What Effective Protest Could Look Like
Perspective from the right on Trump’s political challenge for the left
The Atlantic | 6 February 2017
David Frum is a senior editor at The Atlantic and the chairman of Policy Exchange. In 2001–02, he was a speechwriter for President George W. Bush.
Fourteen years ago, I found myself an unexpected micro-target of a
left-liberal protest demonstration. I had visited London to watch the
debate and subsequent vote in the House of Commons over the Iraq war
resolution. A huge demonstration against the war snaked down Whitehall
toward Parliament. I wandered into Trafalgar Square for a view. Somebody
recognized me as a recent alumnus of the Bush administration; arguably
its least important member, but undeniably the closest at hand. A small
throng surrounded me, and there followed what the diplomats would
describe as a candid exchange of views.
Midlife brings strange changes to us all. After a lifetime
of viewing demonstrations from the other side of the barricades, I was
one of the many who admired the orderly commitment and resolution of the
women’s march on Washington the day after President Trump’s
inauguration. Yet my admiration is mixed with worry. As I step through
the police lines, I bring a message with me: Your demonstrations are
engineered to fail. They didn’t stop the Iraq war. They won’t stop
Donald Trump.
With the rarest exceptions—and perhaps the January 21 demonstration will prove to be one—left-liberal demonstrations are exercises in catharsis, the
release of emotions. Their operating principle is self-expression, not
persuasion. They lack the means, and often the desire, to police their
radical fringes, with the result that it’s the most obnoxious and even
violent behavior that produces the most widely shared and memorable
images of the event. They seldom are aimed at any achievable goal; they
rarely leave behind any enduring program of action or any organization
to execute that program. Again and again, their most lasting effect has
been to polarize opinion against them—and to empower the targets of
their outrage. And this time, that target is a president hungering for
any excuse to repress his opponents. Look at how Trump positioned the
University of California—whose out-numbered police battled to defend the
speech rights of one of the most provocative and obnoxious of Trump’s
minions—as a target for retaliation.
Trump’s statement is
precisely the opposite of the truth. But it’s become dogma in
Trumpworld, including even to many Trump-skeptical conservatives.
Protesters may be up against something never before seen in American
life: a president and an administration determined to seize on unrest to
legitimate repression. Those protesters are not ready for it. Few
Americans are.
It’s
possible I’m not the right person to offer the following analysis. Yet
it’s also a good rule to seek wisdom wherever it may be found. So here’s
what I have to offer from the right, amid the storms of the Trump era.
The more conservative protests are, the more radical they are.
You want to scare Trump? Be orderly, polite, and visibly patriotic.
Trump
wants to identify all opposition to him with the black-masked crowbar
thugs who smashed windows and burned a limo on his inauguration day.
Remember Trump’s tweet about stripping citizenship from flag burners?
It’s beyond audacious that a candidate who publicly requested help from
Russian espionage services against his opponent would claim the flag as
his own. But Trump is trying. Don’t let him get away with it. Carry the
flag. Open with the Pledge of Allegiance. Close by singing the Star
Spangled Banner––like these protesters at LAX, in video posted by The Atlantic’s
own Conor Friedersdorf. Trump’s presidency is itself one long
flag-burning, an attack on the principles and institutions of the
American republic. That republic’s symbols are your symbols. You should
cherish them and brandish them.
Don’t get sucked into the futile squabbling cul-de-sac of intersectionality and grievance politics. Look at this roster of speakers from the January 21 march. What is Angela Davis
doing there? Where are the military women, the women police officers,
the officeholders? If Planned Parenthood is on the stage, pro-life women
should stand there, too. If you want somebody to speak for immigrants,
invite somebody who’s in the country lawfully.
Since
his acceptance speech in Cleveland, Donald Trump has made clear that he
wants to wage a Nixon-style culture war: cops against criminals,
soldiers against pacifists, hard hats against hippies. Don’t be
complicit. If you want to beat him, you have to reject his categories.
“Tone
policing” has entered the left-of-center vocabulary as one of the worst
possible things you can do or think. In fact, all effective political
communication must carefully consider both tone and content. If the
singer Madonna wants to indulge herself in loose talk about political
bombing, let her do it on her own platform, not yours. If you see guys
with crowbars in the vicinity of your meeting, detain them yourselves
and call the cops. You’re the defenders of the Constitution, the
Republic, and the Western Alliance. Act like it.
Strategic thinking; inclusive action
The
classic military formula for success: concentrate superior force at a
single point. The Occupy Wall Street movement fizzled out in large part
because of its ridiculously fissiparous list of demands and its failure
to generate a leadership that could cull that list into anything
actionable. Successful movements are built upon concrete single demands
that can readily be translated into practical action: “Votes for women.”
“End the draft.” “Overturn Roe v. Wade.” “Tougher punishments for drunk driving.”
People
can say “yes” to such specific demands for many different reasons.
Supporters are not called upon to agree on everything, but just one
thing. “End the draft” can appeal both to outright pacifists and to
military professionals who regard an army of volunteers as more
disciplined and lethal than an army of conscripts. Critics of Roe run
the gamut from those who wish a total ban on all abortions to legal
theorists who believe the Supreme Court overstepped itself back in 1973.
So it should be for critics
of President Trump. “Pass a law requiring the Treasury to release the
President’s tax returns.” “An independent commission to investigate
Russian meddling in the US election.” “Divest from the companies.” These
are limited asks with broad appeal.
On the other hand,
if you build a movement that lists those specific and limited goals
along a vast and endlessly unfolding roster of others from “preserve
Dodd Frank” to “save the oceans”—if you indulge the puckish
anti-politics of “not usually a sign guy, but geez”—you will collapse
into factionalism and futility.
The Democratic party
remains open for business. If your concerns are classic Democratic
concerns, you know where to go. But if you are building a movement to
protect American democracy from the authoritarianism of the Trump
administration, you should remember that the goal is to gain allies
among people who would not normally agree with you. Just as the
iconography of your protest should originate in the great American
mainstream, the core demand of your movement should likewise be easy to
explain and plausibly acceptable to that mainstream, stretching from
Bernie voters to Romney donors.
Here are a few useful tests:
a) Could this demand be achieved by a law passed through Congress?
b) Can I imagine my Rush Limbaugh listening brother-in-law agreeing with it?
c) Can I tweet it?
If so … good.
Alternatively
d) Would I still be upset about this if Marco Rubio were president now?
If so … bad.
Protests are fun; meetings are effective
Protests
can be powerful. Just this past week, the Romanian government withdrew a
law intended to protect high-level corruption in the face of mass
demonstrations in the streets of Bucharest. Big mobilizations send the
message politicians most fear to hear: “A lot of us are mad at you.”
That message resounds especially forcefully in the ears of Trump, so
obsessed with the massive popular vote tally against him.
But bodies in the street represent only potential
power, not actual power. Even the largest rally must sooner or later
disassemble and return home. What happens after that? The difference
between Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party was that only the second
movement translated the energy and excitement of its early mass meetings
into steady organizational work aimed at winning elections.
Protests
can energize people and overawe governments. But it is the steady and
often tedious work of organization that sustains democracy—and can
change the world. Protests are useful mostly to the extent that they
mobilize people to participate in the follow-up meetings to realize the
protest’s goals. Collect names and addresses. Form Facebook groups. Keep
in touch. Don’t argue: recruit. Meet in real space as well as online.
Serve cake. Make your presence felt on your local elected officials not
just once, but day after day, week in, week out. Make them feel that
they could lose their individual seats if they do not heed you. They
feel the pressure from lobbyists all the time…to succeed, you should be
equally focused and persistent. And that requires above all: be
motivated by hope, not outrage.
The outrage may get you
started, but only hope keeps you going. Hope, as Vaclav Havel insisted,
is an expression of the state of our minds, not a description of the
state of the world. It powers you to undertake the daunting but
essential mission: unlimited efforts for limited goals. You’re not
trying to save the world. Just to pass one law. It doesn’t sound like
much. It could be everything.
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