Americans need more political candidates for – and from – the working class.
In Illinois, more than one-third of votes in November’s election were early – more than in 2020, says the state Board of Elections, which also noted that while voting by mail remained popular (with some 1 million casting ballots that way), that’s only about half the 2020 elections. Overall, the turnout was the lowest in 40 years, meaning 20 federal elections.
There are many possible reasons, but one deserving more attention of citizens, if not civic organizations and political parties, is the lack of candidate from the working class.
In communities, whether in business, education, labor, religion, etc., it’s common and effective to draw on the experience and expertise of people who’ve been in the trenches, whether construction sites, hospitals, classrooms, offices, sanctuaries… We turn to those familiar with the jobs and the problems for insights. If people dislike an assembly bottleneck, it makes sense to go to a factory worker on the line; price of gas or groceries get your attention? A filling station owner or grocer might explain now the consolidation and near-monopoly practices of big corporations limits prices at the pump and on the shelves more than the government.
Most Americans work for a living and are in the working class or are struggling but at least half of members of Congress are millionaires. Because most political candidates aren't working class, few people vote, or settle for promises we may suspect are hogwash.
The working class is usually written off or taken for granted by the professional political class, their paid consultants, and the PACs and campaign contributors.
“Working-class voters have been cut adrift,” wrote Dustin Guastella, a Teamsters official in Philadelphia active in the Center for Working Class Politics (CWCP). “Their views and voices are invisible in Washington, and they see no real champions for their interests.
“The lack of working-class representation in government is also one major factor in explaining the dysfunction in our politics and the persistence of economic policies that seem to only benefit the rich,” he said.
Maybe this fall’s disappointing turnout will alert some people, along with the impressive results by independent Dan Osborn, the first-time candidate running without party support for the U.S. Senate from Nebraska who lost the race by 8 points (while Kamala Harris lost the state by 21 points).
Another independent, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (who caucuses with Democrats), after the election asked, “Will the Democratic leadership learn the lessons of their defeat and create a party that stands with the working class and is prepared to take on the enormously powerful special interests that dominate our economy, our media and our political life?”
Osborn’s campaign was straightforward, relating to people suggesting there are culprits to blame, and explaining what he’d try to do in Washington, where the one-time union president and Navy vet (who earned about $48,000 last year as a steamfitter and mechanic) described the Senate as “a country club of millionaires that work for billionaires.”
A CWCP study showed that among working-class voters, hypothetical candidates with elite or upper-class backgrounds performed significantly worse than everyday Americans. And the working class encompasses different races, faiths, ages, genders, geographies, and so on.
“As a working-class populist, Osborn’s appeal cut across the various divisions to unite working people, because to be working class, and to proudly identify as such, is not just to show voters that you ‘feel their pain,’ as Bill Clinton said,” Guastella said. “But that you actually understand the world from their position. And that’s one reason Osborn thinks that getting more workers represented in office is such a good idea.
“Only 2.3% of Democratic candidates worked exclusively in blue-collar jobs before entering politics,” he continued. “Even if we broaden the category to professionals like teachers and nurses, the number is still under 6%.”
Obstacles include time and money. Time off from their jobs and funds to compete with the rich or the juggernaut of cash raised by the elites.
Organizations of mass constituencies, such as labor unions, can help. Osborn has another concept, and he’s formed the “Working Class Heroes Fund” to advocate for working class candidates, for unions and for union strikers.
“The idea is to help other people like me – teachers, nurses, plumbers, carpenters, bus drivers – to be able to run for office in their particular counties, states, areas, and we can help them accomplish that," he told ABC News.
Sanders commented, “The American people are sick and tired of seeing the rich getting richer. They think billionaires dominate both political parties. They want real change, and Dan’s campaign raised those issues in a very significant way.”
He continued, “We need strong working-class candidates who are prepared to run on working-class issues, [asking], ‘Why in the wealthiest country in the history of the world are 60 percent of our people living paycheck to paycheck? Why do 60,000 people a year die because they don’t get to a doctor on time? Why can’t young people afford higher education?’
“Trump had an appeal to working-class people,” Sanders conceded, “but his ‘solutions’ will make a bad situation even worse.”
Indeed, with an economic plan including more tax cuts to corporations and the affluent, and mor tariffs, the working class is going to bear the burden of even higher prices and lost jobs.
Nevertheless, last month, many working-class voters went for Trump even though they were not liars, insurrectionists or racists because it seemed that even if Trump was – or even an aspiring dictator -- those weren’t dealbreakers if the price of eggs got cheaper.
But that’s unfair and probably inaccurate.
“Eight years ago when Trump won, the analyses proclaimed he secured the working-class vote,” said Natalie Y. Moore in the Chicago Sun-Times. “A closer look by political scientists debunked myths about that support.”
So now, looking ahead, will wealthy candidates, almost all of whom depend on rich contributors, really put in the effort to make life better for the working class, whose interests are different?
Really.
The working class needs candidates from our ranks – the rank and file.