The Them Vs. US Election, by Kim Strassel
This recaps the Scott Rasmussen survey about the 1% "elite" and their fanatical, authoritarian views. I'm linking and quoting it here to keep it more visible over the coming days.
Talk about out of touch. Among the elite, 74% say their finances are getting better, compared with 20% of the rest of voters. (The share is 88% among elites who are Ivy League graduates.) The elite give President Biden an 84% approval rating, compared with 40% from non-elites. And their complete faith in fellow elites extends beyond Mr. Biden. Large majorities of them have a favorable view of university professors (89%), journalists (79%), lawyers and union leaders (78%) and even members of Congress (67%). Two-thirds say they'd prefer a candidate who said teachers and educational professionals, not parents, should decide what children are taught.
More striking is the elite view on bedrock American principles, central to the biggest political fights of today. Nearly 50% of elites believe the U.S. provides "too much individual freedom"--compared with nearly 60% of voters who believe there is too much "government control." Seventy-seven percent of elites support "strict rationing of gas, meat, and electricity" to fight climate change, vs. 28% of everyone else. More than two-thirds of elite Ivy graduates favor banning things like gasoline-powered cars and stoves and inessential air travel in the name of the environment. More than 70% of average voters say they'd be unwilling to pay more than $100 a year in taxes or costs for climate--compared with 70% of elites who said they'd pay from $250 up to "whatever it takes."
This framing explains today's politics better. While this elite is small, its members are prominent in every major institution of American power, from media to universities to government to Wall Street, and have become more intent on imposing their agenda from above. Many American voters feel helplessly under assault from policies that ignore their situation or values.
What unites "rich" and "poor" parents in the revolt against educational failings? A common rejection of disconnected teachers unions and ivory-tower academics. Why are growing numbers of minorities--across all incomes and education levels--rejecting Democrats? They no longer recognize a progressive movement that reflexively espouses that elite view. Why are voters on both sides--including "free market" conservatives--gravitating to politicians who bash "big business" and trade and are increasingly isolationist? They feel the system is rigged by elites that care more about the globe than them. And why the continued appeal of Mr. Trump? The man is a walking promise to stick it to the "establishment" (never mind that most of his party's establishment has endorsed him).