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Flames engulf the Community Corrections Division building as an American flag flutters on a pole as protests turn to fires after a Black man, identified as Jacob Blake, was shot several times by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin on Aug 23, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Stephen Maturen)

Commentary: America needs a government without the drama or disaster

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At a time when the United States and other democracies need solidarity, the resulting civic turmoil and division are being fed by populism, say Anne-Marie Slaughter and Sharon E Burke.

WASHINGTON: The same deep tension lies at the heart of the fight against COVID-19 and climate change, particularly in democracies.

In each case, the measures necessary to save everyone entail costs that widen existing inequalities.

At a time when the United States and other democracies need solidarity, the resulting civic turmoil and division are feeding (and being fed by) populism.

WORSENING RACIAL AND INCOME DIVISIONS

In the US, the disastrous response to the pandemic has exacerbated class, racial, ethnic, and age divisions.

Shutting down 60 per cent of the economy for months, and then reopening it in an uneven state-by-state fashion, has pitted those who can work remotely and want to stay safe against those who cannot and thus regard public-health measures as tantamount to economic suicide.

The 40 per cent of the economy that has remained open all along is staffed by millions of essential workers, who disproportionately comprise low-paid black and Hispanic Americans.

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They are up to five times more likely than whites to be hospitalised for COVID-19, and – with more than 37,000 black Americans having now died from the disease – more than twice as likely to die.

YOUNGER AMERICANS PAY A HIGHER PRICE

Intersecting these divides is the coronavirus’s differential impact on younger and older Americans, although jokes about COVID-19 being the “boomer remover” have faded as every age group suffers deaths and serious health consequences.

Beyond the health effects, young people are paying a higher social, educational, and economic price for the shutdown than older Americans.

The unemployment rate among those aged under 34 is in the double digits, while McKinsey & Company estimates that the ongoing disruption to schooling will cost US$110 billion in lost annual earnings for today’s students. And these are just the consequences that can be measured.

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Simran Arora, 24, sits on an empty University of Southern California (USC) campus, amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Los Angeles, California on Aug 17, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson)

UGLY POPULISM

None of this had to happen. America’s poor COVID-19 response is a failure of leadership, not governance.

Other democracies – including countries as geographically diverse and culturally distinct as South Korea, New Zealand, Germany, and Ghana – have kept infection rates under control so far.

China is widely viewed as having responded better to the pandemic than the US. Taiwan has done an even better job – and without suppressing information about the spread of the virus.

The fault lies with a particular kind of populist leadership that is abysmally evident in President Donald Trump’s administration but also plagues other countries, from Poland under the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party to the Philippines under President Rodrigo Duterte.

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Such leaders approach problems by blaming others, aiming to strengthen their support within a particular subgroup by fostering division.

SACRIFICE NEEDED

That type of leadership undermines trust, and makes it less likely that people will have sufficient confidence in authority and expertise to follow public-health guidelines. It also eschews and destroys any idea of shared sacrifice.

Therein lies the similarity between the responses to COVID-19 and climate change: Faced with outsize and unexpected burdens and costs, everyone must commit to give up or pay something.

To be sure, solidarity is much harder to sustain when sacrifice is shared unequally. As with the current pandemic, the effects and costs of climate change are unevenly distributed within and across populations.

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Law enforcement and fire personnel wait on the Enterprise Bridge to enter an area encroached by the Bear Fire, part of the North Lightning Complex fires, in Butte County, in Oroville, California on Sep 9, 2020. (Photo: AFP/JOSH EDELSON)

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Those who have benefited from the generation of wealth in the industrial age will not be paying anywhere near a proportionate share of the legacy costs in the twenty-first century.

THE CASE FOR SOLIDARITY

But embracing solidarity offers a potential path forward for all democracies beset with racial and ethnic tensions, either among native populations or between self-described natives and immigrants.

In his forthcoming book on “race, solidarity, and the future of America,” US Navy veteran and former White House Fellow Theodore Johnson defines national solidarity as “the civic version of the Golden Rule,” requiring that each of us “actively champion the right to equality and liberty” for ourselves and our fellow citizens.

Johnson further argues that African-Americans and other minority communities have deep experience of solidarity. Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow, has similarly called for a “politics of deep solidarity rooted in love”.

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Solidarity is both golden and necessary. The US, along with Japan, China, Russia, and much of Europe, is struggling with a demographic imbalance, having too few young people to support a tsunami of retirees. 

But the US has a comparative advantage, because both immigration and a more diverse young population are contributing to economic growth.

Whites are already no longer a majority among Americans under 18. By 2027, they will cease to be a majority among those under 30, and by 2045 they will no longer be a majority at all.

If America can make closing the racial equity gap its national mission, such that economic, educational, and social disparities simply track America’s demography rather than being disproportionately concentrated in black and brown communities, it will open the door to huge and lasting innovation.

THE POLITICS OF UNITY

Throughout its history, American democracy has innovated to adjust to technological change, wars, pandemics, and other shocks.

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People wearing protective face masks are seen in the street, amid the coronavirus pandemic, in the lower section of Manhattan in New York City on Sep 9, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton)

Its persistence shows that a society governed by liberal principles, the rule of law, and elected representatives can exist and thrive for centuries.

As the US approaches the 250th anniversary of its founding, Americans need to embrace the country’s diversity as a source of strength and solidarity that will allow it to meet collective challenges at home and abroad.

The politics of populism is a politics of division, defining “the people” whom populist leaders claim to represent against others – foreigners, elitists, cosmopolitans, globalists, urbanites, or people of a different colour, race or creed.

By contrast, the politics of solidarity is one of unity, reminding us of the common threat to the planet that imperils us all. 

By choosing a response that unites equity and existentialism, Americans can save both democracy and our world.

Anne-Marie Slaughter, a former director of policy planning in the US State Department (2009-11), is CEO of the think tank New America, Professor Emerita of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton University, and the author of Unfinished Business: Women Men Work Family.

Sharon E Burke, former US Assistant Secretary of Defense for Operational Energy, directs New America’s Resource Security Program.