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Ivy League Liberal Elitism Will Make Sarah Palin President - How Only Union Organizing Can Prevent It

by: Mike Elk, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

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(Photo: geerlingguy; Edited: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t)

Conservatives win many votes saying that liberals are elitist. I am here to tell you that the liberal movement is indeed very elitist. Its organization's staffs are composed mainly of Ivy leaguers whose life experiences are dramatically different than the 70 percent of Americans that never graduate from college. Very few of them have any actual experience living with or knowing working-class people. As a graduate of Bucknell, I still feel out of a place and most glaringly underdressed when I get in a room with the Ivy Leaguers running our movement.

As garbageman turned United Electrical Workers (UE) in Political Action Director Chris Townsend put it to me:

"When I am in meetings in Washington, DC, with organizations that presume to speak for workers or on behalf of workers - I ironically find myself the only worker in the room. As a worker with a GED - and 30-plus years of labor union experience - opinions like mine are rarely sought and universally dismissed as being too extremist when most workers feel the way I do about things. This is why it is so common for liberal and left-wing staff and activists to completely misunderstand workers."

 

The experiences of liberal elites are so outside of the mainstream that, very often, they just don't understand the working class. They fail to communicate to workers because most of them have never talked to a worker in real life, except for to ask for fries at McDonald's. Instead, when they fail to understand the misdirected anger of the working class at its economic anxiety, they tend to engage in intellectual snobbery and narrow-mindedness that only serve to alienate the white working class further.

Such snobbery was expressed to me in an email recently sent to me from a Democratic media strategist who said the message of the day was, "Conservatives face a choice about the future of their movement: Will they come to the table to get things done or 'stick with the angry people'?"

Well, let me think about that for a second. If I am a poor white guy, do I want to go with the polite people (Democrats) who are going to beg for change with their sophisticated intellectual arguments that I don't understand? Or do I want to be with the party (Republicans) that embraces my anger and wants to get out in the streets to yell about how awful this economy is?

Americans are screaming now about the economic hell we are in. Republicans are screaming about how awful the economy is and winning many of them over. Albeit, they're winning them with the wrong solutions, but they are trying to win Joe the Plumber, not Joe Stiglitz, so the details don't really matter.

On the economy, the Democratic message is, "Sit tight, don't get out in the street and protest, everything will be alright."

White working-class guys would choose the angry people who are willing to stand up and say how frustrated they feel. The progressives who are telling me to be cool and not get upset with things are just merely talking down to me. They have the privilege of telling me not to get upset, when I have every right to be upset.

Sarah Palin indeed represents all the rage of the working class that liberals of this country are trying to quiet down. Many liberal elites engaged in revisionist history say that McCain's defeat was caused by Palin. However, anybody who actually worked on the Obama campaign like I did knew that McCain's defeat was caused by the financial crisis and McCain's baffling response and coddling of Wall Street.

As an organizer for the Obama campaign on the ground in Western Pennsylvania during the election, I remember how white, working-class, swing voters couldn't stop talking about Sarah Palin for weeks on end. For the three weeks between Palin's selection as VP candidate and the financial crash, we were scared shitless the Republicans were going to win as Palin led to McCain surging in the polls.

Many white, working-class people loved her because here was a politician who finally was working class and ready for a fight. They loved her even more as Ivy League liberals denounced her as basically "white trash." It felt to white, working-class people like liberal elites were calling them "white trash" too.

Liberals still treat Palin and the right-wing populist Tea Party Movement that she leads as "white trash." They spend more time attacking them as "stupid racists" than actually trying to win them over and address their concerns. Its as if liberals are saying we know better than you stupid working-class people.

To understand how easily Sarah Palin could be the next president, we need only look to another vice presidential candidate widely denounced by the liberal elite when he was announced in 1952 - Richard Milhouse Nixon. Nixon became president by mobilizing resentment of the working class against elites. By framing elites as talking down to the poor and working class, Sarah Palin, with the right slick ad men, could mobilize that same type of sentiment against the elitist "eggheads" of the Democratic Party.

From Rick Perlstein's classic, "Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America":

"To cosmopolitan liberals, hating Richard Nixon, congratulating yourself for seeing through Richard Nixon and the elaborate political poker bluff with which he hooked the sentimental rubes, was becoming part and parcel of a political identity.

 



"And to a new suburban mass middle class that was tempting itself into Republicanism, admiring Richard Nixon was becoming part and parcel of a political identity based on seeing through the pretensions of the cosmopolitan liberals who claimed to know so much better than you (and Richard Nixon) what was best for your country. This side saw everything most genuine in Nixon, everything that was most brave, - who saw the Checkers speech for what it also actually was, not just a hustle but also an act of existential heroism: a brave refusal to let haughty 'betters' have their way with him."

 

It's like déjà vu all over again.

Republicans are rallying the troops against the educated elites of society. As a result of their political jujitsu, Republicans are making it look like they are engaged in a class war on behalf of the working class against the liberal elite.

Liberals instead are playing into the class war trap by talking down to the uneducated masses of America via TV talk shows and blogs. They can't understand why they aren't winning over the working class because they are too busy attacking them.

Such intellectual foolishness was dramatized in the way I heard liberal DC political operatives talk about the widely read focus group study by "The Very Separate Worlds of Conservatives" by Stan Greenberg, James Carville and others. They took the memo as evidence that working class people lived in a world so far outside of their own (socioeconomically speaking, they do) that they couldn't possibly be reasoned with using their methods). They reckoned that surely these people must be " crazy, brain dead racists" who believe Obama is a socialist out to get them.

What they failed to read is one of the main conclusions of the study that shows that their efforts to paint working class conservatives as "racist idiots" is backfiring big time:

"They readily identify themselves as a minority in this country - a minority whose values are mocked and attacked by a liberal media and class of elites."

 

I wonder why they feel under attack? Maybe it's all the liberal elites calling white, working class people "stupid racists."

Indeed, the focus groups found that race was not an important factor affecting the political opposition of white, working class conservatives. Indeed, the study found that mocking these people as racists, as I argued in my article, "Martin Luther King Would Have Loved the Teabaggers, Not Called Them Racists," only serves to stigmatize them more against liberal elites.

Talking down to working class people engaged in a class war against the elites isn't going to win them over.

What liberals have to do is unite with the teabaggers and engage in a class war against Wall Street. Organized labor has succeeded in doing this by using constant, year-round, on-the-job political engagement to compel people to come over. As a result, Obama won by 23 points among white, non-college graduates who belong to a union, even as he lost by 18 points among all white, non-college voters.

We need to "Organize the Unorganized" in massive organizing drives like we did in 1930's - the heydays for the progressive reform. Union organizing is the best way to engage people one-on-one on a constant year-round basis. We need be constantly sitting down with working class white conservatives one-on-one, listen to their concerns, and engage them in honest dialogue. Only real community organizing can do this, not the slick TV ad buys that DC liberals tend to prefer.

Part of the reason the Obama movement was so successful was that they invested so heavily in community organizing. We would treat them like human beings and engage in friendly conversation. We would find out what issues they cared about it and get them to critically look at issues in friendly, non-threatening communications. Much like Howard Dean's fifty-state strategy, we took no voter for granted. Our movement should do the same when it comes to voters if it expects to be sustainable over the long run.

Sure, we might not get them the first time or the second time or the third time; it might 20, 30, 40 or 50 long, deep conversations in order to win over these working white guys, but it's worth it However, when you get a union on your job every day eight hours day, a good, well-trained union leader or shop stewards have plenty of time to get to that 20th or 30th conversation you need to win a guy. Furthermore, you have a common bond which you guys can unite behind - fighting economic injustice in your workplace.

As a union organizer in West Virginia, I remember some of our most active members showing up with Bush-Cheney bumper stickers on their pickups. A lot of them would complain against liberals ruining society and then in the next breath argue passionately for a strike. Over time through constant dialogue and popular education, our union was able to win these members over to the liberal side. They realized that voting based on slick TV personalities made up to appear folksy was merely putting folks out of jobs.

Sure, not all of them came over, but enough that it was worth the effort. If we can just bring over one-third of white, working class conservatives, we can dramatically change the political landscape of this country. That's what the Employee Free Choice Act would be able to do.

Many liberal political operatives in DC dismiss the Employee Free Choice Act as merely political payback to the unions for their help in the election. They fail to see the larger political implications - increased unionization would dramatically change the political dynamics of this country and prevent 30,000 workers from getting fired from their jobs every year for trying to join a union.

Many lament the loss of marriage equality last week in Maine. There have been a thousand analyses of why we lost this important fight for a fundamental civil right. However, what none of them pointed out is that if we had increased unionization, the fight for marriage equality would be dramatically easier.

Its no coincidence that ranks of the Christian Coalition began to swell as the ranks of unions declined dramatically in the 1980's. Unions are organizations that bring people from different parts of society and unite them in a common cause. Union members know that their true enemy is Wall Street and not a couple of people trying to get married. This is why Obama won by 23 points among white, non-college graduates who belong to a union, even as he lost by 18 points among all white, non-college voters.

We as progressives can win only when we get all the teabaggers into our movement through getting them into unions. As Lincoln said, "United We Stand, Divided We Fall." Only organized labor can achieve that type of unity. Failure to bring working people into the Employee Free Choice Act could easily lead to the election of a Sarah Palin.

Sure, liberals laugh off the idea of Sarah Palin being elected president. However, elitist, out-of-touch liberals laughed off Nixon, Reagan and Bush as unelectable. Well, guess what, they all won.

If we don't stop laughing at white, working class people, we are going to lose too.

  

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Mike Elk works for the Campaign for America's Future. Previously, he worked as a union organizer for the United Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers, and as a staffer on the Obama-Biden campaign.

Comments

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Good luck with that. I agree

Good luck with that. I agree that what we need is massive organizing and union action that unites all workers. What we have now are fiefdoms and the labor "leaders" seem to like it that way. Each union is unto itself and don't dare to unite with others for a day of action the likes of which folks in France, Italy and the UK have seen and which get them power. We need to seize opportunities to unite (one such missed opportunity was when United Airlines employee pensions were hugely reduced while the big fellas got theirs). But union "leaders" don't seem in the business of leading and unfortunately most Americans have bought the brainwashing that if they're any good, they don't need unions. Three decades of brainwashing need to be undone with ad campaigns, articles in the MSM, etc. But MSM ignores labor as Dick Meister so well explained in his last article.

I'm confused. I though

I'm confused. I though Truthout didn't ally itself with Glen Beck and his ilk. This essay reads like a slightly edited editorial statement from Fox News. There are indeed some liberals who are elitist and tend to talk in phrases that confuse and bore (John Kerry comes to mind). There are also plenty of liberals who can easily converse with workers. The key question is"Why aren't workers liberals?" The answer comes in two parts: First most workers will sell out the future of this country to keep their jobs. I have seen this with lumberjacks, fishermen, and steel workers. Second, and more worrisome, most workers seem determined to keep themselves in a state of willful ignorance. They would rather watch Fox News than read a book, or even the internet, which has more functions than seeking pornography. There is a lot of information out there about the issues with labor and the future of the US economy. I suggest that Mr. Elk and his ilk try looking at the real problems and stop paying attention to Sarah Palin. If you think she is the possible answer to anything, you will definitely reap what you sew.

democrats run for the hills

democrats run for the hills as soon as the s-word is thrown at them. i have heard independents comment how the dems are scared to death to stand up for, i will say it, socialism. until the democratic party finds a way to fund their elections without wall street, they will remain in the banksters pockets. since this article is about unions, i will say it, the people who formed these unions knew about class struggle, to the point of getting their heads cracked, or being killed. mike is right on when he talks about your typical college-educated type, they do not know what it is like to run a shovel all day in the heat for little bucks. i am a democrat, i voted for obama, but i am turning against obama and the dems because they are more concerned with politically correct minorities than the concerns of the broad working class.

Wow! I think that Mike Elk

Wow! I think that Mike Elk has identified some really important points. If our fellow citizens are being co-opted and misled by misinformation, we need to find ways to work with them and do as Mike says - "by constantly sitting down with working class white conservatives one-on-one, listen to their concerns, and engage them in honest dialogue. Only real community organizing can do this..." What we are doing now isn't working. We need to get on the work class's side - and that is not going to happen by coddling the banks and Wall St as is happening now. The rich are getting richer while no one is really standing up for the poor and working class folks who are burdened by 10.2% unemployment... If we don't have a paradigm shift and take on the corporations, we are going to lose the electorate big time...

I'm sorry, but I think it's

I'm sorry, but I think it's divisive and untrue to label liberals as Ivy League elitists. Look at the numbers: most people do not even live in that part of the country, much less attend those schools. Your evidence, I suspect, is either anecdotal or imagined. I know darn few Ivy League people but many liberals of all economic levels. You are just yielding the ground to their definitions by talking like this. Those who first started labeling liberals as elitist were think-tankers from the East Coast and Stanford who thought it would help them get the support of people who have no rational reason to support their agenda.That said, I strongly agree with your thesis that the Free Choice Act is both right and important!! A fine argument on that issue!

Mike, This is one of the

Mike, This is one of the best thought pieces I have read in years. I grew up in Alabama, joined the Army, got a college education through ROTC, and have watched working class whites, African-Americans, Hispanics, and the educated left wing conduct a dialog of the deaf for far too long. My maternal grandfather was a member of a carpenter's union in Montgomery, AL in the early 1920's, and my mother later became an elementary school teacher. She told me that the best parents she ever had in supporting her efforts with their children were in a small coal-mining town in NE Alabama, because "a coal miner doesn't want his son to HAVE to be a coal miner and education was the only way he would have a choice." Bridging economic class will transform this country, but we have to confront our own prejudices, even as we do "good work."

The author is correct to say

The author is correct to say that Sarah Palin or someone like her could easily be elected if somehow things don't change. If we want to prevent Sarah or someone worse from being elected, we have to steal her thunder. We have to make the cause of the person who can't make ends meet our own. These moralistic pompous stuffed shirts who go on about "taking personal responsibility" need to be counteracted and the people who are hurting need to be shown that something is being done for them, not the elites (i.e., Wall St. and other corporate CEO's). There is a difference between giving a handout and leveling the playing field. We need to do the latter, which is 180Ëš from what we are doing now, coddling Wall St. We need to make it clear that the Democratic Party is once more looking out for the little guy. Rhetoric doesn't do it. Action is needed. We need to walk the walk as well as talk the talk. With people like Summers and Emmanuel in charge, it will never happen.

I agree with most of your

I agree with most of your argument - certainly it should be obvious to anyone that you don't win votes by alienating voters. However, you haven't made it clear to me why unions in particular are the only way to win over these "teabaggers." You've asserted it a lot but your arguments are thin to me. Sure I understand why people are angry, but the point of the original statement is that screaming doesn't get anything done. Coming to the negotiating table is what gets things done. Furthermore, I'm not sure the "teabaggers" are all people who just want a job and a better life. A lot of them seem like sore losers because that their party didn't win and will do whatever it takes to stop the other party from getting anything done. There are allegations of people being paid to do some of this protesting. There is evidence that a lot of the people showing up at these town hall meetings are not even from the communities they're held in. Secondly, it seems to me like one problem is the Democratic Party is too polite, too afraid to take off the kid gloves. Even the Obama campaign had plenty of valid criticisms to make that it did not make, and those it did were not worded strongly enough. There were many opportunities to call bulls***t on claims by the Republicans which were passed up. Sarah Palin scares the living crap out of me. She is a classic rabble rouser who craves attention, and made me wonder what kind of lynchings would go on under a regime led by her. She wasn't merely aligning herself with the angry mob, she was whipping the angry mob into a furious froth. The kind of change that comes from this is not the kind of change anyone in their right mind truly wants. People talk like there is a police state now, but any police state needs a heap of authoritarian followers to support their chosen demagogue. She'd be that demagogue, and they would be those followers. With her in charge, we truly are at risk of a transformation like Germany saw in the 1930s - we were already heading slowly in that direction under Bush. So, you're right, something needs to be done. I'm unconvinced that unions are THE answer so please back up your claims more. I find it hard to believe that unions have that much sway over voters. I also don't believe there is such a thing as a magic bullet. There should be multiple approaches to winning over working class Americans.

Corruption issues are so

Corruption issues are so severe and threatening that calling anybody anything is too much of a distraction. We've got deformed fish and deformed humans because the EPA has been protecting pollution while pretending to make our water better by enforcing unfunded mandates for conglomerates. These mandates could end up privatizing our drinking water for big banks and construction companies, with Homer Simpson at the controls of the chemicals used at the filtration plants. We've got the FDA threatening to bust Dr. Weil for selling astragalus while many people are buying it from naturpaths and traditional Chinese herbalists, not just Yalies. The herbal supplements have thousands of years of use by humans behind them, are made out of plants, and are safe at high doses which nobody does anyway; it's too much trouble. We've got environmentalists building their own wildcat graywater systems with beautiful lotus and water lilies because they want to keep raw sewage from combined sewer overflows out of the rivers. Red, white, black, brown, blue, pink, green, and purple people do not want to be genetically altered. If we don't get together, it's going to happen. Read the fine print in the edicts from D.C. It's nauseating, in more ways than one. Fine with the pissing contests once we've busted some of the finely-clothed perps. Visit Birmingham bond defaults on a search.

Palin is not half the

Palin is not half the politician or leader that Nixon was, regardless of the scandals of Nixon's presidency. I just felt that needed to be said. However, I agree that a lot of people are angry and don't care about the right solution so much as the solution they feel is right. Obama was elected by angry, passionately hopeful people. Not mild people engaged in small intellectual debates. The Democrats would do better if they focused on middle-class issues with vigor, and make a bigger deal about Republican obstructionism. They need to make a huge deal about the way Republicans are refusing to be a part of the government.

Giving up the illusory, not

Giving up the illusory, not to mention defamatory, notion of “white privilege” is a sine qua non for lefties winning over working class voters of the Caucasian persuasion. Not engaging hardhats on the subject of LGBT rights is another. Can they do it? I’d wager my eternal soul on the answer being a resounding “no.”

"Its organization's staffs

"Its organization's staffs are composed mainly of Ivy leaguers" - what organization? - the Democratic party? What on earth is this author talking about? Overwhelmingly, liberals are people who come from poor and middle-class families. Most of those that are rich have "new money," as opposed to the Republicans, whose leaders have "old money." Meritocracy might be a better word for liberals than "elite." It's going to be hard to convince blue-collar conservatives that liberals genuinely do care about their well-being. Right-wingers are so good at deflecting the dialogue away from practical policies to "values." Read "What's the Matter with Kansas" for insight into this problem

Mike is absolutely correct.

Mike is absolutely correct. The outrages of the "tea-baggers", while most often misdirected,stem from legitimate, deep-rooted antipathy toward the elites, whom they rightly perceive to be responsible for their declining/disappearing economic security. While many of the "tea-baggers" may not be able to articulate clearly, the basis for their rage, and while they may be susceptible to Republican/Palinian demagoguery, they are NOT stupid. They, like almost anyone, will respond positively to genuine efforts to listen to -- and hear -- their concerns, fears and disillusionment with what has become of the American Dream and their hopes of participating in it. The "liberal elites", as well as less elitist progressives, should go read some Studs Terkel, Walter Karp and C. Wright Mills. If they do so with an open mind, they might just come to both some helpful insights and at least a smidgen of much needed humility.

It's American stupidity that

It's American stupidity that would make Sarah Palin president, not liberal elitism.

First off, I class myself as

First off, I class myself as a liberal, hell that is putting it mildly, I am a Socialist, Period! I am a member of the Socialist Party of the US and also the Socialist Party of France. I have never voted for a Right Winger in my life, and to my knowledge I have never voted for a Conservative even if they were a member of the Democratic Party. If you are a Blue Dog, I will do my very utmost to see you do not make it on the ballot in my district, and if you do, I will not vote for you even if it means a vote for the opposite side. Independents I will vote for if they are progressive in their leanings. I quit High School way back in the early 50's to join the military so that I would be able to get a better ecucation and find a field that I could use to better myself and climb higher up the education ladder, as college at that time was well beyond what I or my parents could afford. I was never a Union Member as I spent over 20 years on active duty, and Union Membership was not something that the armed forces allowed. After I retired I was a Field Engineer and again higher up the scale than a union member in my field. That doesn't mean that I have no feelings for workers, in fact I came from worker families and know exactly how that bottom line is written. I for one would never cross a union picket for any reason unless it were to save a life. My father was a life long Teamster, I had uncles who were union members, cousins and friends who were union members. I have never looked down on any of them, and never felt that they were anything other than family and friends. Workers are the grassroots of all commercial activity. I don't know how anyone could think that the reich wing, mouth breathing, tea bagging, fundie, superstitious dregs that want it to be their way or no way, can ever be made to think of others, they cannot think of anyone but those that are exactly like them. I now live in a country where the workers really count. France takes good care of their workers from what I have seen and I have been French since 84. I think that I will stay here, I have been back to the USA and really do not like what I see there. Just this old Chief's 2 cents

Thanks for an interesting

Thanks for an interesting article. I come from a different part of the country and we have tea baggers here. They demonstrated on a highway and started a website -- which was actually sort of useful for the local elections because we don't get a lot of press information otherwise on candidates if you're not an insider of any persuasion, and the interviews with people who were pruning themselves for these folks were quite revealing (mostly their views on the Constitution and having to pay anything in taxes for "socialism"). I think a lot of them may work for health insurance industry and are aggressively scared about health care reform. So I don't agree that tea baggers represent the views of the white working class, and the angst you describe from parts of Pennsylvania. Though they may have some roots there. My impression is more that we are seeing a wealthier group of Republicans with threatened financial interests, but it's not always as obvious because they're kind of crude, to say the least. And the interviews revealed them as lacking a certain level of education and thinking, whether they've been to school or not. They expressed themselves in these kind of George Bush truisms. (And we all know George Bush went to Harvard. Not to mention where his family made their money.) Now that's not to say I don't have my issues with the Ivy League liberal elite. I myself am not an Ivy Leaguer though I'm college educated. I'm a State University graduate with a State University graduate degree, no less, and I can't find work. The doors of the liberal elite in my area are closed to people like myself. I come from a family of union people, organizers, workers and middle class, people who crossed class borders or remained behind. But the ones they'll hire first graduated with honors from (list of schools), have such and such connections, have never been on a Food Program, and are not quite as interested as I am in REAL health care reform -- because of what it means not only to myself and my family at present, but to their lives in the not so distant future. The problem with liberal elitism is that they're pretty well off, and while they want change and have good intentions in some respects, their rears are not as much on the line. But make no mistake about it. What the tea baggers have on the line here is not what you and i are worried about at all.

how about starting with a

how about starting with a democratic party that is worth supporting? one that stands in opposition to what the republicans stand for, not one that supports the TBTF banks, the health "insurance" companies that try every means they can to deny insurance, and the pharmaceutical companies that use every means possible to establish monopolies and squash any free market in medicines. Mike Elk rightly points out that people are angry, but getting people to have conversations with other people so that they will correctly see what is causing their economic situation will not provide a reason to support the Democrats presently in office.

Me thinks we have a problem

Me thinks we have a problem with our definitions here. Liberals are just as bad as conservatives- look at the records. What real, substantive differences are there between the two? From where I sit there are none. Wars, globalization, NAFTA, WTO, IMF, CIA etc etc. They are two sides of the same coin. It is the progressives, of whatever flavor that are the true different breed. Clinton was a liberal and just look at the damage he caused as president. Make a difference- vote third party progressive and flush the rest down the toilet. They dont represent you anyway.

Apparently the biggest

Apparently the biggest boo-boo anyone can make of his -- or worse yet, HER! -- life is to get an education, become informed and literate and logical, capable of reasoning, analysis, and worst of all, fact-checking. Because then you'll be damned as an "elitist." Since when has the "working class" been limited to sheephood? I've known some well-read plumbers, painters, seamstresses, who enjoyed books, classical music, fine art, theatre -- oops! elitists!!! So what's the "working class?" Yes, these people were all good union members, but their lives were far broader than their labors. And they worked hard to send their kids to college to become teachers, doctors. lawyers, engineers -- oops! more elitists!!! Never mind the "elitists" -- take a good look, and listen, at the ones who are throwing that epithet at people of all "classes" who dare to think.

Interesting that a guy who

Interesting that a guy who claims to understand the tea partiers doesn't even know that "teabaggers" is an offensive term.

I tend to agree. Certainly

I tend to agree. Certainly union organizing will in the long-term benefit the working class regardless. As to Wall Street, they are in serious danger of causing open revolt among the working class. People have had it, and the Wall Street crowd is the poster child for greed and economic ruin in the vast majority of Americans' minds. They had best grow some honest altruism before they find themselves where Marie Antoinette ended up. I hope that the altruism is the case. If Wall street put its collective mind to it, they could create a sustainable society / economy and save the planet, thereby going down in history as heroes instead of the black-hearted villains they're making of themselves now. The question is, will they change their mindset toward stewardship over rulership?

What makes an elite an

What makes an elite an elite? Let's not forget you don't have to be liberal to be an elite. There are plenty of conservative elites (if not more) than there are liberal elites. But what makes an elite? Is it money and education? Isn't money and education a stated and standard goal in our society? The problem is that people, regardless of background, too easily allow themselves to become the puppets of political and ideological rhetoric. No one thinks clearly when they don't think for themselves, but instead become seduced by sensationalist campaigns to gain political power. If the working class is considered a less educated, poorly informed class, we have no one to blame but ourselves. Not any elite, or politician.

"We need be constantly

"We need be constantly sitting down with working class white conservatives one-on-one, listen to their concerns, and engage them in honest dialogue." Seriously? That movement's main concern is that the left never gets a turn at the steering wheel. The only way to address their concerns is to let them be in power 100% of the time. No thank you. Instead the left should focus on completely marginalizing the NeoTard movement. There should be no room in government for bible-thumping Luddites.

Many of those angry at this

Many of those angry at this blog are responding in the fashion 'the problem isn't us, it's them! ,' but they are us- we're all workers(or unemployed at the moment and barely scraping by) and until you people see the need to unify under that rather than throw them to the curb they'll continue to run away from our ideas.

I recently got a fundraising

I recently got a fundraising call from Feingold's campaign. I had contribute dquite a bit in the past but when he refuused to oppose the Roberts supreme court nomination I wrote him off as not being fierce enough for the times. I talked for a long time with the fundraiser who put forward the same liberal arguments that Elk comments o in this article. He said that I "didn't understand how things really worked". Although I am now very wealthy I was raised in an orphan home, served in WWII, and worked in the steel mills to supplement my GI Bill. I have never forgotten my early poverty and the people I worked with. Mike Elk is quite correct in raising this issue. I must also say that there are many "tea baggers" who are so brainwashed that logic cannot reach them. But emotion can reach them and tha tis what Feingold and the Clinton-Obama Democrats refuse to show in support of progressive issues.

Well, I see that pretty much

Well, I see that pretty much everyone has a good argument, but the best one is that we are all working people, and as such we have to find ways to get unionized amongst ourselves. And yes, Unions are extremely important in making better connections among working people for their own benefits. That is why here, in the USA, especially since Reagan's administration up to G. Bush, including Clinton, unions have been systematically underestimated. Also Republicans seems to be winning for playing these lowest common demonstrator tickets, G. Bush, Reagan, and it is true they are winning in some regards. BUT I must say that Democrats really seems week, afraid, if not sometimes spineless. It seems that they are afraid or not wiling to tackle real power, yet they are in comparison to Republicans more or less aware of well being of the general population. Dems are also about money, just as Republicans, but Republicans are very extremes in their own right. We can see how everything has been played during this health care debates, on streets, and congress and senate with "Blue Dog Dems" and extreme right wing republicans. Also, Yes there is elitism in Democratic party, but common do not tell me that the answer to this problem is Bush family or John McCain. Also I just can't understand how Palin can bring the change, hell no, she comes from the Republican party. And in this regard Democrats are fully responsible for not talking about what Republican party is all about and not only about Pallin. But by any mean we should move our eyes from Palin, for she is really a representative of a very dangerous extreme right wing policy, and if we really want to see what Police state is abou8t, then sure, vote for her. Therefore: -NO STRONG UNIONS -LACK OF REAL MEDIA (not these corporate ones) And also, here in the USA every idea of social consciousness is presented like "fascism" and or "Nazism." DO not forget that fascism and Nazism came hiding behind populist ideology, but truly they represent conservative, right wing, everything but "for the people" ideology and interests. Pretty much what is happening with Republican party and "angry populous" today is quite similar to what was taking place in parts of Europe at the beginning of 30's. Again, media, here in the USA, has not done anything to clarify the danger of Republican game. So Mike has some good points but I really agree with Shannon E. I would say that I ma quite disappointed with Dems, since Obama came to power, but by NO mean I SEE Republican to represent an alternative. They are the ones, in the first place, who fully contributed to this financial fiasco. Again, media is silent about it. Unfortunately, even if there is "a third party" alternative, I see only right wing alternative, Ron Paul, and or Pat Buchanan. There is no a serious left oriented progressive alternative that would fully stand behind working people. For the end “organizing of everyday people is of crucial importance. And sending e-mail and making TV ads doesn't do harm, therefore it is just one of different mechanisms, which seems to work, to response to this crazy right wing extremist ideology.

Thank you so much for this

Thank you so much for this article. I am one of those college graduates who is disgusted with the way some 'progressives' talk down to the "working class". They have no clue. There is an unfortunate attitude associating intelligence with education level and sophistication - at least among the white working class. (If this equation seems obvious to you chances are you are rather out of touch.) If this equation ( appears) to be assumed by a political party they will not get the votes of this constituency. You can't claim to be the party of the people if you make negative generalizations about them. ( Latinos are a bit less happy with the GOP these days, for example.) Thank you again for giving this perspective the light of day.

Mike, thanks so much for

Mike, thanks so much for this article. It's hard to expand the awareness of "progressives" about the realities of this working class.

To say that most workers

To say that most workers want to keep themselves in a state of 'willful ignorance' is such a shallow excuse for not wanting to involve yourself. They'd rather watch fox news just as you would rather keep a safe distance. But that is what this article is about;Learning from and Engaging with people who we don't understand.

This article is very

This article is very misleading and simply not true. The author rails against "elitist liberals" and then starts talking about Democrats. Uh, what percentage of Democrats are actually liberal? Not many. I know many liberals, and none of them have graduated from Ivy League universities, and most of them are in touch in the working class, as that is OUR background. This author spends too much time in D.C. and New York. Come out to the Midwest. We'll show you what a real liberal looks like (and there isn't a capital D in his or her name).

This issue is a very old one

This issue is a very old one going back at least to the progressive era at the beginning of the 20th century. It has been one of my consuming interests for the last 4 decades, both as a sometimes activist, sometimes fellow worker, and as anthropologist. The evidence to me is very strong that the differences between the average working class person (blue collar or “BC”) and what is best described as the average middle class professional (“MCP”) is very, very profound. Their sub culture arises from differences in work situations: Without an understanding of these differences, we liberals – the average liberal - can’t hope to understand why the blue collar crowd often appear “stupid” to them. Politicians in mixed districts, though, are quite aware of the difference, and they use it to their advantage, too often from a divide and conquer point of view. I would urge open-minded people in this forum who insist that BCs aren’t that different or are simply “stupid” – or that we aren’t elitist – carefully examine two excellent sources on this subject, classmatters.org and the public TV documentary, Class In America. And try to remember that it's human nature to underestimate the the limitations of our own particular kind of intelligence and judge others who don't have it as "stupid"; it's human nature, and it can be very destructive.

The Nebraska liberal

The Nebraska liberal wouldn't by any chance be John or Maura of Lincoln, would it? Good cogent point, in any case.

It's as inaccurate to refer

It's as inaccurate to refer to liberal organizations as ivy league as it is to call all tea baggers angry white racists. You have a double standard to make your articles fit a preconceived narrative.

This article is so poorly

This article is so poorly written and its reasoning so foggy it is hard to know where to start with a critique. The author confuses terminology and conflates disparate groups with such regularity that the central argument loses all coherence. The "white working class" is not the same as the Tea Party movement. Those attending such rallies hold signs decrying "Obamacare" and comparing health care reform to Nazi German death camps, and take it as a matter of course that the President was born in Kenya. These are not people who can be expected to listen to a reasoned argument about the merits of the Obama administration and a Democratically-controlled congress. As for any attempt to co-opt Palin supporters, is the author's memory so faulty as to forget the kind of blatant racism and xenophobia that was so ubiquitous at her rallies? Like the Teabaggers, with whom I am sure there is significant amount of overlap, this is not a potential constituency for the Democratic party. Which brings us to the subtle racial exclusion evident in this piece. Why must mentions of the all-important working class always be prefaced by the word "white"? Are not blacks often members of the working class as well, entitled to a role in Mr. Elk's burgeoning class war? Whether intentional or not, the implication is that blacks are at best a constituency to be taken for granted, and at worst an impediment to the Democratic party consolidating its support among the variously defined "white working class." If the author has heretofore failed to perceive the disaster that any attempt to co-opt the Tea Party movement would sow throughout the Democratic Party, particularly among the poor and minorities, and the flagrant repudiation of core Democratic principles it would represent, I humbly point out the flaw and excuse his ignorance. If Mr. Elk's intent is to trade these constituencies for the likes of the Birthers and flat-Earthers who take Sarah Palin's brand of demagoguery for appropriate political discourse, I can only pray he is not successful.