Home WebMail Saturday, November 2, 2024, 10:18 AM | Calgary | -2.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Posted: 2017-07-29T22:52:13Z | Updated: 2017-07-29T23:34:11Z Politically Exhausted? Focus On What Matters. | HuffPost

Politically Exhausted? Focus On What Matters.

Politically Exhausted? Focus On What Matters.
|
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.
Open Image Modal
GQ

In the past week alone, Senator John McCain was diagnosed with brain cancer, several very close votes were held in the Senate in efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act and throw millions off health insurance, the Department of Justice announced it no longer interpreted federal civil rights law to apply to LGBT people, and Donald Trump fired his chief of staff and tried to ban transgender soldiers via twitter. A few days ago, the administrations new communications director embarked upon an unhinged tirade while on the record with a New Yorker journalist. Meanwhile, the investigation into whether Trumps campaign colluded with Russia has continued apace. (No doubt, Im missing somethingit is near impossible to keep track of it all.)

The response to each of these events has been a flurry of online activity, ranging from gleeful (Did you hear about the thing in the New Yorker?!) to horror (This is terrible!) to disbelief (Theres no way this could happen!) and everything in between. Each response has in turn provoked a war of words between conservatives and liberals and leftistswhat is the appropriate way to respond to news about a conservative Senators cancer? Who is the real hero in stopping the latest ACA repeal bill? Is banning trans troops good, actually, because the military is bad? Each hot take and counter-take has produced a new volley of vociferous tweets and Facebook comments.

Ive done my best to keep up, and have even joined in the fray myself, but Im exhausted. Isnt anyone else? Only a handful of times since Trumps inauguration, writers have talked about political exhaustion and how to address it, with varying suggestions. In mid-February, one Huffington Post contributor suggested that people just get over it, explaining his concern over complacency with the Republican Party s agenda, insisting that the only way to address this was political engagement. In May, US News ran an opinion column , ostensibly on the same topic, attributing the exhaustion to the news medias thirst for a major leak or new angle every 30 minutes. NPR echoed this sentiment, and pointed to a handful of other potential causes, in a short piece a few days ago .

But there is more to this than political disillusionment and the 24-hour news cycle, which have both been around for decades. It is true that the Trump administration may be churning out a startlingly high number of scandals and leaks, but those of us who want to be effective in opposing it cant simply attribute the blame to the administration or the media and sit back in satisfaction. Nor is it enough to say that people should just get over their exhaustion; believe me, if I could choose to feel less tired, I would!

What this calls for is more disciplined messaging and better focus. Considering our current environment, we have to be efficient to be effective. This means picking our battles, prioritizing struggles that will save lives above frivolous topics.

Recent events are instructive. Over rumors that Trump might dismiss the independent investigator of the Russia allegations, some liberals have suggested that the Resistance respond with massive street protests if he follows through. Apart from the twitterati, however, few Americans actually care about the Russia investigation. Meanwhile, though active in pushing for voters to call their representatives, these same people have been conspicuously silent about the possibility of a similar mobilization in support of saving the Affordable Care Actlet alone pushing for single payer healthcare.

Likewise, commentators have devoted huge amounts of time to covering the drama of the inner workings of the Trump administration, right down to the specific ways in which Trump demeaned Reince Priebus, his former chief of staff. As far as I can tell, coverage of these stories and the bickering accompanying public responses to itutterly irrelevant to anyone struggling to feed their families, find work, or afford health carehave come to eclipse legitimate work about finding a way forward.

Meanwhile, the Democrats recently unveiled their Better Deal , something that has generated remarkably little discussion, apart from the lefts mockery of the milquetoast slogan they rolled out with it. Though embarrassingly limited in its vision, this marks a step forward, and something deserving of attention and serious consideration, regardless of whether we think it goes far enough or not. We should be talking with one another about this plan, or our own visions for the future. What is wrong with with the Democrats vision? What is right with it? Is there something we can do to protect vulnerable communities by statute rather than by executive order or administrative interpretation? Lets argue about that.

We also need to consider whether our own back-and-forths are worth the energy. It is not that important, for example, to prove were right who the real hero is in the healthcare debate. As people interested in pushing back against the Trump administrations policies and advancing a progressive agenda, we should start talking about precisely those policies and that agenda; this entails narrowing our focus, relegating the court politics of the federal government and pointless flame wars to where they belong: gossip columns.

Your Support Has Never Been More Critical

Other news outlets have retreated behind paywalls. At HuffPost, we believe journalism should be free for everyone.

Would you help us provide essential information to our readers during this critical time? We can't do it without you.

Support HuffPost