[75 years ago this week, Dewey didn’t defeat Truman—but the 1948 election was close and contested enough that one newspaper famously reported he did. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that election and a few other hotly contested ones (not including 2020, because it really wasn’t), leading up to a special Guest Post from an FSU alum and talented young journalist who would never get it so wrong!]
On three
frustrating aftermaths of the most hotly
contested presidential election in our history.
1)
The climate crisis: It’s hard to remember exactly
where our narratives stood in 2000, but I think it’s fair to say that Al Gore’s central role
in raising the alarm about climate change (or global warming, as it was
generally known then) was seen by many as at least slightly kooky, if not
outright silly, somewhat akin to the whole “Al
Gore invented the internet” conversations. As that hyperlinked article
argues, those latter critiques of Gore were pretty off-base—but not nearly as
off-base as any and all downplaying of his climate change activism. I don’t
know for sure what a Gore administration might have been able to do over those
four or eight years to address the climate crisis, but I will always regret—and
believe every one of us humans should regret—that we weren’t able to find out.
2)
The Supreme Court: No electoral aftereffects
could ever be as important as those, certainly not on a global scale. But
closer to home, I would argue that the 2000 election, and more exactly the
hugely and rightfully controversial Bush v. Gore Supreme Court decision that
ultimately decided said election, played a crucial role in shaping one of the
most significant stories in 21st century American politics and
society: the ever-more-overtly politicized presence of our highest court. As I
argued in this 2016 HuffPost piece, the Supreme Court
has always been political, and those origins and histories are important to
keep in mind. But nonetheless, the Court’s blatant and (to this AmericanStudier,
among many others) unconstitutional intervention in a presidential election
marked a decidedly more political role still, and at the very least
foreshadowed one of the single worst and most destructive court decisions in
our history, Citizens
United (2010).
3)
January 6th: Obviously—and I
do mean obviously—the November 2000 “Brooks
Brothers riot” in Florida that sought to end the electoral recount there
(and that most definitely did influence the Supreme Court’s ruling) was far
from the first such expression of mass outrage and potential violence seeking
to affect the outcome of an American election. But I nonetheless agree with
this excellent Chris
Lehmann piece for The Nation that
the 2000 riot was a direct predecessor to the January 6th, 2021
insurrection, most especially in the ways that it demonstrated that far-right
rage and violence could dictate our national politics. Not sure any single factor
more directly contributed to the rise and age of Trump, and I know that no
single event better encapsulated those trends than did January 6th.
One more reason to (as sarcastically as possible) thank the 2000 election.
Special
Guest Post this weekend,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
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