The trust gap
Back in April, the Pew Research Center published a poll showing that the American people’s trust in government had hit a 50 year low. Only 22 percent said that they could trust Washington all or most of the time. In the six months that have passed, the relationship has deteriorated still further. An Allstate-National Journal Heartland poll indicates that 58 percent of respondents are less confident in our federal elected officials than they were a year ago.
Government is about trust. This is especially true in a representative democracy, the form of government in which some people govern others only because the people have entrusted authority to them. In our democracy today, public trust is at an historic low. That means an astonishingly high percentage of the population sees an unacceptably wide gap between what the government is doing and what they would like the government to be doing in matters that are decisively important to them.
Given the trust gap, and given especially how widely and clearly the gap has been publicized, people are alarmed that the governing Democrats are proceeding with the transformative change that has brought them into such wide disfavor. Voters have been expressing their alarm in statewide elections (Massachusetts, New Jersey, Virginia), in the primaries leading up to the November elections, in polling responses, and at heavily attended demonstrations. Yet the administration and their legislative allies have shown little interest in moderating their pace and policies.
In fact, we see just the opposite. The more opposition that develops from below, the more determined the efforts become from above. There has even been serious talk of using a lame duck session of Congress (the time between the November election and the swearing in of the new Congress the following January) to pass all the hopelessly unpopular legislation that vulnerable legislators have been afraid to touch (e.g., card check, cap and trade), relying on the support of nothing-to-lose defeated office holders. Call it the Lame Duck Revolution. Remember House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s plan simply to “deem” the unpopular health insurance reform legislation through the House as a way of overcoming the awkward fact that she couldn’t get a majority to pass it? As a consequence of maneuvers and attitudes like this, voters feel increasingly alienated from their government and have become implacably angry.
Legally, President Obama has a mandate to govern. With a four-year term in the White House and a majority in both houses of Congress, constitutionally he can do what he wants. But politically, he is like Wile E. Coyote who has pursued his catch beyond the edge of the cliff and is now running on air and about to fall. Usually, the sight of the cliff is enough to drive even the boldest statesman back closer to the popular will. Yes, he has every legal right to enact whatever legislative agenda he can get through Congress. But there is a diminished moral legitimacy to the acts of government when the great body of the people is strongly against them. Despite our government leaders’ conformity to the due process of law, as the trust gap grows they take on an increasingly tyrannical quality. So, are the Democrats being faithful to the public by following through on their popular mandate for “change,” or are they betraying the public by remaining largely unresponsive to the high levels of distrust the people are expressing? As the president said at the healthcare summit back in February, “That’s what elections are for.”

















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back to top25 Comments to “The trust gap”
It seems that somewhere along the line, those in government need to perceive that more can be written on the walls around them.
“In the same hour came forth fingers of a man’s hand, and wrote over against the candlestick upon the plaister of the wall of the king’s palace: and the king saw the part of the hand that wrote.” (Da 5:5)
He knows the occasions, locations, and ramifications.
“I saw in the night visions, and, behold, [one] like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and they brought him near before him. And there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that all people, nations, and languages, should serve him: his dominion [is] an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom [that] which shall not be destroyed.” (Da 7:13-14)
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Health care reform was not “deemed” into law by Nancy Pelosi. It passed according to the rules, after long and fierce debate, by a majority vote in the House and 60-40 in the Senate. DC INNES is incorrect about these facts. The Affordable Care Act became law properly as the Founders provided.
One third of “the great body of people” wants repeal. Who’s running on air and about to fall?
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Should the Republicans regain control of Washington DC and replace Obamacare with proposals of their own design, they are most likely to come up with something from Heritage Goundation ca. 1990 or Romeneycare. Especially, under Pres. Romney.
Guess what? That’s what Obamacare already is — a heavily “moderated” policy. Perhaps Republicans are less mad about the real content of the policy than about the fact that they don’t have their brand on it.
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Yes, I am “implacably angry”.
And distrust ‘em, You betcha.
Vote ‘em out? Sure. But I have an even better idea.
Impeach every last Democrat, and about two thirds of the Republicans. They are all a bunch of arrogant elitists that haven’t a clue what a budget is.
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It’s crazy that pollsters could find 22% of the population that still trust the govt. it must be that those 22% are all employed in high-paying cushy govt. jobs.
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What’s that verse ” mene, mene tekel…”
“Thou are weighed in the balances and found wanting.” That’s what should be written on the walls in the halls of Congress.
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Ordinary fok will get a chance to speak back to their overseers in November, which can’t come too soon.
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It passed according to the rules…
Not quite. The House passed the Senate version when they realized they didn’t have enough votes in the Senate to overcome a filibuster (due to the election of Scott Brown). Then they got to the compromise version acceptable to both Houses, not by passing amendatory legislation through both houses according to the normal rules, but by use of the “reconciliation” process, which is supposed to be reserved for budget reconciliation of budget bills. This was a corrupt process in its own right. But the Senate version was able to pass in the first place only due to additional corruption – such as the Louisiana Purchase and The Cornhusker Kickback (hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to buy a single vote!). This type of shennanegan is now, unfortunately, typical of the Democratic party, which has become thoroughly corrupt and evil.
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If trust for politicians and government in general is declining, that may simply mean that wisdom is on the rise. The key is to limit them as much as the Constitution calls for them to be limited, and that’s a lot more limited gov’t than we have today.
* “Corruption increases in direct proportion to the size of government and its centralization. This is because it is easier to hide evil within the labyrinth of agencies,, commissions and endless bureaus, especially if it is far removed from the governed.” H.L. Richardson
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Joel Mark, from your lips to God’s ears.
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BUZZY – The Senate passed The Affordable Health Care Act through regular order, that is, with a 60-40 supermajority.
Subsequently, the Senate amended the Act through a vote of the majority, according to the rules. However, the Senate didn’t use a simple majority to pass the underlying Act.
Your narrative skips over the Act to highlight the Reconcilliation Act., which is a separate piece of legislation.
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Buzzy sure can argue process — to no effect– but what about substance? Republicans had no ideas about health care reform which didn’t somehow violate their own absolutist notions about the self-healing miracle of free markets. For example, most Republican policy wonks would impose rules on insurance companies.
Republicans don’t care as much about the content of policy as they do about the way policy may be characterized among themselves. Their entire dispute had little to do with health insurance reform itself but with their need to advertise their opposition to “Death Panels,” their supposed reverence for unregulated markets, and other ephemera.
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Perhaps the lack of trust in government has something to do with the fact that O’Donnell will lie to voters (according to Karl Rove) but wouldn’t lie to Hitler!
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/15/flashback-gop-senate-cand_n_717936.html
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SM- my point was that getting to the final, compromise bill, bypassed the usual process of confrerence committee, followed by a proposed compromise bill, followed by a vote in both houses. Instead, knowing that they didn’t have the Senate votes for that, the House Democrats passed a bill they didn’t want, and then got to the compromise bill through misuse of the budget reconciliation process. The whole saga was corrupt, through and through. As for substance, the Rs correctly saw Obamacare as an unmitigated disaster (read: socialized medicine) and said they didn’t want to go off that cliff. That’s substance enough for me and anyone who sees our country being systematically destroyed. “No” is a good position when the ship is being steered, Titanic-like, into an iceberg.
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Columnist/talking head Charles Krauthammer is the rare voice raising concerns about O’Donnell. Oddly, one of the concerns was about a sexual harassmt complaint against a former employer. Okay, I could see why voters miqht wonder about a candidate with a history of initiating harassmt (or worse, as with the Dem Senate candidate in SC) but if a candidate is an alleged victim/recipient of harassmt, should voters really be concerned? There is the matter of the accused’s privacy to contend with as well
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I can’t wait for November. I’ve been teaching my kids that WE the PEOPLE are ultimately responsible, and WE the PEOPLE are accountable before God for educating ourselves, keeping close tabs on the elected (NOT elites, as they suppose themselves to be), and voting where we have the right (so sorry for the nations where free conscience voting is not practiced). I also teach them that we who follow God, humbly, fearing HIM, might get caught in the storm of judgment, but if we have built on the one true sure foundation, Jesus said we will continue to stand.
I have NO confidence in our voting system, although I will vote. In the last election here in MN, thousands more “voted” than reside in the state! That’s been documented. And my community refused to allow an independent investigation of the fraud that resulted in Al Franken being named one of our senators–I heard this from a conservative who has lived in the city his whole life and has many political connections. He’s frustrated that the press will not do its duty and “press” the issue. But they are in on the fraud, too. My own local paper editor told me he will not investigate an elected representative’s lies–printed in his own paper! That’s why we NEED the internet and Twitter, and why the Dems are so eager to silence the people’s ability to hear through radio and the internet what they are doing, or to keep organiations like the NRA from reporting to their members within 30 or 60 days of an election what the political elitists are doing in that time frame. It’s not just voter fraud, it’s elected fraud: people who don’t do what they were elected to do, and refrain from raping the rest of us.
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Focusing on O’Donnel is a red herring, and misses the bigger picture. Her primary victory was a protest vote, against the systematic destruction of America by the establishment of both parties. Whether she wins or loses in November is of little consequence, even if it causes the Republicans to fail to reach the 51 mark. The bigger picture is that the public is fed up with the Washington establishment, and between November 2010 and November 2012, the public intends to do something about it. The 2008 bailouts under a Republican president, combined with an acceleration of fiscal irresponsibility under a Democrat regime, has triggered a revolution that is presently in the works, even if it takes several cycles to get there. O’Donnell’s victory is proof of that.
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Wow… the right spends three years on a massive propaganda campaign designed to build suspicion of Obama and Democrats in Congress, and then it’s supposedly news that a poll shows people don’t trust the government.
Well of course they don’t. Leading conservative voices have been telling the day after day that the president’s not a citizen and probably is a secret Muslim, that his administration practices “Chicago politics,” that the health care bill contains “death panels,” that it was ramrodded through Congress, and on and on and on.
Maybe if the right would reconsider its “party above country” mentality and stop trying to frame the debate with lies, the trust level would be higher.
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Republicans don’t care as much about the content of policy as they do about the way policy may be characterized among themselves.
I fundamentally disagree with this statement. One of the most unacceptable pieces of this legislation is the unprecedented Federal mandate that private citizens be required to purchase a good or service, in this case, health insurance. In the history of these United States, this has never been done. The reason? It is inarguably unconstitutional. The Federal government has no Constitutional authority to require private citizens to buy something or be fined. While there are other pieces of this legislation that Republicans, Libertarians, Independents, and even some Democrats oppose, this single, one thing embodies the very foundation of their discontent. The government is forcing people to do things against their will; they are taking an individual right to not purchase or particiapte in something and forcing a behavior, which is the exact opposite of liberty. It is tyranny.
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Daughterwifemother – you raise a good point, and one that SM conveniently overlooks. The only reason the Dems were able to get to 60 votes in the first place was due to the stolen election by Franken the Clown (not to mention the fradulent prosecution of the incumbent senator from Alaska). George Soros’s billions of dollars have been bankrolling electoral fraud ever since Bush legitimately won Florida in 2000, as confirmed by the three county-wide recounts and all of the liberal media’s indepent state-wide recounts.
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Conan – take a look some time at the President’s approval rating, versus Congress’s. With the president, the spread is -2.7%, whereas with Congress, it’s -46.3%.
This destroys your thesis that the distrust is solely due to Republican criticism of Obama.
Also, you conveniently neglect to mention that the mainstream media is completely dominated by liberal democrats, as has been documented hundreds of times since the 1960s, and that they act as a cheering section for left-wing policies and practices. Whatever criticism the Republicans level at the Democrats presents the other side of the argument. But you, like most liberals, just can’t stand that anyone would express an opinion that is not in lock-step with the left-wing worldview. And so you, like most liberals, are in complete denial that there might be any merit to these criticisms, and hence, that there might be a logical reason by people don’t trust their government these days (just look, for example, at the rampant corruption in Congress, the Obama administration’s gangster tactics when it comes to suppressing dissent, and the balooning national debt that our children and grandchildren can have no hope of ever paying off – which amounts to intergenerational theft).
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“Wow… the right spends three years on a massive propaganda campaign designed to build suspicion of Obama and Democrats in Congress, and then it’s supposedly news that a poll shows people don’t trust the government.”
Now now Conan, everyone knows the Republican plans never work so such claims are false.
Maybe if our elected officials from both parties had integrity, character, and wisdom we’d all trust them more. However, the track record of stupid useless policies has been pretty bismal the last few years.
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Buzzy: Also, you conveniently neglect to mention that the mainstream media is completely dominated by liberal democrats, as has been documented hundreds of times since the 1960s, and that they act as a cheering section for left-wing policies and practices.
People who say this are people who don’t really pay attention to the media. That claims gets made often, but facts don’t back it up.
I think it probably was true in the past, but it has not been since the 1990s. The news media has shifted priorities, away from “comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable” and to making money for the conglomerations that are increasingly the owners of media outlets.
Whatever criticism the Republicans level at the Democrats presents the other side of the argument. But you, like most liberals, just can’t stand that anyone would express an opinion that is not in lock-step with the left-wing worldview.
False.
I don’t care about people having different opinions. Everyone’s entitled to an opinion and debating and discussing differing opinions is how democratic societies make decisions.
But you’re not entitled to your own facts. If you tell me you don’t like the health care bill because of things that are actually in it, such as the mandate on individuals to purchase health coverage that Iohannes mentions. That’s actually in there, and not liking that is a valid opinion. We can debate it and disagree, but neither of us can be said to be factually wrong.
But if you tell me you don’t like it because it has death panels and a government takeover of the health care system, those are claims widely made and believed among conservatives, but they’re simply not tree. That is not “the other side of the argument,” that’s making up stuff to make sound more extreme than it really is.
the Obama administration’s gangster tactics when it comes to suppressing dissent
Uh huh. Where?
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The parliamentarian ruled that the Reconciliation Act conformed to the rules of the Senate. There’s nothing corrupt in that, as there is nothing corrupt about majority rule.
Saving 40,000 people a year from preventable deaths won’t bring down capitalism or destroy America.
Meanwhile, no Republican notion of health care reform I’ve heard about avoids contaminating the autonomy of supposedly “free” markets.
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I should not try to type before noon. That should be “not true,” not “not tree” above.
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