By Marc Jampole
The real question about this year’s electorate is how large
a part of it truly seeks a confrontational authoritarian as our next
president? How many people practice
racism, condone violence and approve of torture? How large is the population
with fascist tendencies?
In other words, what part of the American public has voted
for Donald Trump?
Judging from the numbers in a recent Economist article titled “How
non-voters blew it,” Trump has gathered relatively few supporters. In no
state to hold a primary until now has more than 25% of Republican voters
actually gone to the polls and cast a ballot. Even though Republican primary turnout
is at its highest since Ronald Reagan swept into office in 1980, only about 17%
of eligible Republicans have voted in the primaries so far. Trump has averaged
about 38% of the vote, which translates into a little less than 6.5% of all
registered Republicans. But Republicans represent only about 28% of all voters,
probably a little more in the states already holding primaries. If we
extrapolate these numbers across the country, we find that a mere 1.8% of all
eligible voters support Donald Trump.
The one word to describe American voters in 2016, is the
same one word we can use to describe them virtually every year. That word isn’t
“angry” or “frustrated,” not “conservative” or “liberal.” The one word to
describe American voters is “apathetic.”
Ted Cruz and John Kasich have gotten an even lower
percentage of the total votes than the Donald. Hillary Clinton hasn’t gotten many
more votes than Trump, as voter participation in Democratic primaries is down. If we’re using votes to measure whether any
candidate is engaging the public, the answer is that none of the candidates are
winning in any state or across the country, not even Hillary Clinton or Bernie
Sanders. With such low voter turnouts, we can’t proclaim anyone who has won a
primary a real “winner.”
The real winners in this election season so far are not even
“none of the above,” since that outcome would require people to enter voting
booths and actually write those words down.
No, the real winners are the fascists like Donald Trump and
the oligarchs, who represent about one tenth of one percent of the country,
like the Koch brothers and Sheldon Adelson. Just as in the Germany of the late
1920s and early 1930s, the oligarchs and the fascists share many traits in
common—power hungry, obsessional about control, well-funded, prone to lies and
misrepresentations, ruthless.
I used to tell the kids on the Little League teams I managed
that the only way to guarantee never losing is never to play. But in American
politics, the people are losing by not playing. Only when the electorate stays
home can fascists like Donald Trump win at the polls. Only when the electorate
remains uninvolved can oligarchs manage the voting patterns of legislatures.
Only when the electorate prefers ignorance can oligarchs and fascists get away
with filling airwaves and bandwidth with their lies.
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