Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Political prisoner dilemma

This is a draft oped. It didn't make it as events in Israel are now consuming attention. But sooner or later we need to elect a president and live with the results. I went light on the economics, but you can see the basic game theory of the analysis. It amplifies some comments I made on Goodfellows. 

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 If, as it appears, the election will come down to Trump vs. Biden, the US is headed for a constitutional crisis, and the social, and political chaos that implies. Like prisoners of the economists’ dilemma, there seems no easy way out. 

Whichever wins, the others’ partisans will pronounce the president to be fundamentally illegitimate. In turn, Illegitimacy justifies and emboldens scorched-earth tactics, more norm-busting and institution-destruction.

If Biden wins, Trump supporters will see an official Washington, especially its justice system, enmeshed in presidential politics. They remember Hilary Clinton’s laptop, the Russia collusion hoax, and endless investigations. Now they see sprawling indictments for process and paperwork crimes, that nobody else would be charged for.  They see a Washington-media-intelligence cabal censoring news, from censorship of Covid policy dissenters — who turned out to be largely right — to the Hunter Biden laptop story just before the last election. See the scathing Missouri V. Biden. And they see the Family Business. Sure, Biden, like so many in public office who somehow end up with millions in family wealth, likely has enough lawyers and shell companies to avoid provable illegality.  But illegality is not the issue. Trump supporters will see the stench of the swamp, secret email accounts, the reins of power covering up the embarrassing facts. 

If Trump wins, Democrats will go ballistic. Democrats have refined de-legitimization for decades. Trump’s denialism was almost comical in its incompetent emulation. Recall Bush derangement syndrome, continuing claims that the 2000 election was  stolen or decided by a corrupt court; Stacey Abrams, the #resistance, #not my president. But it’s all worse now. Though Democrats express themselves in legalisms, in the end they feel that Trump’s actions after the last election amount to a nearly treasonous violation of his oath of office to defend the Constitution.

(Before you start yelling your side's spin, take a breath. Yes, you see things differently, but how will they see things, no matter you loud you yell? How will they act? That's what matters.)

Our next election is likely to be chaos, enhancing the voices claiming illegitimacy. The election will be close. There will surely be a nationwide legal battle. Every questionable vote, every smudged postmark, every local decision to stretch a ballot deadline, every change in procedures will end up in court. Losing Democrats will cry “racist voter suppression.” Losing Republicans have gotten good at even more fanciful stolen election claims. 

If the election is decided by courts, heaven help us. The Democrat’s efforts to de-legitimize the Supreme Court are already well under way. Media now routinely refer to every federal judge by the president that appointed him or her, not, say, by the school they went to or their most famous decisions. Large swaths of the population will tell themselves that the election was stolen. 

With No Labels and Kennedy in the fray, it is possible that the election will come down to many ballots in the electoral college. Having tried to de-legitimize Trump for losing the popular vote in 2016, will democrats accept an electoral college result if the popular vote is 40-30-30? Will Republicans? It is possible that the electoral college fails, and the Presidency is decided by the House of Representatives, itself chaotic and under a razor-thin majority. Our Constitution brilliantly prescribes fail-safe procedures to produce a decision. But it only works only if people accept that decision. With so many already opining that the electoral college is an illegitimate anachronism, and with the House in such chaos and low esteem, will losers calmly accept the results of the Constitutional mechanism?

Widely believed, and more widely spun illegitimacy justifies horrendous behavior. You can tell the Jan 6 rioters were play-acting by how unserious they were. People who really believe an election was stolen bring tanks. Widespread violent protests are easy to foresee. 

Widely perceived illegitimacy leads to constitutional crisis and chaos. People will simply disregard presidential actions, action by his appointees, and court orders. They will violently resist attempts to enforce government actions. 

How do we avoid this mess? There is a lot of hope that one or the other party will blink, and choose a vaguely sensible candidate who will then sweep the general election. But candidates are chosen by primaries, a “democratic” reform we may wish to rethink. (Old men in smoke filled rooms, desiring to win a general election, would never have picked these two.) It’s not so easy. 

And even a reasonable candidate will only postpone the deeper question: Why is attacking the legitimacy of elections, institutions, and the courts gaining in strength? It is a scorched earth policy — ruin the institution to gain temporary advantage. 

The answer seems clear: The rewards of winning and the costs of losing are now too great. Narrowly, each of Trump and Biden could well end up in jail if he loses, a situation familiar in, say, Pakistan, but so far undreamt of in the US. Avoiding that is worth a lot of scorched earth. More broadly, winning an election now confers the power to rule by executive order. It confers power over administrative fiat, the power to shower billions on supporters, control of the regulatory machine that lines up corporate support, the power to censor the internet, and the power to hound your opponents and their supporters through the intelligence and judicial system. Losing graciously is a less and less viable option. 

Democracy isn’t so much about who wins elections. Democracy requires the ability to lose elections, admit the legitimacy of the loss, but live on to regroup and win another day. Only when the power of the winners to impose immense changes with narrow majorities is constrained can losers do that.


39 comments:

  1. I was too new to the US to care about it when it happened, but having the Supreme Court decide the results of the presidential election by a 5-4 decision where those 5 judges were Republican appointees is .... not a good look.

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    1. As regards Democrat unhappiness with the 2000 election, here's what Gore said after the Supreme Court ruling:
      "(P)artisan rancor must now be put aside. I accept the finality of the outcome, which will be ratified next Monday in the Electoral College. And tonight, for the sake of our unity as a people and the strength of our democracy, I offer my concession.”

      With the best will in the world, and despite having 0% confidence in Gore in every other respect, that's a bit different to Trump's ranting following the 2020 election (and still continuing)...

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    2. Yes, as Nixon did in 1960. But many others still deny 2000, ignoring that bush did in the end have the votes. Just heard Carville do it a few days ago.

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    3. The 5-4 trope tests it's ugly head again. 2 democrat appointed judges said Florida does not have to follow it's election laws. 2 said they do but we'll give them as many chances as they need to get the result they want. It wasn't a good look, as you say.

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    4. Justice Scalia said that the decision to abrogate the Florida [Democratic Party] Supreme Court's decision was 7-2. The disagreements were about possible remedies.

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  2. "Only when the power of the winners to impose immense changes with narrow majorities is constrained can losers do that."

    In the Senate they call that the filibuster.

    "In the United States House of Representatives, the filibuster (the right to unlimited debate) was used until 1842, when a permanent rule limiting the duration of debate was created. The disappearing quorum was a tactic used by the minority until Speaker Thomas Brackett Reed eliminated it in 1890."

    Perhaps it's time for the House to replace the motion to vacate with a filibuster rule?

    Right now, a successful motion to vacate brings the entire House engine to a grinding stop. Better that a filibuster brings individual pieces of legislation to a stand still.

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    1. Interesting, but...the House cannot even elect or maintain a Speaker now. Could there be enough votes in either party (or both parties, acting bipartsanly) to so change the rules? I think not, and I guess I'd say I'm as concerned as the grumpy economist.

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    2. "Could there be enough votes in either party (or both parties, acting bipartsanly) to so change the rules?"

      I think a rules change as proposed above would assuage those who are concerned that the same thing can happen two weeks, one month, 3 years down the road when a small faction is upset with the status quo.

      It can just as easily happen in the Democratic Party with a Green Party / Anti-War Party, etc. faction.

      Individual members should be able to buck the party line on key issues that are important to them. That doesn't mean they should be able to bring the entire government apparatus to a screeching halt.

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  3. IMO too hostile to the reader while also making it sound like both "sides" are equally concerning (even minimizing Jan 6 in the process). Perfect for the WSJ, I guess.

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    1. It was hard to write, trying to be balanced and knowing readers on each side would be convinced of the righteousness of their cause, the truth of their spin, and perfidity of the other side. Be quiet and listen is a tough message.

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    2. John, you were very balanced. Despite the fact that I loathe Trump, I see the Democrats as easily the bigger threat. They control the universities, most of the media, much of the regulatory bureaucracy, and show no hesitation in censoring views they dislike. Making your post sound more sympathetic to the Democrats would just put off Republicans as well as people like me who are neither R nor D but see the latter as the larger threat.

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    3. I thought it was a sensible and even handed article. The most interesting point was the high cost of losing argument.

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  4. Take heart. There are many other possibilities. An independent can win. It happened in the 1859 election. The result was a new party (Republican) which came from the old Whig party when it grew tired of the old policies, and a new President called Abraham Lincoln. The southern states seceded over states rights and slavery, and the civil war, however with the numerous variation of issues these days, the likelihood of their coalescing into a similar them is quite low. It is doubtful that any states will secede, but geographically speaking, it is likely that many cities may burn as they did in 1968.

    The United States still has a large majority of quite stable voters who do not follow the extremes. They may provide the resilience which historically they always have. The system was designed to provide that stability.

    On the other hand, in the 1920, 1924, elections after the first progressive period of politics (Wilson), the turn to the Republican party was made by the largest majority in U.S. political history. It led to similar results in the 1928 elections.

    Variations on a theme are always possible.

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    1. The two parties are really not extremes. It is their rhetoric that is extreme. In reality, they both support a massively interventionist state.

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    2. Self -interested politicians are subject to incentives as any other individual. Whether republican or dem, they wield coercive authority. A third party of neo-liberal politicians would, hopefully, be more judicious of applying power vested in them. Less inclined to interfere in the lives of individuals. Less inclined to pick winners and losers. advocates of free markets. Fiscally responsible. Deregulation. One can hope.

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    3. Oh, you noticed that too. Globally also.

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  5. Great piece, John, and thanks for pointing out a new-to-me cause of polarization, i.e., the eclipse of smoke-filled rooms by primaries. FWIW, here is something I wrote that made some of the same points - https://subgameperfect.substack.com/p/sore-losers.

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  6. I think we need to start looking past the current democratic algorithm, and start developing a new algorithm that is based on what humanity has learned since 1789.

    The problems the US is currently experiencing are global. Divisiveness, budget problems, and lack of strategy are problems in just about every democracy on the planet.

    I would suggest learning from corporate board governance to make the following two changes. First, rather than having the legistlature consists of people who each represent a segment (geographic in the US, party based outside) of the country, each representative should be elected in a national election on a rolling schedule. Second, reprentatives should enjoy and be subject to the same sort of incentive management given corporate board members.

    Although this is a huge change, if we want to move past the problems facing democracies globally, we need to improve on the system.

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  7. Thought provoking. But in my view, society's progress and order start with the ability of leaders and influencers (the real ones, including this blog author) to tell different things apart. With that in mind, the narrative relies too much on two-sideism. I will try to be selective for conciseness' sake.

    Factoid 1. In 2000, Gore went to the courts (his right, within the norms), lost, and conceded. Oh, there was also a concession speech. Same with Nixon in 1960, another tight election where allegations of irregularities were at play. Same with Hillary in 2016, lost and conceded. Fast forward to 2020, and a very different pattern altogether was followed, even before the election . Now, one can quibble with the importance of the loser conceding publicly, but let us not call all sorts of views and actions "delegitimizing" without addressing certain important distinctions. Concession speeches are an important part of American democracy. Maybe one can debate whether its symbolism or norms more generally matter (I believe they do), but in 2020, we didn't have a concession speech. Not the day after the election, not after the votes were certified ahead of inauguration after court challenges were decided/dismissed. Pointing to irregularities is one thing, calling it stolen is another thing altogether. It acquires a very different meaning, even in a well-functioning democracy. If we fail to see that distinction and its ramifications, that's really bad news and two-sideism becomes nothing more than hand waving or worse.

    Factoid 2. Russia "hoax": one interpretation is the tactical collusion, for which evidence is inconclusive; another interpretation is that of David Frum's -- of a broader alignment of interests. Adhering to a particular interpretation is well within one's first amendment rights. But again, that does not mean delegitimizing anything. It just doesn't follow. Actually, there was a concession speech and no riots/demonstrations that obstructed the functioning of government and peaceful transition of power (Biden and Gore 16 years before did what they were supposed to). Calling it a "hoax" is a step too far in light of the facts. There was interference and there were public calls for interference by one of the candidates in 2016. whether and how it altered outcomes is not even needed to make a point here. Imagine interference didn't happen. We could still say that one of the major candidates publicly called for interference by another country in American elections. Again, an exercise in free speech and norm busting for sure, but with no clear equivalent on the other side.

    I could go on. But I would never equate exercising free speech with "delegitimizing" outcomes. Some folks may think and say that W was not a legitimate president because a 5-4 SC decision "handed" the outcome. I disagree. Folks may think and say that voting right laws may influence elections in pernicious ways. They can repeat that ad nauseum - that's free speech. But when you go beyond court challenges, and "bust norms" by inciting people to obstruct the functioning of government, call judges/prosecutors "thugs", that's not only an exercise in free speech. But in the name of free speech we can each decide for ourselves what that is and so help us God.

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    1. Very well put …

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    2. Can you link me the video of Hillary Clinton conceding in 2016? I don't remember that

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  8. This may be an interesting test of the 12th Amendment. Assume a situation as in 1860. Trump-Biden-Spoiler; no Electoral College majority. Since the counting of the electoral votes would be on a date after the new House of Representatives had been sworn in, which States would have majorities for one or the other?

    This is perfectly democratic, with republican structures to prevent an unstable clash of demonic mobs who shout, “the election was stolen.”

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  9. Wonderfully coherent, John. I'm first-timer here on your blog and glad to have found it. Indeed the upcoming presidential election will be tumultuous. At best. I'm of the mindset that we'll have widespread civil unrest - unrest that could become something leading to a more permanent change to our fine republic. Calamitous times, indeed. Times I never could have imagined growing up the the US northwest in the 70's and southern California in the 80's and 90's. Can we, perhaps, publish a casting call for the next JFK in time for the primaries? I can only see the avoidance of the fracture of the country from a genuine unifier. What is Kiefer Sutherland doing post-Designated Survivor? Tom Kirkman is our guy!

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  10. The old men in a smoke filled room managed to put forth Adlai Stevenson for Governor of Illinois and Paul Douglas for Senator, in 1948. Men of character, but 75 years ago. What's happened?

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  11. This all sounds reasonable and all too likely. But if reasonable Dem policy makers see this, what are their incentives to avoid it by instigating a WW3 (and getting a hefty patriotic bump at the polls + getting to censor with impunity)?

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  13. 2024 must be an election without all the drop off mail in ballot harvesting nonsense. This will clear much of the noise surrounding 2020 and the corresponding echoe chambers will reverborate slightly less. A return to the economy of December 2019 will quiet much kitchen table finance issues as well. All of this would be academic if we had a voter participation level in the 80th percentile rather than the low 50th percentile. Lets talk in thirteen months or so.

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    1. Low percentile voter turnout…somehow delegitimises electoral outcomes? But long study of (internationally comparative, onerous hyper democratic ballot) US elections finds non-voters affirming the outcome of elections even with lower participation rates. The pursuit of high turnout is a canard because our election ballots are LONG and require study even from the bright, intelligent, and politically aware voter. Thus, you’re beating a non-starter dead horse.

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  14. If we're to really look into the root cause of the mess we find ourselves, I will argue it has been the sacrifice of education (not just a US problem) at the behest of economic interests (very broad term here, as its effects are far reaching, of course). As I observe MAGA adherents speak, it becomes all too clear to me that we're simply an undereducated society of people. Educated people with a more evolved worldview are much less inclined to become entangled in cult-like scenarios. Alas, if I were president of the world, my first executive order would be to send every young person aged 18 to a deeply foreign country to live for a year as part of their pathway to university or the jobs market. We simply need to place a much greater emphasis on education...in my (simple) view.

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  15. btw, John C, thanks for pushing this snowball over the edge of the summit.

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  16. My takeaway is that we need a smaller Federal government. These elections have become so crazy because as you note the Executive branch continues to usurp authority. I think that the ability to print money plays a large part in how dysfunctional DC has become. Instead of debating trade offs, politicians just spend more and carve out loop holes for lobbyist.

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  17. From what I see in the political life in my little country Bulgaria, I think that abandonning your primary elections tradition would be a huge mistake. It is about finding a "good package" of political ideas that would resonate best, it is about the adecuate "supply" of ideas and suggestions. I doubt that a committee is capable to do that, it would practice a power play within the (whatever big tent) party and eventually it can establish a forced concensus that might fracture it.

    Government is Big, stakes are high, you came to this state after decades and some minor tweaks wouldn't be enough. I think that only a good luck in the future presented as a good candidate might break the dillema. And then there must be another good luck about facing the unpleasant problems seriously. :-)

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    1. This is an important comment, and I agree. I was too quick in the essay. People bemoan how long US elections take, and the long dragged out primary contests. But as I have watched them, we learn a great deal about candidates along the way. In the absence of primaries, we would have only one shot to evaluate each candidate's carefully spun talking points. There is always a tension between fighting within a party to see which factions will win the party, and producing a candidate that can win the general election. The current system produces too much of the former, but that is not a reason to throw it entirely overboard and go back to smoke filled rooms. That system also produced some awful candidates, many with hidden weaknesses that a primary would have exposed.

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  18. Great analysis, John. The big question is how did US institutions mutate so badly into this delegitimizing spiral, and, how the heck do we fix it? My gut instinct is that the demise of journalism is the pillar of democracy that crumbled, and I'm not sure how to restore it. Maybe AI will save us.

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    1. The intelligence institutions have too much powder and been weaponized by one party. The legal system is collapsing as well. The government uses fake evidence to prosecute its dissidents while hides crime evidence and prevents investigation of the leader in power. John is just brave enough to scratch the surface of the problem.

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  19. Who would your "vaguely sensible candidate" be? Polls show that Nikki Haley, Ron Desantis, and all the rest perform WORSE against Biden than Trump does. Likewise, polls show that Gavin Newsom, Kamala Harris, etc. perform WORSE against Trump than Biden does.

    Your writing is heroically balanced in terms of not favoring one side over the other, but it is unbalanced in terms of taking for granted your own point of view that both candidates are loathsome, when millions of Americans disagree with you on that. It may be inconceivable to you, but plenty of people actually LIKE Donald Trump, and plenty of people LIKE Joe Biden. If that weren't the case, we wouldn't be here.

    Unfortunately this doesn't change your core point that a constitutional crisis is likely, but it does underscore how difficult and deeply entrenched the situation is. Yes, you heard me right, your post is trying to paint a picture that's apocalyptic and I'm saying you're too optimistic.

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  20. I like that both Biden and Trump may end up going to jail, except that only one has been indicted in four different jurisdictions, with several cooperating witnesses, while the other has had a Congressional inquiry where even the conservative witnesses would not say that there was any illegality. This is a views differ on shape of the world argument.

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  21. Arrow’s Impossibility theorem looms large.

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