The dawn of the anti-woke era
Having rejected the Democrats’ progressivist dogma, the American electorate is undergoing a social and demographic revolution.
By Christopher Caldwell Dec. 4, 20241/4(excellent but long)
In late November, a California judge rejected a demand by several women’s volleyball teams to disqualify a transgender player for San Jose State before this year’s tournament. Six opponents have forfeited games against the team this year rather than collude in what they see as cheating. The larger question of transgender athletes in college sports will be decided later, but the judge is defending a lost cause.Fewer than a quarter of Americans (23 per cent) support allowing transgender athletes to play on women’s teams. Teams that do field trans athletes are sometimes booed off the pitch.Such feelings go a long way towards explaining Donald Trump’s resounding win in November’s presidential election.
Washingtonians are often asked what it feels like to watch the second age of Trump dawn. Oddly, it does not feel much like his first arrival in 2016. It feels more like Barack Obama’s in 2008 or Bill Clinton’s in 1992 –less a political than a social revolution, in which philosophical habits will be broken along with political hierarchies. This particularsocial revolution owes most of its energy to a revulsion against woke. That is the source of the new era’s promise and danger.
Trump left office only four years ago.Washington rejected him – somatically, as in a botched organ transplant. Having squeaked into power on an anti-establishment platform, he arrived in the capital to find the establishment bloodied but unbowed. Hostile neighbours on Tennyson Street hung rainbow flags in front of the house where his vice-president Mike Pence was staying during the transition. By the CVS drugstore at Connecticut Avenue and McKinley, activists waved signs at honking motorists throughout December.
The day after the inauguration in 2017, over 200,000 women, decked out in “pussyhats” and led by establishment celebrities from Scarlett Johansson to Emma Watson, descended on the Mall. It shook the city:it was the largest collection of protest marchers since the Vietnam War, and drew a considerably larger crowd than the inauguration ceremony. The mood was defiant.
There’s none of that now. The mood in Washington’s progressive neighbourhoods is more one of muttered commiseration. (And they are all progressive neighbourhoods: in the capital city, Harris defeated Trump 93 per cent to 7 per cent.)
The country no longer wants the establishment’s advice on its choice of president. Democrats can blame their own spite. Not content to defeat Trump at the ballot box, as they had in 2020, they set out to defeat him in the courts, lending their support to a number of court cases as election season heated up.They wound up doing grievous harm to their party and country.
One was a civil case against Trump for defamation, in which he was ordered to pay $83m in damages to the claimant, E Jean Carroll, for accusing her of fabricating her allegation that he had sexually assaulted her in the 1990s. In a second civil case, Trump was accused of frauds centered largely on the overvaluation of a New York City apartment on a loan application and ordered to pay $355m.
Elsewhere, in criminal proceedings, Trump was convicted of what Harris and her campaign liked to describe as “34 felonies”. By this, prosecutors meant one perfectly legal hush-money payment, mislabeled by Trump’s accountants as a “lawyer’s fee” – a misdemeanor, even if you assume it was a mislabeling. It was turned into a felony through the use of a never-before-deployed technicality, and multiplied by 34 by turning each monthly instalment into a separate crime.
https://www.newstatesman.com/international-politics/2024/12/dawn-anti-woke-era