So what is American liberalism, and how (if at all) has it
changed since the 60’s? Is it truly
as
irrelevant to our times as the "re-branding" of Senator Clinton and others would seem
to indicate? In its broadest meaning,
the classical political liberalism that emerged in the 17th and 18th
centuries based upon constitutional government and individual rights is an
intellectual heritage shared by liberals and conservatives alike. It was in the late 19th and early
20th centuries, heralding the emergence of corporations and the
rapid expansion of wage labor, when today’s liberals and conservatives began to
part ways.
The essential difference revolved around their approach to
what was called the “social question”:
what is to be done about the poverty and insecurity generated by the new
economic and social order? Or, to put
it somewhat differently, is the unequal distribution of economic power a threat
to liberal government? Future
conservatives thought freedom was best protected by property rights, contract,
and a limited government, and generally denied the existence and relevance of
the whole idea of “economic power.”
Pushed by social movements as well as theological developments (the
Social Gospel for Protestants, and the papal
encyclical Rerum Novarum for Catholics), future
liberals began to articulate a broader definition of effective freedom, a more
robust conception of power, a moral need for social solidarity, and a new role
for government.
Modern American liberalism came into its own under
Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the thirties and forties. The
commonly told political story is that liberalism triumphed in 1936, and in the
post-war era shaped a politically dominant “consensus” that wasn’t shaken until
the late sixties, liberalism’s “high water mark.” Liberals were never really as
dominant as people think; conservatives had limited liberals from the very
beginning of what’s understood as the liberal/conservative dichotomy, not
suddenly in the 60s. The New Deal
coalition patched together by
Franklin Roosevelt in 1936 was limited from its inception by the political and
racial conservatism of the apartheid South, as well as by a conservative
business class that became increasingly active politically in the Cold War
era. The ability of liberalism to
grapple with the two central dilemmas of 20th century American life
the social question, and race was severely circumscribed by steady
opposition from the very beginning.
While one can certainly criticize the limits of liberalism’s reach on
these two issues (particularly the latter), one must also properly understand
the limits of its grasp.
Pushed by the reborn labor
movement, Franklin Roosevelt provided American liberalism’s answer to the
social question. Liberalism borrowed
its moral sensibilities from the seemingly “unliberal” notions of solidarity
and interdependence, but deployed them in the service of liberalism’s essential
concern: freedom. Because of the Great Depression, Roosevelt
argued, “we have been compelled to learn how interdependent upon each other are
all groups and sections of the population of America.” This interdependence convinced Roosevelt
that “true individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and
independence,” because “necessitous men are not free men.” In an economy dominated by “the often intangible
forces of giant industry,” Roosevelt argued in 1938, a person’s “individual
strength and wits” cannot guarantee security or freedom any more. More than anything else, Roosevelt argued,
Americans want “work, with all the moral and spiritual values that go with it;
and with work, a reasonable measure of security” for them and their
families. Modern freedom required an
opportunity to make a decent living not just enough to live by, but also
“something to live for,” in Roosevelt’s words.
American liberalism was a public philosophy of both individual freedoms and social solidarity. Not only were these things not mutually
exclusive; they depended upon one another.
The imbalance of economic power in
American society, Roosevelt insisted, had led a growing number of citizens to
believe that liberty was no longer real.
Government must do more than just protect the right to vote; it must
also “protect the citizen in his right to work and his right to live?freedom is
no half-and-half affair.” This would
not deny individual responsibility; rather, it would define it in a way that
seemed reasonable and fair to people in the real world. Freedom from desperate conditions security
was thus an essential supplement to political freedom. This was an old idea, deeply rooted in the
nation’s founding. It was based on the
old republican notion of freedom as "self-government," as articulated by Paine, Jefferson,
and many others. The needy lack the independence and security
to be self-governing, and thus they are not free citizens.
Roosevelt’s answer to the social
question became the centerpiece of a powerful public philosophy that dominated
American liberalism into the 1960s. Indeed,
throughout the developed West (and Japan) in the decades after World War II,
the notion of a “social contract” that
democratized wealth and opportunity became widespread, contributing to economic
expansion and the growth of a stable and prosperous middle-class. Welfare states were established, embodying a
generation’s hopes for universal economic security and protection from the
worst of life’s hazards. In the US the
G.I. Bill typified this use
of Hamiltonian means to Jeffersonian ends, helping to spark a massive expansion
of home ownership and college attendance.
Economic, tax and social policy, investments in infrastructure
(highways, education, and especially housing), and the growth in collective bargaining,
were primary factors that helped to broadly distribute the nation’s
unprecedented prosperity. This, in
turn, provided widespread access to property ownership, education, and mass
consumption for millions of white Americans.
Today, liberalism no longer
concerns itself with the "social question."
Indeed, it has not done so for decades now. It is this, as much as anything, that lends credence to many of
the criticisms directed at liberals from all sides. It isn’t that liberalism lacks any kind of moral core, as
conservatives assert; nor is it overly individualistic and rights-based, as
more friendly critics contend. For much
of the 20th century American liberalism was a public philosophy
grounded in social solidarity and a moral (and even theological) critique of
inequalities of power.
There are many reasons why the
social question has dropped out of American political discourse. One could argue, for example, that the
institutional and geographic underpinnings of social solidarity have greatly
eroded in recent decades, as white Americans decamped to the suburbs, our older
cities imploded under the pressure of economic change and racialized neglect,
and unions lost their radical edge and then their membership. Only a militarized patriotism seems capable
of successfully evoking solidarity today.
One could argue that the inability (and frequent unwillingness) of
liberals to overcome white resistance to a solidarity that fully included black
Americans generated a chastening backlash against all active government. The growing political power of corporations
has also played a role, joining with conservatives to fetishize “free” markets
and deny that government has any meaningful role to play in shaping the material
preconditions of effective freedom.