If I had the time
and money (hence, pie in the sky), I would love to start a new political party,
since the current major parties have too much loyalty to big donors and
powerful corporations and are therefore unwilling to tell the American people
the truth—about pretty much everything. The Republican Party, in particular, is
unwilling to propose policies that we really need, and I believe the majority
of Americans would respond positively to the truth, even if it is painful,
simply because they know we have significant problems and our current elected
officials are unwilling to deal honestly or productively with them.
So, I would like
to outline a basic philosophy for what I would call the THIRD Party, short for
the Totally Honest, Intelligent, Responsible, Decent Party. As one might expect
from the acronym, this party would espouse the following principles:
1. Honesty is important. We the voters have
been lied to about too many things for far too long. The Republicans are especially
guilty of this. They have been lying for almost 40 years about economics. They
know it, and most Americans know it. That’s why less than 30 percent of Americans
polled by Gallup before the Republican tax “reform” was passed viewed it
favorably. It’s why Republican politicians have stopped touting it as something
to be proud of. Most Americans know that the rich don’t need more money. They
know that giving them more money doesn’t create stupendous growth or millions
of new jobs. It simply gives the wealthy more money, which they often use to
invest in technologies that replace human labor with machine labor. Corporate
executives admitted beforehand (and are now following through on that
admission) that they will use the extra money from the tax cuts not to add jobs
or to pay their current workers better but to give out more dividends and buy
back stock, which benefits primarily the wealthy investors and the executives
who own stock. Most American see through this scam.
They also know
that the debt needs to be dealt with. We can’t go on living beyond our means.
But we can’t balance the budget and pay down our debt by cutting taxes or by
slashing spending. We have significant infrastructure needs. We have a
generation of Baby Boomers retiring who have not been able to save enough for
retirement. They will rely on Social Security and Medicare. There are also many
poor, sick, elderly, unemployed, and disabled who depend on Medicaid, CHIP, and
other government “safety net” programs to avoid disaster. We are not so
cold-hearted as to leave these people to their own devices (even though
Republicans like to talk as if they were). So, massive cuts to these programs
are simply not in the cards. These are simply facts. Another fact is that
teachers in many states are woefully underpaid. They are starting to demand
fair treatment, and legislators have no choice but to cave in to their demands,
because fairness is on the teachers’ side. So let’s be honest about our predicament.
We need to start talking about increasing taxes, a lot, in order to pay for all
the things we expect and demand of government and to pay off a lot of debt that
politicians have simply refused to deal with. People like me need to pay more.
But those who need to pay the most are those who have benefitted most from the
lax regulations and irresponsible taxation schemes of the past 40 years. So, the
THIRD Party will campaign on raising taxes and balancing the budget. We’ve
tried supply-side, trickle-down economics for almost 40 years. It doesn’t work.
It never will work.
And the dire
predictions about the effects of a tax increase are pure political rhetoric. We
tried a little experiment with raising taxes on the wealthy when we allowed the
Bush tax cut on the highest earners to expire. What happened? Well, the rich
kept getting richer. There were no negative effects on the economy. None at
all. The wealthy probably never noticed the increase. If they did notice, it
did not affect them at all. It did not cost us jobs. But it helped decrease the
deficit.
Honesty is
extremely important in campaigning. The American people are cynical about
politics because they have been lied to by politicians of both major parties
for so long. Much of this involves making promises on the campaign trail that
the candidate has no intention of keeping. Donald Trump was, of course, a
master at this. Buyer remorse has already set in among many Trump voters. This
past week, even Fox News started taking him to task for his constant lies. THIRD
Party candidates, by contrast, will not campaign on lies or half-truths. That
is why the first word in the acronym is so important. Being somewhat honest is not enough. THIRD
Party candidates will be totally
honest. They will tell the whole truth about what our country needs: higher
taxes, responsible government, a smaller and more agile military, less welfare
for corporations, means testing for social programs, facts about the changing
economy (no promise to restore jobs, for instance, that have been made
irrelevant by technology or market forces), significant efforts to combat
climate change, reasonable gun laws, and a clear plan to meet our actual
infrastructure needs. I believe voters are tired of hearing empty promises.
They are cynical. They would find total honesty appealing, even if it hurts. I
also believe that many politicians would also be relieved to just be able to
tell the truth and would gravitate to a party that demands honesty. I believe
Donald Trump will create a huge backlash against dishonesty. Having elected
leaders who tell the truth would be an extremely popular notion. Digging
ourselves out of the mess we’ve created with decades of lies and half-truths is
not going to be painless, but we need to address this and not leave it for our
children and grandchildren to clean up.
2. Expertise is important. The Republican
Party has been waging a war on intelligence. The GOP used to be serious about
policy. No longer. It has become a party that governs by sloganeering and a bankrupt
ideology. If someone actually knows something (is an expert), the Republicans
label that person as “elite,” which has become a right-wing pejorative. But we
need to listen to intelligent people. These include climate scientists, tax
experts, macroeconomists, policy analysts, health-care specialists,
intelligence operatives, diplomats, and education specialists. We need to
embrace intelligence and the people who are experts in important fields. Trump
may claim to love the uneducated and go to great lengths to avoid facts and
knowledge, but we’ve got to stop assuming that uninformed people know how to
run a country in the highly complex twenty-first century. Intelligence is not
elitism, and it certainly isn’t something to demean and degrade. We are seeing
the results of stupidity in the GOP’s “repeal and replace” efforts, in their
horrific tax “reform” adventure, in their efforts to increase pollution and
greenhouse gases, and in their ideological responses to crises that could be
solved by intelligent, reasonable policies. Ignorance ain’t pretty. And we’re
currently getting a double helping.
3. Fixing our health-care system is important. The
ACA was never perfect. But it was a step in the right direction. The opposition
to it was purely political, if not personal (the GOP had sworn to oppose
anything Obama did). The ACA was actually based on Republican ideas and a
conservative blueprint, which was part of the reason it was imperfect. It
didn’t go far enough, but it would have worked after a fashion if it hadn’t
been repeatedly sabotaged by the very people who should have embraced it. But
it was incomplete. It still left people uninsured. It didn’t deal well enough
with exorbitant medical costs and the profit motive that has taken over the
health-care industry. Other countries are doing far better than we ever did. We
can learn from them. The THIRD Party will select carefully from the best
features of those other systems and propose a health-care system that covers
everyone, reins in prices, and provides quality care. It is possible. Other
countries are doing it. We just need to have the political will to get the
profit motive out of medicine. Health care should be seen as a public good,
similar to education, not as a product to be sold to whoever can afford it. We
need to stop being the stupidest country on earth when it comes to health care.
4. Greater economic equality is important.
While there will always be rich and poor, studies show that countries with a
smaller gap between the wealthiest and the average citizen have the healthiest
economies. Rampant inequality, such as we have in America, is not just
economically unhealthy; it is unsustainable. If wealth keeps migrating to the
top, demand shrivels for the products businesses need to sell in order to keep
the economy going and debt explodes. The wealthy don’t spend the same
percentage of their income on consumer products as would be spent if that same
money were spread around a large middle class. The wealthy invest, and if there
is insufficient demand to justify investing in new production capacity, the
wealthy will seek other options—often speculative financial instruments that
are not tied to the creation of actual products or services people need. When
the consumer classes receive a greater share of income, they generally spend
most of it, driving demand and keeping the economy healthy. They also save
more, which reduces demands on the government in the long run.
The statistics
all show rapidly increasing inequality. By 2014, the wealthiest 1 percent
possessed 40 percent of the nation’s wealth; the bottom 80 percent owned 7
percent. And the gap keeps increasing. All you have to do is plot this on a
graph to see where this trend will take us, and it is not a future we want to
experience. When income is drastically unequal, over time wealth becomes even
more unequal, especially since the wealthy invest while the middle and lower
classes have to spend pretty much everything they earn (or more, by going into
debt). Eventually, this creates a society in which too many families and
individuals cannot afford the necessities of life and will either require help
from government or will slip through the cracks. The former will cause further
strain on the federal budget; the latter turns us into the wealthiest Third
World country on earth.
So, the big
question is, how do we reverse this unsustainable trend? The most reasonable
answer is to increase employee ownership in America’s businesses. This will
spread profits to those who create them but all too often don’t receive a fair share
of them. We can easily increase employee ownership by simply offering tax
incentives to companies that share ownership and penalizing those that restrict
it.
5. Freedom and government are important. The Republican Party has co-opted the
word freedom and has misapplied it in
numerous ways. Primarily they have insisted that Americans need freedom from government. The problem with this
philosophy is that this creates unprecedented freedom for authoritarian
institutions that only government has the power to control. I am talking about
businesses here. Anyone who has worked in a typical American business—anything
from a small sole proprietorship to a mammoth multinational corporation—has
seen authoritarianism up close and personal. If you liken most businesses to
nations, the employees are not the equivalent of citizens. They do not have a
vote. They are merely used for their labor and compensated as little as the
business owner can get away with. A reasonable analogy is that they are slaves.
They almost never earn enough that they can become independent of the authoritarian
wage-labor system.
Depending on the
organizational structure, capitalist businesses may resemble monarchies,
oligarchies, plutocracies, dictatorships, aristocracies, fiefdoms, or
theocracies, but almost never can they be described as democratic republics, in
which power resides in the employees. In essence, we have embraced an economic
system that is almost totally at odds with our political ideals. Put another
way, free enterprise may exist between
businesses, but it rarely exists within
them. This is a result of the system of capital ownership we have adopted.
The problem with
this form of capitalism, as William Greider put it in his classic One World, Ready or Not, “is not that
capital is privately owned, as Marx supposed. The problem is that most people
don’t own any.” Eighty percent of corporate stock is owned by the richest 10
percent of the people. And that number is increasing over time.
Why is this
significant? Because the economic authoritarians—the owners and controllers of
capital (including human capital)—have an inordinate degree of power in our
country, which has the ultimate effect of turning our government into a black
market in which both policy and politicians can be purchased. We now have a
government of the corporation, by the corporation, and for the corporation.
One of the basic
functions of government is to regulate business so that it is neither dangerous
nor burdensome to the average citizen. But the tail is wagging the dog in
America. The THIRD Party would reverse this. Instead of freedom from government, the THIRD Party would promote freedom through government. Let me use a simple example. I have good health
insurance. Expensive, but good. And yet I do not have the freedom to seek
medical care from some of the best providers. Why? Because they are out of
network. My friends in Germany feel a good deal more freedom in this regard
because government has intervened in the health-care industry. Some Americans
are in far worse shape than I am. They cannot afford health insurance and must
rely on emergency care, the least effective and most expensive option. Their
freedom is restricted because government is not doing what it should be doing.
Instead, it is allowing authoritarian corporate entities to extract a profit
from the health woes of American citizens. Who has freedom here? Corporation
do, not American citizens.
In much of
America, government is seen as the enemy, the source of our problems. But
government is us. It is our tool for creating a more equitable, prosperous, and
just society. We must embrace government, make it more efficient, but allow it
to serve us as it was intended to do. It is not the enemy. We will only enjoy
full freedom through government, not from government.
6. Transparency is important. Any
politician, party, or organization that keep secrets from the people, unless
for national security reasons, is neither honest nor well-intentioned.
Therefore, the THIRD Party will require all candidates for office to make
public their tax returns for the previous 10 years. It will also require all
candidates to reveal the sources of their funding. It will restrict giving by
corporations and other large impersonal entities, preferring smaller donations
from individuals. It will refuse interference from Super PACs, and if any
insist on interfering, the THIRD Party will disavow them. They are not welcome
in America, and THIRD Party candidates will campaign on the promise to overturn
Citizens United. Big money has no place in politics. This will require the
creative use of less expensive methods of campaigning, primarily through the
Internet and social media. Donald Trump has abused this method of campaigning,
but he has shown how effective it can be. The THIRD Party will take this lesson
and apply it in an honest and decent manner.
7. Global warming is real and is
human-caused. This should not even be a political issue. It is a partisan
point of division only because of the Koch brothers and the instrumentality of
Mike Pence in getting his fellows in Congress to deny a massive consensus among
climate scientists (see this New Yorker article).
The science is overwhelming, and we need to join the rest of the world in doing
something about it. The THIRD Party will therefore propose and support strong
measures to rein in carbon emissions.
8. Guns do kill people. The Second
Amendment is fairly easy to interpret. Its context is a well-regulated militia.
It says nothing about self-defense, hunting, shooting ranges, or anything other
than providing for the protection of our nation against foreign powers. It
certainly was never written with the assumption that Americans would need guns
to arm themselves against their own government. What this suggests is that
legislators should have broad discretion in restricting the ownership of a
variety of weapons. We regulate hand grenades. We regulate tanks. We regulate
missile launchers. We should be able to regulate such weapons as military-style
rifles that serve no other practical purpose than to kill as many people as
possible. The THIRD Party will therefore propose reasonable legislation to
limit the ownership of the types of weapons used in the growing number of mass
killings that occur on this scale only in America. Gun registration will also
be a high priority.
Other advanced countries
have mentally ill citizens. Other countries have extremists. Only America has
the number of mass slaughters we see with increasing frequency. The difference?
Other countries have sensible gun laws. Most Americans, even Republicans, want
stricter gun laws. Only the politicians who bow to the NRA refuse to do
anything about our situation.
Our current mess
is partly due to the conservative Supreme Court decision in 2008 in District of Columbia v. Heller, which
overturned two hundred years of court precedent in interpreting the Second
Amendment. For a history of the court’s views and an argument against this
radical change, see the dissenting view by Justice Stevens.
9. Immigration reform is important.
Immigration is important to the economy. Creating a path to citizenship for
those who were brought here as children is important. Welcoming refugees is
important for our national soul. To turn our backs on those desperate
individuals and families who are fleeing oppression or danger is
unconscionable. The THIRD Party will insist on comprehensive immigration reform
to create a safer, more systematic, but more humane immigration system.
10. Decency is not just important; it is
essential. With the GOP’s embrace of Donald Trump, our political discourse
has become crude, offensive, and reprehensible. Before Trump, the two parties
were mudwrestling in the swamp. With Trump, it has gotten exponentially worse.
The THIRD Party will therefore insist that its candidates and elected officials
refrain from personal attacks, name calling, and even innuendo. It will insist
on a discussion of crucial ideas. If the other parties choose to campaign in
the gutter, that is their choice. The difference will be distinct and will be
noticeable to the American people. I believe they will welcome a return to
common decency. That does not mean, however, that the THIRD Party will turn a
blind eye to corruption or foul behavior by politicians and elected officials.
Speaking out against morally reprehensible behavior is crucial. This is also
the responsibility of the press.
11. A free press is crucial. Contrary to
what Donald Trump is trying to convince his followers of, most of the
mainstream news outlets are not publishing or broadcasting “fake” news. They
are doing their best to make sense of the constant stream of lies and
contradictions that flow from the White House. Unfortunately, polls show that a
majority of Republicans believe Trump more than they believe the press. In case
you’ve ever wondered how Hitler could have possibly gained power in 1930s Germany,
just look at what is going on in America today. When people are willing to
believe lies and propaganda instead of using their brains to question what’s
being said, democracy is in danger. The free press is sometimes our best
defense against dictatorial tendencies in leaders. The press is certainly not
perfect, but if it is not free, it is useless. The THIRD Party will therefore
strive to support the constitutionally established freedom of the press and not
undermine its efforts to hold power accountable.
Well, I could go
on, but since eleven is a nice, clean prime number, I’ll stop here. You get the
idea. This is the sort of political party I believe America needs, and I
suspect this is the sort of political party Americans would flock to. Maybe
someone with more time and money than I have can give it a try.
I'm confused. This whole article talks about the shortcomings of the GOP (and is missing many other GOP failures).
ReplyDeleteIt fails to address the necessity of a 3rd party as it doesn't address the Democratic Party at all.
Yes, I focus mainly on the shortcomings of the GOP, primarily because they are so egregious. The dysfunction in our government is largely due to the GOP's decision at some point to simply stop playing by the rules. Compromise and working across the aisle became impossible as the tea party started throwing its weight around and as the GOP divorced itself from any semblance of intellectual foundation. Now, what is going on behind the scenes in Trump's administration, is threatening the system of safeguards we have had to preserve the possibility of freedom and democracy.
DeleteThis is not to say that the Democratic Party is perfect. They lack a clear positive vision of where the country needs to go, or at least the ability to express that vision. They are also too beholden to the wealthy. This is why I think the time is right for a third party with a clear vision and no obligations to wealthy interests that will distort clear policy initiatives.