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But why do regions that rely on the safety net elect politicians who
want to tear it down? I’ve seen three main explanations.
First, there is Thomas Frank’s thesis in his book “What’s the Matter
With Kansas?”: working-class Americans are induced to vote against their
own interests by the G.O.P.’s exploitation of social issues. And it’s
true that, for example, Americans who regularly attend church are much
more likely to vote Republican, at any given level of income, than those
who don’t.
Still, as Columbia University’s Andrew Gelman points out, the really
striking red-blue voting divide is among the affluent: High-income
residents of red states are overwhelmingly Republican; high-income
residents of blue states only mildly more Republican than their poorer
neighbors. Like Mr. Frank, Mr. Gelman invokes social issues, but in the
opposite direction. Affluent voters in the Northeast tend to be social
liberals who would benefit from tax cuts but are repelled by things like
the G.O.P.’s war on contraception.
Finally, Cornell University’s Suzanne Mettler points out that many
beneficiaries of government programs seem confused about their own place
in the system. She tells us that 44 percent of Social Security
recipients, 43 percent of those receiving unemployment benefits, and 40
percent of those on Medicare say that they “have not used a government
program.”
Presumably, then, voters imagine that pledges to slash government
spending mean cutting programs for the idle poor, not things they
themselves count on. And this is a confusion politicians deliberately
encourage. For example, when Mr. Romney responded to the new Obama
budget, he condemned Mr. Obama for not taking on entitlement spending —
and, in the very next breath, attacked him for cutting Medicare.
The truth, of course, is that the vast bulk of entitlement spending goes
to the elderly, the disabled, and working families, so any significant
cuts would have to fall largely on people who believe that they don’t
use any government program.
The message I take from all this is that pundits who describe America as
a fundamentally conservative country are wrong. Yes, voters sent some
severe conservatives to Washington. But those voters would be both
shocked and angry if such politicians actually imposed their
small-government agenda.
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