Elitism and Elections

The Atlantic is a magazine I think everyone should read, even though its analyses are often shot through with a kind of elitism it has often critiqued itself.  For example, the cover of one of its 2018 issues (at left) highlights its reporting on America’s growing aristocracy, which creates a “gilded future for the top 10 percent, and the loss of opportunity for everyone else.”  The January 2025 issue contains four essays on the 2024 election. They’re brilliant and need to be taken seriously.  But they also suffer from an elitism that clouds their reaction to some of the major reasons Donald Trump won, partly because of stunning gains among groups of people—the young, women, people of color—you wouldn’t have thought would vote Trump in such numbers.

George Packer’s “The End of Democratic Delusions” explores the Democrats’ misunderstanding of Identity Politics.  Just because you’re a person of color doesn’t mean you’ll always vote Democratic, etc.  Sophie Gilbert’s “The Gender War Is Here” focuses on—well, gender—though it struck me as somewhat schizophrenic, saying, on the one hand that this is going to happen to women, but that women don’t have to let these things happen to them.  It ends: “He won’t ruin women, but he will absolutely destroy a generation of men who take his vile messaging to heart.”  David Frum explores the new administration’s foreign policy, especially the threatened tariffs.  And Helen Lewis explores the Joe Rogan phenomenon, a testament to the power of new media and the continuing power of maleness.  I’d call it “patriarchy,” but part of my point here is to steer away, for a moment at least, from what many perceive to be “elitist language.”

These pieces all focused by and large on deep, underlying issues.  But in one of his many post-election interviews, Trump said, “I won this election because of one word: ‘groceries.’”  Not one of the Atlantic analyses mentioned groceries.  When, during the campaign, I got texts from James Carville asking for money to bolster the Harris-Walz campaign, I couldn’t help but think: Are you kidding? You invented the phrase, “It’s the economy, stupid!”  It’s groceries.

Not to say that groceries is less deep than misunderstanding identity politics.  Abraham Mazlow’s popular Self-Actualization Pyramid puts “Physiological Needs” and “Safety Needs” at the bottom of a pyramid which puts “Self-Actualization” needs at the very top.  Perhaps the pyramid should be turned on its head, or perhaps it shouldn’t be a pyramid at all but a circle. Elites tend to take Self-Actualization more seriously than groceries.  And they also tend to forget that Trump’s appeal in fact goes well beyond groceries: that abortion continues to divide the nation, that a kind of cultural trendiness has crept into LGBTQ issues that alarms many people (even in the LGBTQ community itself), that many of us rail against government inefficiency all the time. Etc.  The biggest disconnect in all this for me is that despite being so against the cultural elite, MAGA nation seems not to rail much against the economic elite, which so many of its members definitely are not part of.  The growing wealth gap in our nation is one of those deep things that needs attention.  That may be too much of an elitist concern for the moment, but it seems to me closer to groceries than self-actualization. It’s also true that it’s harder to draw a direct correlation between billionaires and groceries.

There’s also a fifth essay in the January 2025 issue appearing about one-third of the way through.  It has nothing directly to do with the election but might have been included by design anyway.  It’s Caitlin Flanagan’s lovely tribute to her parents and to the great Nobel Laureate Irish poet Seamus Heaney.  Its title comes from one of Heaney’s most famous lines: “Walk on air against your better judgment,” which is an invitation to hope even though hope itself seems to go against your better judgment.  She says Seamus Heaney “didn’t believe in a force as mere as optimism.  He believed in hope, “something far greater and more powerful.” She also quotes lines from his The Cure at Troy, which is a good way to end this commentary on the election as so many people on both sides of our stark divisions look out on what they believe is a terrible, almost apocalyptic, future.

So hope for a great sea-change
On this side of revenge.
Believe that a further shore

Is reachable from here.
Believe in miracles
And cures and healing wells.

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