On the
stakes of 2012 for perhaps the most longstanding and significant, yet also one
of the most often misrepresented, American political debate.
The
Federalist and Anti-Federalist debates over the Constitution, which lasted for
over two years and featured most of the prominent Revolutionary era leaders,
were big, complicated, and shouldn’t be boiled down into a paragraph of a blog
post; I can’t recommend strongly enough that every American Studier read both The Federalist Papers
and the collected Anti-Federalist papers to
get a much fuller sense of those debates than I can provide here. Yet it’s also
true that the two sides’ names were purposefully and rightly chosen, since the
core of the debate can be boiled down to two relatively clear and certainly
contrasting positions: a support for a present, well-defined, and at least
somewhat strong federal government on the one side; and an opposition to
virtually any such government on the other. So it seems to me that there are
few, if any, American political subjects older or more vital than this one:
what the federal government’s presence and roles should be.
On the other
hand, one of the most disingenuous positions in American political history—and it
too has a long history—is the one which uses the phrase “states’ rights” or its
ilk to advocate not for a less strong federal government, but instead for a
federal government that uses its strength in service of what particular states,
and more exactly particular communities within those states, desire. For example, as James Loewen
has argued very effectively, and as anyone who has read the Confederate Articles of
Secession knows well, the Confederate states actually objected strongly to
other, Northern states exercising their “states’ rights” and opposing the
Fugitive Slave Act—what these Confederate states wanted was a federal
government like the one that had existed under President Buchanan, one which
would protect the institution of slavery (and even aid in its expansion) on the
national level. In a different vein, Ronald Reagan famously argued in his 1981
inaugural address that “Government is not the solution to our problem;
government is the problem,” yet during his two terms oversaw one
of the largest expansions of federal government spending in recent history,
making clear that he and his supporters were referring to certain aspects of
the federal government and not at all to others.
Which brings me
once again to the 2012 election. It’s possible that this election will
genuinely represent another debate between those who believe that federal
spending and influence have a significant role to play in all aspects of
American society (as Obama and the Democratic Party certainly do believe, and
as I do as well) and those who believe that the federal government should be as
limited and powerless as possible (as is the expressed belief of conservative
forces as diverse as Grover
Norquist and the Tea Party). Yet it’s also possible that the differences
are more about what roles an expansive federal government would have under each
potential administration—which is to say, that Mitt Romney, like Ronald Reagan
(and George W. Bush) before him, might continue and even expand federal
spending on defense, on support for business and corporations, and so on. Both of
these are, again, longstanding American debates—over the size and power of the
federal government on the one hand; over its proper focus and role on the other—but
they are also quite distinct, and it would serve us well, at the very least, to
push both candidates, and especially Romney, to articulate in which debate they
are actually participating.
Final election
and American issue tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
6/21 Memory Day nominee: Reinhold
Niebuhr, the son of
German immigrants who became one of 20th
century America’s greatest theological, philosophical, and cultural
thinkers and commentators, and whose voice and
ideas continue to
influence our national
converations.
PPS. One more list of quotes from Founding Fathers and Framers:
ReplyDeletehttp://ammo.com/articles/founding-fathers-quotes