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Politics : The Donkey's Inn

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To: Dorine Essey who wrote (5184)11/5/2002 3:24:39 PM
From: Mephisto   of 15516
 
Stop Making Sense

" Go out there and vote - and tell everyone you know to do the
same. America's future depends on your irrationality."


The New York Times

November 5, 2002

By PAUL KRUGMAN

It's Election Day, and it's your duty as a citizen to be irrational.


Let me explain. Political scientists will tell you that voting suffers
from a severe "free rider" problem. Even if it's very important to you that Mr. A
beat Mr. B, your individual vote is very unlikely to decide the outcome.
So the sensible thing is not to bother voting. Yet if everyone acts on that
logic, Mr. B - the candidate backed by corrupt special interests,
which pay for his get-out-the-vote operation - sweeps into office.

In other words, even if the candidates in an election offer radically different
programs, and you have a strong preference for one over the other, a
narrow calculation of self-interest says that it's not worth taking the trouble
to go to the polling booth. Yet democracy depends on your ability to
rise above that calculation. If citizens want good government,
they must do what they want others with the same concerns to do - namely, vote.

Of course, some pundits tell you that not much is at stake in this
particular election, that the parties aren't really very different on the issues. I
don't know what planet they are living on: in reality, the parties are further
apart than they have been since the 1930's. The fact that anyone
imagines otherwise is a tribute to the timidity of the Democrats,
who are afraid to say what they really think, and the subterfuge of the
Republicans, who show a disciplined willingness to pretend to hold
positions they actually abhor.

Not only are there huge substantive differences between the parties,
the background to this election means that it may determine the shape of
America for decades to come.

Here's the story: In the 2000 campaign George W. Bush portrayed himself
as a moderate. Toward the end the public started to catch on to this
ruse, but thanks to all those Jewish retirees who voted for Pat Buchanan,
the purging of minority voters from the Florida voter rolls and so on, Mr.
Bush made it to the White House. Once there, his true radicalism quickly
became apparent, and voters didn't like it.


But then came Sept. 11, and with it a huge surge
in Mr. Bush's personal popularity. Although many pundits still talk as if he remains immensely
popular, the fact is that most of that surge - about two-thirds, if you look
at an average of polls - has now gone away, and the political landscape
is returning to normal. Still, the Republican Party hopes that the remnants
of Mr. Bush's post-terror clout can be used to regain control of the
Senate - and that his radical domestic policy agenda can once again
march forward, and perhaps be made irreversible.

For if we've learned one thing these past two years, it's the importance
of Senate control. In his first few months in office Mr. Bush wasn't
particularly popular, but Dick Cheney's vote was decisive in
a 50-50 Senate - and the radical agenda rolled forward. After Sept. 11 Mr. Bush was,
for a while, extremely popular, and gleeful right-wing pundits believed
that he could get anything he wanted. But the Democrats had a one-vote
edge in the Senate, and all of his pet domestic projects - permanent
tax cuts for corporations, accelerated tax cuts for upper brackets, drilling in
ANWR, hard-line judicial appointments - stalled.


This election will determine if Mr. Bush can resume
the radical policy course he followed in those first few months. It will also determine the
character of the nation's courts for decades; and it may greatly
enlarge the Republican Party's already huge fund-raising advantage.

Now if that's what the American public wants, so be it. But it seems all too likely
that this election will depend not on what the public wants but on
which people bother to vote. (Or on which people are dissuaded from voting.
The stories are already starting to come in; for example, someone is
distributing leaflets in minority districts in Maryland telling people that
they must pay parking tickets and back rent before voting.)
Gallup now
predicts only a 35 percent participation rate, the same as in 1998.
That would be a shockingly low fraction in any year. In a year this crucial, it's
appalling.

So now is the time not to be sensible. Forget those self-interested calculations.
Go out there and vote - and tell everyone you know to do the
same. America's future depends on your irrationality.


Copyright The New York Times Company nytimes.com
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