The Washington political
establishment has hit the panic button. Not because they are afraid of any one
individual or candidate, but because they are afraid of losing their own
political power. The Washington political establishment has hit the panic
button.
This town is filled with
well-intentioned people who believe they are doing the right thing, but far too
many have lost their way after years in Washington. Politicians pay more
attention to special interests groups and powerful lobbyists writing checks to
their next campaign, than listening to the people back home who sent them here
in the first place.
This dangerous power vacuum has
fueled frustration and created an entirely new breed of disenfranchised voters
who are fed up with the status quo. These are real people, their anger is
palpable, and it’s not going away anytime soon.
A
recent survey of likely Republican primary voters showed that 86 percent
believe that “people like me don’t have any say about what the government
does.” Another recent exit poll in my home state of Georgia showed six in ten
Republicans felt “betrayed” by their political party.
This sentiment is something I heard
countless times during my campaign for the United States Senate just over a
short year ago. It is what pulled me to get involved personally to try and make
a difference. But this is not just happening in Georgia. People across America
are angry, frustrated, and scared because they feel like Washington is not
listening to them.
A growing number of Americans are
more motivated by this feeling of frustration than any individual political
ideology. The rise of career politicians has completely shifted the political
paradigm from just liberal versus conservative.
There is now a disconnect between
the Washington political class and everybody else—the insiders versus the
outsiders. When most Americans look at the
federal government, all they see are years of failed policies that have made
life harder for them and their families, and a political class that is well
connected and uninterested in giving them a say in how to right the ship.
People are still hurting, and they
are weary of Washington’s penchant for business as usual. Georgians sent
me—someone who had never run for elected office—to the United States Senate to
try and do something about it and change the system. In state after state this
year, voters have voiced support for presidential candidates who are not part
of the political class.
This is a growing movement, and it
is bigger than any one candidate or election victory. Unless the political
establishment is willing to learn from the anger felt by millions of Americans
who feel left behind, this will not end in November.
True to form, though, political
elites prefer tearing down individuals to understanding what created this
movement. This movement of Americans wants nothing to do with Washington, and
neither endorsements nor criticisms are going to change that.
No matter who our Republican
presidential nominee is at the end of this process, one thing is clear, we
cannot allow Democrats to double down on the failed policies of the last seven
years. A better course of action would be a
candid examination of what can be done to regain the trust of the American
people. Let’s start with simply listening to them.
The Daily Signal is the multimedia
news organization of The Heritage Foundation.
http://dailysignal.com/2016/03/14/why-washingtons-political-class-is-losing-control/
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