The Way forward for the Democratic Get together

George Packer discusses his newest reporting on Donald Trump and American politics.

Panelists on Washington Week With The Atlantic
Courtesy of Washington Week With The Atlantic

Editor’s Observe: Washington Week With The Atlantic is a partnership between NewsHour Productions, WETA, and The Atlantic airing each Friday on PBS stations nationwide. Examine your native listings or watch full episodes right here.

Democrats have veered into id politics and away from the pursuits of the working class. On Washington Week With The Atlantic, George Packer joins Jeffrey Goldberg to debate his current reporting on the Democratic Get together’s illusions and the way forward for American politics.

Donald Trump’s reelection ought to put an finish to 2 progressive illusions, Packer defined final night time: The primary of those illusions is the notion that id is political future; the second is the idea that the Democratic Get together has been stored out of energy by a white Republican minority thwarting the favored will by means of means similar to voter suppression or gerrymandering.

“The Democratic Get together has develop into the celebration of firm, of established order, of the establishments,” Packer stated. The celebration has come to arrange itself underneath a framework that the “most simple id of a citizen is group id based mostly on race, gender, sexuality.” However in doing so, they’ve “misplaced a lot of extraordinary People who don’t see themselves primarily in these phrases, who’re principally working-class … and who was once the spine of the Democratic Get together.”

In the meantime, as with the drift of the working class away from Democrats and in direction of Republicans, the nation’s more and more isolationist international stance has additionally been constructing. “We’re not the unipolar energy that we had been after the top of the Chilly Conflict,” Packer stated. “We stood for a sure order, a sure set of values, a sure liberal view of the world, and I believe that might collapse in a short time underneath Trump as a result of he doesn’t imagine in it—in truth, he needs to destroy it, and so do the individuals he’s placing into key positions.”

Packer discusses this, in addition to his reporting on conspiracism and hyper-partisanship in Phoenix, Arizona, the nation’s fastest-growing metropolis, with the editor in chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg.

Watch the total episode right here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *