted federal largesse. The US federal government
invested a lot of resources in the Southern states to keep the Southern Democrats on board.
But there was also a deep suspicion of government power,
because government power was feared,
would intrude on race relations in the South.
So Jimmy Carter is an heir to suspicion
of excessive federal power.
But I also think he's grasping at this moment,
a point of transition in the American economy and a sense that government
policy as set forth in the New Deal was not working as well as it should have been.
I think it mattered that he was an engineer and he was doing a lot of cost-benefit analysis.
What kind of yield are we getting for the bucks that we're investing?
And so he's open to this fertile moment of dissent.
He's channeling new thinkers and imagining a different Democratic party that you are
correct in saying precedes Clinton by 20 years.
And the key figure in this movement is a man by the name of Ralph Nader.
And he was a key influential advisor on Jimmy Carter, which makes Jimmy Carter in some odd
ways, what we might say is he may have been accidental, but he's also the first, in a
sense, neoliberal president, many meetings between Nader's people
and Carter's people to begin a process of scrutinizing the federal state, deregulating
where it was necessary to deregulate. But it also needs to be said that he's very uncertain about
this path for the Democratic Party, and he's very torn. And so one day, as in this speech that we just listened to, he's supporting smaller
government deregulation, preaching a philosophy that government can't solve people's problems.
But that older Democratic Party of unions, federal policy, vast programs, a welfare state is still there and still present.
And he'll give another speech a month later where he sounds much more like an old Democrat.
And I think as I evaluate the Carter presidency, I see a man really caught in the throes of a moment of transition, able to glimpse what
is coming, but unable to master what is coming.
And so what defines his presidency for me is uncertainty, vacillation, and thus failure.
He's a classical transitional figure, more controlled than in charge of the moment.
You mentioned Ralph Nader as one of the muses in Carter's ear
and of Carter's moment.
I think to the extent many people think about Nader now,
they sort of vaguely know he helped make seat belts into a major thing in cars
and that he helped throw the 2000
election to George W. Bush.
But who is Nader then?
Not just what he's doing, but ideologically what he's saying and the sort of critique
that he's making that is being taken up by so many people who end up being very important
in the Democratic Party. Well, on the one hand, Nader is a man of the left, but he doesn't fit in the old left or the new left.
We might call him a man of the consumer left.
For him, the key figure in American society was the consumer, and he wanted to champion the consumer. And his contributions in terms of automobile safety,
occupational safety, food safety, were immense and attracted a very large following, including
among sections of the New Left who became known as naters, raiders. But he also executed a profound
shift in ideology, and I'm not even sure how
aware he was of the consequences of what he was generating. Because in the process of making the
consumer sovereign, he deflected attention, I would say, from what was and what remains
the core relationship in a capitalist economy, and that is in the realm of production and
the relations between employers and employees.
He was reluctant in some respects to challenge corporate power,
if corporate power was serving the consumer in a good way.
He anticipates in some respects a profound shift
in antitrust policy and the key figure in this
is gonna be Robert Bork in the 1980s and 1990s.
It had been an article of faith in American history
that no corporation should be allowed to get too large
because they would inevitably exercise power
in an undemocratic fashion. So antitrust meant breaking up big corporations. Under
Robert Bork the question changed. Big corporate power was okay as long as it
served the consumer with cheap goods. What Ralph Nader is not shy about
confronting is the government.
I mean, the sort of architecture of organizations he helps create, the sort of Nader's Raiders
staff, that, I mean, generations now of really smart young liberal lawyers have gone into,
they're built to sue the government.
And to some degree, I think I'm more sympathetic to Nader as a skeptic of corporations. And it sounds like maybe you are, because I think he understands the government as the
entity capable of bringing the corporations to heel.
But what he builds is this huge set of documents and theorists and movements and institutions
devoted to describing the ways in which the government
fails and then suing it into acting differently.
There is a sort of turn on bigness and one kind of bigness is corporations, but the kind
of bigness you can really attack is the government and its faceless, compromised activities. I accept that view of Nader.
And he and his supporters and his organizations
deserve a lot of credit for holding the government
accountable and making vast improvements
in a whole host of areas, regulating the environment
and other matters, regulating food, and compelling government to do the service that it does.
But it also distracts from understanding part of that which powers the rise of large corporations
and gives them the ability to control government and capture regulatory agencies.
And I think the results of his attacks on government have been ambivalent in terms of their consequences,
in some respects really accelerating the process of delivering goods to the American people and American consumers that they want. But on the other hand, contributing to an atmosphere of thinking
the government can't really do much, that's right.
We sort of put down the thread of
the Soviet Union back with Eisenhower,
but now I want to pick it back up.
As you move towards Reagan,
certainly part of Ronald Reagan's appeal, is his anti-communism.
So how do you describe the role of the Soviet Union in this period of political time?
The collapse of the Soviet Union between 1989 and 1991 is one of the most stunning events,
I think, of the 20th century and arguably much longer.
What were its consequences?
First, it opened up the whole globe
to capitalist penetration to a degree
that had not been available to capitalism
since prior to World War I.
And this generates a tremendous amount of belief
and excitement and expansion and a good deal of arrogance and hubris within
the capitalist citadel, which is the United States.
So that's one major consequence.
The second major consequence is what does it mean for communism no longer to exist as
a threat. And what we begin to see in the 1990s is capital in America regaining the power, assurance,
authority, belief in its unilateral power that it had across the years of the Cold War,
if not sacrificed, then moderated.
What the Soviet Union had promised, what communism had promised was
that private enterprise could be superseded by
rational planning on the part of an enlightened
set of rulers who could manage
the economy in a way that benefited the masses in
extraordinary ways.
That whole project fails,
and it fails in a spectacular
fashion. And in the United States,
because the collapse of the Soviet Union
happened under
Republican presidents,
because it happened under Ronald Reagan, who was particularly hard on the Soviet Union,
because Ronald Reagan had insisted
that there was a continuum between Soviet government tyranny and what he regarded as
New Deal government tyranny.
They were on the same spectrum, one inevitably led to another.
He and other Republicans, George H.W. Bush, but the party as a whole,
takes this as a great vindication of their core beliefs.
That capitalism, which under the New Deal was sharply constrained,
should be freed from constraint.
It's animal spirits allowed to soar.
Venture capitalists encouraged to go everywhere, investments made
easy, lower taxation, let capitalists and capital drive America and the world economy
unconstrained by regulation. And these were the core ideas of neoliberals, which have been
incubating for decades. And now suddenly these ideas seem to be vindicated.
This is the moment of free market triumph.
And it intersects in a very powerful way with the ongoing IT revolution, which is also bound
up with the Soviet Union's collapse because the Soviet Union was very hostile to the personal computer because it required a degree at that time of
personal freedom that the Soviet Union wasn't willing to allow.
What the IT revolution represented in the in the 1990s, and this is one of the reasons that Democrats
get on board with it, what it represented was a belief that
market perfection was now within human grasp.
That there may have been a need for strong government in the past because knowledge about
markets was imperfect. It was limited. It took time for information about markets to
to travel. A lot of it was wrong. Not enough of it was available instantaneously. Well,
suddenly in the 1990s,
you have this dream, this vision of all economic knowledge in the world being available at your
fingertips instantaneously and with a degree of depth and a range of statistics and figures that
had been unimaginable and a techno-utopianism takes hold. And it's the intersection of these two vectors, a sense that the collapse of the Soviet Union
vindicates free market thinking and the IT revolution that allows people to think market
perfection is within our grasp in ways that never has been before, that pours fuel on
the fire of neoliberal free market thinking.
You describe Bill Clinton as the Dwight D. Eisenhower of neoliberalism.
What do you mean by that, and what are some of the, for you, core examples?
When Bill Clinton was elected in 1992,
no Democratic U.S. president had been elected since 1976.
16 years is an eternity in electoral politics
in the United States.
And the question becomes,
will he roll back the Reagan revolution of the 1980s,
massive efforts at deregulation? Or will he follow a path
that Dwight Eisenhower followed in the early 50s? Eisenhower was the first Republican president
elected in 20 years, and he has a choice to roll back the New Deal or to acquiesce to it.
I think Clinton in the beginning is a little uncertain about what he is going to do.
And he has some ambitious proposals in his first two years, most notably a vast program
of national health insurance, which crashes spectacularly.
And then he gets punished for that venture severely in the 1994 congressional elections, which bring Newt Gingrich and a very right-wing
group of Republicans to power, the first time that Republicans control both houses of Congress
since 1952.
It's a huge achievement for the Republicans. Clinton reads that moment as signifying that the older Democratic Party
of the New Deal, Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson, really had to be reworked and revamped.
And the only way for him to win re-election and the only way for the Democrats to hold on to national power and to regain it in Congress in
1996 is for him to acquiesce
to some core Reaganite
beliefs and at the center of the Reaganite
project was
deregulation
Which is a code word for getting
the government out of economic affairs or curtailing government
power.
We know big government does not have all the answers.
We know there's not a program for every problem.
We know and we have worked to give the American people a smaller, less bureaucratic government
in Washington. And we have to give
the American people one that lives within its means. The era of big government is over. Signs off on the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which effectively deregulates the burgeoning
IT sector of the economy, makes possible an unregulated internet.
He signs off on the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999. The Glass-Steagall Act had divided investment from commercial banking and had imposed a
kind of regulation on Wall Street that brought an end to the crazy speculation that had brought
about the Great Depression in the first place.
It was a core principle of the New Deal. He does not seek to revive the fairness doctrine in terms of regulating public media, which
had guided successive democratic administrations.
The idea that if a news outlet put out one side of a debate on a policy matter, they
were obligated to give the other side equal access.
He becomes an advocate of deregulation and in some respects pushes deregulation further
than Reagan himself had been able to do.
And in that sense, he acquiesces to some of the core principles of the Reagan Revolution
rather than seeking to roll them back.
And it is in that respect that I think it's appropriate
to think of him as a democratic Eisenhower.
And this happens at a time of tremendous political conflict
and polarization between him and the Republicans.
One thing I sort of appreciate about your frameworks here is that there's a lot of periods,
certainly in my political lifetime, where when you look at them, what you remember,
what stands out is all the disagreement, all the conflict, the impeachment trials, the
government shutdowns.
But certainly the 90s in the background of this, there are these huge laws being passed
on a bipartisan basis with agreements between not always Clinton and Newt Gingrich, but
quite often Clinton and Newt Gingrich for all the invective Gingrich is hurling at him elsewhere.
Pete Slauson A huge amount has been written on the 1990s
by political historians, political scientists, journalists, And 90% of it focuses on polarization.
The bitter cultural battles of the 1990s,
very close in spirit to the cultural battles going on in America today.
And I remember those times well.
And what one remembers most about those battles is how much Clinton and Newt Gingrich
hated each other's guts. And they were seen as being polar opposites. Clinton, the representative
of a new left America, cosmopolitan, open to the liberation movements, looking for new ways of creating a new and diverse America,
embracing sexual liberations is embrace of gay rights was somewhat limited, but still significant.
Newt Gingrich, on the other hand, representing traditional Victorian America, wanting to reassert the patriarchal heterosexual family,
men at work, women in the home, religious.
This battle was intense,
and both men considered their opponent utterly unscrupulous.
Newt Gingrich thought that Clinton
was the most amoral president ever to sit in the Oval
Office.
So one of the surprises to me in working on this book, because I remember those days very
well, was the degree to which they worked together on telecommunication, on reform of
Wall Street, on welfare.
Now Clinton would claim, and his defenders would claim, that he was triangulating.
He was trying to make the best of a bad deal, that popular opinion was running with free
markets, was running with the Republicans.
And to some extent, that was true.
But I was surprised the degree to which these two men who loathed each other in public and
in private recognize that on political economy.
They were on a similar mission.
And the legislation that they put through has profoundly shaped America in the 21st
century.
And the lesson that I draw from that moment is that one must refrain from always getting sucked in to the daily battles over cultural issues.
They are important. They are crucial.
It's not that we shouldn't pay attention to them.
But sometimes there's a need to look underneath those battles to see if in a subterranean
sense something else is going on.
Let me pick up on a word to use there before we move to the 21st century, which was cosmopolitanism.
Something that was fresh to me in your book was this argument that in neoliberalism, you're
looking at more than just what we typically think of it as, which is an economic theory.
You argue that there is a moral ethic that came alongside it that is part of it.
You talk about it as at various times cosmopolitan, individualistic.
Tell me about it.
Neoliberalism is often defined, as you say, simply as being about markets and freeing
them up.
And neoliberalism is also defined as something that's profoundly elitist in orientation,
and it's a device and an ideology used by elites to implant market ideology on a society in ways that deepens economic inequality and has the ability to
strangle the democratic rights of the masses. This is a popular view of neoliberalism. I do not deny
those elements of neoliberalism, but I also say that in America it had a profound popular base.
Reagan was an enormously successful president, and by success, I mean, he was able to excite
the imagination of majorities of American voters, and his core message was freedom.
And half the time, he meant freedom in terms of a free enterprise economy, but the other half of the time, he
meant freedom in terms of giving individuals the autonomy to go their own way.
Now, he was not a fan of himself, of the liberation movements of the 60s.
Bowen Clinton becomes president in the 1990s. He has a profound connection to those liberation movements of the 1960s, to feminism, to sexual
liberation, to civil rights.
And he detects in a world in which everyone can travel to wherever they want to go.
He valorizes immigrants. He
valorizes diversity. These are all values that are profoundly compatible with the
neoliberal vision. The opportunity to travel anywhere, to seek out personal
adventure, to seek out different cultures.
This is a world that neoliberalism makes possible.
And it's a thrilling moment for many people who have the opportunity either to mix in
the world of American cities, which have filled have filled up with immigrants or to travel abroad
and experience other cultures.
A single global marketplace enables and encourages the kind of cosmopolitanism that people on spectrum in America have so deeply valued. So you locate the end of this era in the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009.
Why?
The promise of neoliberalism was that it would lift all boats. There was an acknowledgement about those
who were freeing the energies of the market economy that it would probably increase inequality,
the distance between the rich and the poor, but that the increase in inequality wouldn't matter
But that the increase in inequality wouldn't matter because the forces of production that would be unleashed on a global scale would be so powerful and so profound that everybody
would have more and everybody would have a better life. And what the 2008-2009 financial crisis exposed was first a lot of the market freedom that
neoliberalism had unleashed had led to corrupt banking and financial practices that had brought
the world to the edge of financial abyss of unimaginable proportions.
We ended up skirting that abyss, but not by a lot.
And on the other hand, it brought into view a sense
of how profoundly unequal the access to power was
under the neoliberal regime. And here, it's not so much
the financial crash itself, but the nature of what governments did to promote recovery
from the financial crash. And the object in the US and also in Europe became to save
the banks first. The culprits of this financial crisis were the ones who were bailed out first. If you were an American in 2009, 2010, 2011, who had assets in the stock market, you had
pretty much recovered your position by 2011, 2012.
If you were not one of those fortunate Americans and you were living week to week on a paycheck,
your recovery did not occur.
You didn't reach pre-2008 levels to 2016, 2017, 2018. in 18, and people understood profoundly the inequality of recovery.
And it caused them to look with a much more scrutinizing glaze at the inequalities that
neoliberalism had generated and how those inequalities had become so embedded in government policy toward the rich
and the poor.
I've always thought that one of the identity crises in the Republican Party, one reason
the Republican Party is not held together better, is that the Soviet Union was fundamental
to what made its various factions stay in place.
And it was also, I think, fundamental
to what kept the Republican party,
which at its core has a real anti-government streak,
committed in any way to real government.
And then I think as a sort of casting about
for another enemy, I think they end up finding it
after 9-11 or think they have
in what they try to turn into global jihadism.
And then that falls apart, both as the antagonist and as a project and just
feels like another part of the sort of wreckage of this period that opens
away for something new.
That new thing I think is more Donald Trump than it is anything else.
So I think it discredits what had been a core project of the Republican Party, which was to spread
market freedom everywhere. When I teach the Iraq War, I tell my 20-year-old students that
this is the worst foreign policy mistake in U.S. history, that it's going to take the
U.S. and the world 50 years to recover from. And it's imbued with a neoliberal hubris that everyone in the world is simply waiting
for the wonders of a market economy to be unleashed upon them.
And this is where I want to bring us into the present and this election and ask this
question of, okay, if that era ended, what is being born? We spend so much time
looking at the way the parties disagree. Their disagreements are very fundamental. Some of
their disagreements are dangerous when you think about the disagreements over electoral
legitimacy, for instance. But there's also new zones of agreement that have emerged.
When I think about the way I covered politics in 2010, the legitimacy of elections can be taken for granted,
and the legitimacy of the Affordable Care Act could not.
Now the legitimacy of the Affordable Care Act can be taken for granted.
In fact, Donald Trump brags falsely about having saved it,
and the legitimacy of elections cannot.
But there are these new zones of agreement,
of places where the two parties are working together,
where they seem to have come to similar conclusions like on China.
I think China is a huge force here.
How do you think about what is emerging here?
How do you think that Gary Gerstle, including possibly just you, will tell the story of
this period in 15 or 20 years?
I'm a historian, so not very good at predicting the future.
But I think it's useful in this moment of acute polarization
to look at some of what lies beneath the polarization. But you're right, on a series
of issues, there are intriguing conversations going on between Democrats and Republicans.
China and tariffs are one area of agreement. Ironically, immigration
is becoming another area of agreement, regardless of who wins the election.
One can imagine that the bill agreed to in the Senate late in 2023 could easily be implemented
in some form. There is an area of convergence on antitrust. Josh Hawley and Lena
Kahn seem to like each other and are finding some common ground on that.
And the national security hawks and the GOP, people like Rubio and McConnell,
have converged with what we might call the industrial policy doves in
the Democratic Party, people like Bernie Sanders on the importance of reshoring critical sectors
of manufacturing and on improving in dramatic ways the nation's infrastructure.
So we can see here a new political economy taking shape, one that breaks with the central
principle of neoliberalism, which is that markets must lead and their only role for
a state is to facilitate markets.
There are multiple outcomes that are still possible, and that's a sign that we're living
in an interregnum between political orders and no
new political order has established itself to the point where we can say with assurance,
yes, this will triumph.
Let's start on the first of those you mentioned, which is China.
My view is that over a long period of time now, going back into the Obama administration before Donald Trump, China has been exerting an enormous pressure on American politics.
Initially the view is that China is taking low cost, low wage manufacturing by undercutting
us on how much workers are paid.
They have all these people, they pay poverty wages that you couldn't get away with in America. And it's just a cost cutting measure. But by the
time of the Obama administration began to have this sense that they're doing things
we're not doing anymore, building trains, building whole new cities at very rapid paces,
they're beginning to move into advanced manufacturing. By the time you get to Donald Trump and then to Joe Biden, they're dominating in certain
areas like pulling ahead of us in some ways on the ability to build low cost electric
vehicles.
They're dominating the renewable energy supply chain.
They're worried about their sort of rising up the value chain in semiconductors.
For a very long time, I think, there's been this increasing sense that America can
come up with ideas, but it can't make things in the real world and China can.
And I feel that as actually one of the huge points of conceptual agreement now between
the parties.
Does that resonate for you?
Yes, yes.
And another element of that, which has been crucial to the ideological reorientation,
is a new understanding of the relationship of free markets to democracy.
And for the longest period of time, Americans and Europeans were willing to give China
a blank check on their democracy or on their violations of democracy because of the belief that if market freedom and capitalist practices set down deep enough roots in China,
that people with economic freedom would want to add to that political freedom and that democracy would begin to flourish,
and that the Communist Party that rules China would either have to profoundly reform itself or see itself ushered
from the political stage. It's hard to convince people now of how deeply rooted that belief was.
No one in the Democratic or Republican parties believes that anymore. And that has
intensified the fear along with this, oh my God, sense that China is not simply producing ordinary goods.
It's producing very sophisticated goods.
It's cornering markets on electrical vehicles and batteries and solar panels that seemed
unimaginable 15 or 20 years ago.
And it has had the effect of profoundly shocking both parties. Before Trump and Sanders in 2016, Bernie Sanders, protectionism was a bad word in American politics.
If you were identified as a protectionist, you were out of mainstream politics.
You were not being listened to.
You were being marginalized as dangerously heterodox.
Don't you see that the period of protectionism has gone and the
period of free trade has triumphed? And that has completely transformed. And the word protectionism
is not being used because it's such a negative term, but the sentiments that lie behind protectionism,
which might be described more positively as fair trade, are profoundly with
us and shape conversation about US economic relations with China every day of the week.
So the change has been profound in both parties.
And one of the surprises of the Biden administration, although in retrospect, it's not so surprising
given the Biden administration's commitment to industrial policy is the continuity
we see between Trump tariffs and Biden tariffs.
There is a big gap between Kamala Harris's proposed tariffs and Trump's big tariffs if
he comes back into office.
But still, I would say the convergence on the need for tariffs, for reshoring, for creating a whole different relationship with
China.
The consensus on that is much more powerful than any divergence between the two political
parties.
And that was not really imaginable in 2010.
I think that's right.
I mean, there are many places where I think there's continuity between Barack Obama and
Joe Biden, but China is really not one of them.
I think you have to take seriously that Donald Trump changed both parties on China when we're
thinking about things where the other party acquiesced to a different view, a different
idea, that Trump coming and saying, we are losing the competition to China, they should
be treated as an adversary, much more so than an ally.
That has become conventional wisdom in both parties.
And you said that protectionism had been a dirty word, but then you mentioned another
term that has sort of also shifted, which is industrial policy.
That China was effective at using the government to protect and encourage and subsidize industries.
And in doing so, sure, sometimes things ended up being losers and not winners, but they actually were able to bring a bunch of major industries to life.
And the same is actually true at this point among Republicans. They've also come in many cases to the view that China might, by using the government to foster and
supercharge certain kinds of market pursuits in China, just lap us, I think
has become the dominant view in both parties.
I would agree with that.
Although I think the Republican party is probably more deeply split on this
than the Democratic party is.
The Democratic party arranged another kind of grand compromise between the left represented
by Bernie Sanders and the center represented by Joe Biden, which led to a profound commitment
symbolized by Build Back Better, a $5 trillion project that was going to insert industrial policy into the heart of government economic
relations in a way that marked the Biden administration as profoundly different from his Democratic
predecessors, both Obama and Clinton.
I think the Republican Party does not have agreement on that to the same degree.
And one of the interesting things to watch if Trump wins is how that internal fight in
the Republican Party works itself out.
On the one hand, you clearly have people in the Republican Party who have become deeply
committed to industrial policy.
I think of Marco Rubio, I think of Tom Cotton, I think of Josh Hawley, I think of JD Vance.
And also the rhetoric of JD Vance almost fell out of my chair when I listened to his VP
acceptance speech at the Republican Party convention, which was all about putting Main
Street above Wall Street and insisting that the Republican Party was
going to take the steps necessary to restore Main Street to its earlier
vibrancy in American life. And core to that, Vance believes, is reshoring
manufacturing, bringing back to life these abandoned towns. But it's also true that Vance is deeply connected to Peter Thiel,
to the Silicon Valley tech bros, who have a very different vision of the future of
the Republican Party and the future of democracy in America. And we don't know
where Trump stands on this, and I've been thinking about what's the significance of Project 2025, which has
been a punching bag for the Democrats.
I think part of it is an effort by many people in the Republican Party who knows that Trump's
ideological commitments don't run very deep to try and hold him to account.
But that project is confused on this issue.
It's full of radically deregulating measures that promise to bring back neoliberalism with
a kind of soft authoritarianism.
On the other hand, there are strong shoots of industrial policy coming up in that document.
And I think it speaks to the internal divisions in the Republican Party on this
issue. And one of the key questions is, where does JD Vance really stand on this matter?
Is he willing to back up his rhetoric with actual actions? Can we imagine a Republican
Party that is putting Main Street above Wall Street?
Well, when you talk about that JD Vance convention speech,
one of the ideological shifts it speaks to for me
is something that's happened to both parties.
And it goes, I guess, back to that Carter clip
I played, where Jimmy Carter says government cannot solve
our problems.
It can't set our goals.
It cannot define our vision.
And you can interpret that different ways,
maybe saying that society that has to do that.
But I think both parties have come to a view they didn't hold it strongly before, if they
did hold it at all, which is that markets left to their own devices are going to trample
over values, goals, visions that they should instead be serving.
So the sort of ideological strain in the Republican Party that JD Vance is part of, the sort of
more populous dimension of it, what they see markets and particularly free trade and trade
with China and immigration as having violated is the strength of communities and families.
They look around and they see broken communities,
hollowed out communities, they see families
where the male breadwinners have lost their jobs
and lost their earning power
and so they're not getting married and their divorces
and there are too many single parent families.
And on the democratic side,
I think there's some of the same views.
There's a lot of broken communities.
And I also think a huge participant in this ideologically is climate change, the sense
that markets would happily make people rich by cooking the planet.
The market doesn't know if the money is coming from, the profit is coming from burning oil
or laying down solar panels.
And so once again, some goal actually does need to be set.
Markets can maybe serve our goals, they can serve our vision, but
they can't be assumed to get what we want right in the world.
And so the sense on both parties that you actually do need to define goals and
define vision, and that ultimately that is going to have to happen
through government setting policy and making decisions.
The primacy of that kind of dialogue now, the degree to which the first conversation
is what are we trying to achieve, that does feel different.
I would agree with that, and that speaks to the decisive nature of the election of 2016, which we will see the longer we get from it as a decisive inflection
point as really marking the end of the neoliberal order.
And marking the end of the neoliberal order doesn't mean that neoliberalism disappears.
It doesn't mean that suddenly there are no more advocates of strong free markets.
I think one of the questions now and one of the key questions for the Republican
Party is, can they get serious about this? The seriousness that I see among senators,
these senators in the Republican Party, I don't see in the House of Representatives among Republicans.
And I don't have the confidence, you may have more confidence than I do in this that if the Republicans win or if they control
Congress
That they are going to pursue this
Seriously, it requires them to
have a serious program of political economy and a party that
Has lacked direction on political economy for quite some time.
To be clear, I have zero confidence that if Donald Trump wins, we're going to see a cohesive
ideological agenda in any of these directions.
I do want to bring up another piece of it that I think Trump represents though, which
gets to that other dimension, that more moral dimension you talked about.
You describe the sort of neoliberal era as bringing this much more cosmopolitan view of ethics, of morals, and of America's relationship with the world,
a more sort of urbanist view. There's a lot of connections between what it means to live
in New York and to live in London and to live in Tokyo and to live in Hong Kong. And Donald
Trump does seem to me to be a rejection of a lot of that.
Certainly a rejection of the value of immigration and diversity.
But also the people coming up behind him, and JD Vance is a good example of this,
are much more skeptical of the individualistic moral structure that dominated here.
And the Republicans, for all the influence of the question, right?
Largely left untouched. I mean, I always think about project 2025
Kevin Roberts making a point of saying that pornography should be banned
There is something here. That's also a moral turn. I think you see it more clearly
Well, actually, let me say this. I think it's actually very complicated in both parties because Donald Trump is himself such a poor
me say this, I think it's actually very complicated in both parties because Donald Trump is himself such a poor vehicle for a return of traditionalist virtue. But there is something happening here,
a sort of questioning of not just government policy and industrial policy, but did all
this individualism work, right? Is a world where kids are on their smartphones all the time and families are
having this much trouble and did we get something more fundamental, almost spiritual, wrong?
I think that's right. I think the concern about the moral fiber of the American people
is not new in the Republican Party. That goes back to Jerry Falwell, to some of the ministers who became popular in the 1990s, and calling
America back to moral virtue and identifying enemies of God. The new element is a sense
that one has to connect that concern for this kind of morality to a serious program of political economy.
It's not enough simply to call on people to be virtuous.
It's not enough simply to pack churches on a Sunday morning and have them listen to sermons
that serious Christians, that serious conservatives have to find a way to rebuild the economic
foundation that lies at the root of so much immorality and so much despair in American
life. If that develops enough of a base in the Republican Party, then there becomes an opportunity to talk with Democrats
about that, about family welfare, about the welfare of children, about creating institutions
both economic and social that have the capacity to sustain communities in ways in which they
have not been sustained. There are some issues that run so deeply on questions
of morality between Republicans and Democrats. It's hard to see how they can find common
ground. And probably the most important of these is on the question of abortion and reproductive rights.
And to the extent to which J.D. Vance and his associates
take their stand on this issue,
the possibilities for developing a conversation
about morality with liberals and Democrats
are gonna be very, very slim indeed.
So the newest element for me is not simply
the recourse to this morality in a sense
that individualism and permissiveness
and cosmopolitanism has failed, but a recognition
that if America is to remoralize,
that there has to be an underlying economic program that
gives people security, good jobs, dignity, and their children a chance for a better future.
I am very struck on the right at the moment.
If you look at the kinds of people that young
right-wingers read, hilariously the Bronze Age pervert, but the Claremont review people,
the things that I think would have once been framed in terms of Christianity are now framed
in terms of classical virtue. There's a sort of rediscovery of the Stoics, not the early
Christians.
And so there's something here where obviously efforts to remoralize America are not new.
But this idea that we have gone wrong in modernity by becoming so individualistic seems to be
gathering a fair amount of force.
My read of it is that the Christian right is just too weak and not sufficiently appealing
to be the vehicle for it.
And so these other aesthetic and ancient containers are being searched for, but that there is
some kind of pushback happening.
I think there's an argument that that is reaching throughout society.
And so I think you see a lot of interest among people in both parties around some of these tech regulations.
But I think of that as sort of fundamentally moralistic.
One version of it might be to bring in somebody
like John Haidt and to say that there is a sense
that leaving kids to find their way with smartphones
has been just a tremendous moral failure
on the part of adults and on the part of government, right?
That we have just sort of abandoned too many young people to the wilds of the internet and the wilds of technology
without taking responsibility for a certain paternalism
that certainly parents at the very least are supposed to have.
But the backlash to a world that seems that we've just let anybody decide anything from,
you know, if you're taking the right-wing critique of this, you bring in gender ideology,
you bring in quite a bit.
And I think on the left-wing critique, it has much more to do with the role of corporations
in public life.
But there's some sense we've really gone wrong.
Well, I'm going to disagree with one part of your analysis and agree with another part.
The part I'll disagree with is that I think this does go back to the 1990s in one respect.
One of the few pieces of regulation that Congress imposed on the IT industry in the 1996 Telecommunication
Act was kind of an anti-pornography measure that then gets thrown out by the court.
So it becomes irrelevant, but it was part of the congressional package.
It was one of the few elements of an attempt to regulate morality for the general welfare.
And on the other side, some of the flashpoints of conflicts that we had in the 1990s over
trans issues and the like today remind me very much of flashpoints in the 1990s.
So I think there's more continuity there.
But if I am hearing you correctly, I'll rephrase this and you can tell me if I'm wrong, that
the Christian right has become somewhat contaminated by its blind adherence to Trump and by its too great a willingness to plunge into politics with any
messenger no matter what moral qualities they're exhibiting.
That there is a movement among conservatives to step back from that and to ground their
morality in something deeper, more widespread, something
that can appeal to a greater cross-section of Americans, regardless of whether they go
to church or not.
If there is a moral awakening underway that is not tied to instrumentalizing churches
for strictly partisan purposes, which is one way of describing evangelicalism in the last
20 to 25 years, then that would be new. And if that's what you're sensing, a kind of
search for a different kind of moral foundation, less contaminated by politics,
then that would be an interesting development, and it might create a new basis
for conversation
between the Democrat and Republican parties, especially if it can transcend the religious
non-religious divide, which doesn't get talked about much in America because anyone wanting
to be elected president has to declare their belief in God, but is nevertheless profound.
If that's what I'm hearing you're saying, then that would be genuinely new and
would create the basis for a different kind of conversation than the one we've been having.
Well, I think I do think there's some of that and although which way it goes and what conversation
it creates, I guess, is to be seen. I think that's a good place to come to a close here,
though. So, always our final question. What are three books you'd recommend to the audience?
Well, interesting that we talked about Christianity and Trump.
Part of what I've been trying to understand is how sincere Christians have been able to
give such incredible support to the man who I regard as the most pagan man ever to inhabit
the White House.
And he may well inhabit it again.
And a book that helped me a great deal is Tim Alberta's book, The Kingdom, the Power
and the Glory, American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism.
He took me into a world that I otherwise didn't have accessibility to, and he helped me to
understand a great deal that I did not.
So I thank him for that.
I'm always trying to read something fresh and new on
the left and I found kind of an unconventional place to study this and read about it. Tim Harper,
Underground Asia, Global Revolutionaries and the Assault on Empire. And this is a book about
underground radicals in East and South Asia and Southeast Asia, 1900 to 1925,
looking to upend empire, looking to upend capitalism,
looking to free their countries from colonial shackles.
And it was a world that Tim Harper recovered
that was utterly hidden from view.
They weren't that consequential in those years,
but these are gonna be the figures
who bring communist China into the world. They weren't that consequential in those years, but these are going to be the figures who
bring communist China into the world.
And finally, Sarah Igoe, The Known Citizen, very different kind of book, A History of
Privacy in Modern America.
We're talking about morality, we're talking about community, and of course, social media
has put the question of privacy and what constitutes privacy and what's private and what's public such an urgent question in understanding America and
she gives us a wonderful hundred-year overview of how Americans in almost
every generation have redefined the boundary between private and public and
I found that extremely useful in thinking about where America is at in
the 21st century.
Gary Gerstel, thank you very much.
Thank you for having me.
This episode of the Ezra Klan Show is produced by Annie Galvin, fact checking by Kate Sinclair and Mary March Locker.
Our senior engineer is Jeff Galed with additional mixing by Amin Sahota.
Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon.
The show's production team also includes Roland Hu, Elias Isquith, Michelle Harris,
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We have original music by Isaac Jones, audience strategy by Christina Samuelski and Shannon
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The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser.