The United States seems more disunited than at any point in recent history - its politics so undermined by partisan divisions that consensus on almost anything is impossible to achieve.
Toxic partisanship between Democrats and Republicans - the nation's two main parties - has soared under President Donald Trump's administration - worsening since the release of then-Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report on his investigation of Trump and Russian interference in the 2016 elections that brought him to power.
The two parties are fundamentally split over race and identity. Race and identity is the core dividing line in American partisan politics today.
Lee Drutman, senior fellow at the think-tank New America
But "Trump isn't the cause of a lot of the discord that we're seeing", says Lilliana Mason, an author and professor at the University of Maryland.
"He probably makes it worse. But one of the things he has done is actually to bring out into the open these divides that have been accumulating between the parties."
The sorting of people into two camps has fuelled stereotyping and distrust. Too often, the allegiance to one's own side makes the prospect of compromise with opponents almost unthinkable.
The US is now so polarised by the distrust that a 2018 survey recorded 70 percent of Republicans and 60 percent of Democrats as believing the opposing party posed a serious threat to the US.
"Each side is so convinced that they are absolutely correct, that they are morally and truly correct, and that the other side is dangerous," Mason says.
So what has weakened the bonds that once held this huge democracy together - and where could the discord lead?
In a two part in-depth report, People & Power's Bob Abeshouse investigates why the US is a nation so ill at ease with itself.
Part 1:
Part 2:
Source: Al Jiz.
It's de-globalization, pure and simple. Main Street is rebelling against Wall Street and the Wall Streeter's are using historical and new-Left identity politics to try and keep as many Main Streeter's on the global Wall Street side as possible.
ReplyDelete...oh, and G_d Bless DJT! ;)
DeletePlease. Just who is firing up their nativist base here? Who is telling 4 dissident women of colour 'to go home'? Who is taking up extremist pro-Israel positions (resulting in record breaking approval ratings there)?
DeleteAnd Trump is no less a pro-Wall Street than any recent POTUS before him.
Oh and Trump's heavy petting of Evangelicals/pro-life folk.
DeleteTrump didn't tell them to go home, he told them to go home, fix their countries problems, and then come back when they had a clue of what that takes to fix problems and only THEN they should they speak from "authority" about OUR border problems.
Delete...but all that doesn't make a good Democrat talking point/ sound bite.
DeleteTrump's approval rating hovers consistently in the low forties.
ReplyDeleteAlthough it hit 51% this week...
Delete