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- Essay Name : 997.txt
- Uploader : Shane Vaughan
- Email Address :
- Language : english
- Subject : Politics
- Title : Group Polarization and Competitionin Political Behavior
- Grade : 90%
- School System : Idaho
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : Good...a little academic
- Teacher Comments :
- Date : 95
- Site found at : search
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Group Polarization and Competition
- in Political Behavior
-
- On Tuesday, November 14, 1995, in what has been perceived as the years
- biggest non-event, the federal
- government shut down all "non-essential" services due to what was, for
- all intents and purposes, a game of national
- "chicken" between the House Speaker and the President. And, at an
- estimated cost of 200 million dollars a day, this
- dubious battle of dueling egos did not come cheap (Bradsher, 1995,
- p.16). Why do politicians find it almost congenitally
- impossible to cooperate? What is it about politics and power that seem
- to always put them at odds with good
- government? Indeed, is an effective, well run government even possible
- given the current adversarial relationship
- between our two main political parties? It would seem that the exercise
- of power for its own sake, and a competitive
- situation in which one side must always oppose the other on any issue,
- is incompatible with the cooperation and
- compromise necessary for the government to function. As the United
- States becomes more extreme in its beliefs in
- general, group polarization and competition, which requires a mutual
- exclusivity of goal attainment, will lead to more
- "showdown" situations in which the goal of good government gives way to
- political posturing and power-mongering.
- In this paper I will analyze recent political behavior in terms of two
- factors: Group behavior with an emphasis
- on polarization, and competition. However, one should keep in mind that
- these two factors are interrelated. Group
- polarization tends to exacerbate inter-group competition by driving any
- two groups who initially disagree farther apart in
- their respective views. In turn, a competitive situation in which one
- side must lose in order for the other to win (and
- political situations are nearly always competitive), will codify the
- differences between groups - leading to further
- extremism by those seeking power within the group - and thus, to further
- group polarization.
- In the above example, the two main combatants, Bill Clinton and Newt
- Gingrich, were virtually forced to take
- uncompromising, disparate views because of the very nature of authority
- within their respective political groups. Group
- polarization refers to the tendency of groups to gravitate to the
- extreme of whatever opinion the group shares (Baron &
- Graziano, 1991, p.498-99). Therefore, if the extreme is seen as a
- desirable characteristic, individuals who exhibit
- extreme beliefs will gain authority through referent power. In other
- words, they will have characteristics that other group
- members admire and seek to emulate (p. 434). Unfortunately, this circle
- of polarization and authority can lead to a
- bizarre form of "one-upsmanship" in which each group member seeks to
- gain power and approval by being more
- extreme than the others. The end result is extremism in the pursuit of
- authority without any regard to the practicality or
- "reasonableness" of the beliefs in question. Since the direction of
- polarization is currently in opposite directions in our
- two party system, it is almost impossible to find a common ground
- between them. In addition, the competitive nature of
- the two party system many times eliminates even the possibility of
- compromise since failure usually leads to a
- devastating loss of power.
- If both victory and extremism are necessary to retain power within the
- group, and if, as Alfie Kohn (1986) stated
- in his book No Contest: The Case Against Competition, competition is
- "mutually exclusive goal attainment" (one side
- must lose in order for the other to win), then compromise and
- cooperation are impossible (p. 136). This is especially so
- if the opponents are dedicated to retaining power "at all costs." That
- power is an end in itself is made clear by the recent
- shutdown of the government. It served no logical purpose. Beyond
- costing a lot of money, it had no discernible effect
- except as a power struggle between two political heavyweights.
- According to David Kipnis (1976, cited in Baron &
- Graziano, 1991), one of the negative effects of power is, in fact, the
- tendency to regard it as its own end, and to ignore
- the possibility of disastrous results from the reckless use of power
- (p. 433). Therefore, it would seem that (at least in
- this case) government policy is created and implemented, not with regard
- to its effectiveness as government policy, but
- only with regard to its value as a tool for accumulating and maintaining
- power.
- Another of Kipnis's negative effects of power is the tendency to use it
- for selfish purposes (p.433). In politics
- this can be seen as the predilection towards making statements for short
- term political gain that are either nonsensical or
- contradictory to past positions held by the candidates themselves.
- While this may not be the use of actual power, it is an
- attempt to gain political office (and therefore power) without regard
- for the real worth or implications of a policy for
- "good" government.
- A prime example of this behavior can be seen in the widely divergent
- political stances taken by Governor Pete
- Wilson of California. At this point I should qualify my own political
- position. While I do tend to lean towards the
- Democratic side of the political spectrum (this is undoubtedly what
- brought Pete Wilson to my attention in the first
- place), I examine Governor Wilson because he is such a prime example of
- both polarization and pandering in the
- competitive pursuit of power. Accordingly, I will try to hold my
- political biases in check.
- In any case, selfish, power seeking behavior is reflected in Wilson's
- recently abandoned campaign for President.
- Although he consistently ruled out running for President during his
- second gubernatorial campaign, immediately after he
- was re-elected he announced that he was forming a committee to explore
- the possibility. And, in fact, he did make an
- abortive run for the Republican nomination. In both cases (presidential
- and gubernatorial elections), he justified his
- seemingly contradictory positions in terms of his "duty to the
- people"(No Author 1995). This begs the question; was it
- the duty that was contradictory, or was it Wilson's political
- aspirations. In either case it seems clear that his decision
- was hardly based on principles of good government. Even if Wilson
- thought he had a greater duty to the nation as a
- whole (and I'm being charitable here), he might have considered that
- before he ran for governor a second time. It would
- appear much more likely that the greater power inherent in the
- presidency was the determining force behind Wilson's
- decision. Ironically, Wilson's lust for potential power may cause him
- to lose the power he actually has. Since his
- decision to run for President was resoundingly unpopular with
- Californians, and since he may be perceived as unable to
- compete in national politics due to his withdrawal from the presidential
- race, his political power may be fatally
- impaired. This behavior shows not only a disregard for "good"
- government, but also a strange inability to defer
- gratification. There is no reason that Pete Wilson couldn't have run
- for President after his second term as Governor had
- expired. His selfish pursuit of power for its own sake was so absolute
- that it inhibited him from seeing the very political
- realities that gave him power in the first place.
- In his attempt to gain power, Wilson managed to change his stance on
- virtually every issue he had ever
- encountered. From immigration to affirmative action - from tax cuts to
- abortion rights, he has swung 180 degrees
- (Thurm, 1995). The point here is not his inconsistency, but rather the
- fact that it is improbable that considerations of
- effective government would allow these kinds of swings. And, while
- people may dismiss this behavior as merely the
- political "game playing" that all candidates engage in, it is the
- pervasiveness of this behavior - to the exclusion of any
- governmental considerations - that make it distressing as well as
- intriguing.
- Polarization is also apparent in this example. Since Pete Wilson
- showed no inherent loyalty toward a particular
- ideology, it is entirely likely that had the Republican party been
- drifting towards a centrist position rather than an extreme
- right-wing position, Wilson would have accordingly been more moderate in
- his political pronouncements. The
- polarization towards an extreme is what caused him to make such radical
- changes in his beliefs. It is, of course, difficult
- to tell to what extent political intransigence is a conscious strategy,
- or an unconscious motivation toward power, but the
- end result is the same - political leadership that is not conducive (or
- even relevant) to good government.
- The role of competition in our political system is an inherently
- contradictory one. We accept the fact that
- politicians must compete ruthlessly to gain office using whatever
- tactics are necessary to win. We then, somehow,
- expect them to completely change their behavior once they are elected.
- At that point we expect cooperation,
- compromise, and a statesmanlike attitude. Alfie Kohn (1986) points out
- that this expectation is entirely unrealistic (p.
- 135). He also states that, "Depriving adversaries of personalities, of
- faces , of their subjectivity, is a strategy we
- automatically adopt in order to win" (p.139). In other words, the very
- nature of competition requires that we treat people
- as hostile objects rather than as human beings. It is, therefore,
- unlikely, once an election is over and the process of
- government is supposed to begin, that politicians will be able to
- "forgive and forget" in order to carry on with the
- business at hand.
- Once again, in the recent government shutdown we can see this same
- sort of difficulty. House Speaker Newt
- Gingrich, whose competitive political relationship with Bill Clinton has
- been rancorous at best, blamed his own
- (Gingrich's) handling of the budget negotiations that resulted in the
- shutdown, on his poor treatment during an airplane
- flight that he and the President were on (Turque & Thomas, 1995, p.
- 28). One can look at this issue from both sides. On
- the one hand, shabby treatment on an airplane flight is hardly a reason
- to close the U.S. government. On the other hand, if
- the shabby treatment occurred, was it a wise thing for the President to
- do in light of the delicate negotiations that were
- going on at the time? In both cases, it seems that all concerned were,
- in effect, blinded by their competitive hostility.
- They both presumably desired to run the government well (we assume
- that's why they ran for office in the first place), but
- they couldn't overcome their hostility long enough to run it at all. If
- the Speaker is to be believed (although he has since
- tried to retract his statements), the entire episode resulted not from a
- legitimate disagreement about how to govern well,
- but from the competitive desire to dominate government. Indeed, when
- one examines the eventual compromise that was
- reached, there seems to be no significant difference in the positions of
- the two parties. If this is so, why was it necessary
- to waste millions of dollars shutting down the government and then
- starting it up again a few days later? What's more,
- this entire useless episode will be reenacted in mid-December. One can
- only hope that Clinton and Gingrich avoid
- traveling together until an agreement is reached.
- Although people incessantly complain about government and about the
- ineffectiveness of politicians, they rarely
- examine the causes of these problems. While there is a lot of attention
- paid to campaign finance reform, lobbying reform,
- PAC reform, and the peddling of influence, we never seem to realize
- that, most of the time, politicians are merely giving
- us what they think we want. If they are weak and dominated by polls,
- aren't they really trying to find out "the will of the
- people" in order to comply with it? If they are extremist and
- uncompromising in their political stances, aren't they simply
- reflecting the extremism prevalent in our country today? If politicians
- compromise, we call them weak, and if they don't
- we call them extremist. If we are unhappy with our government, perhaps
- it is because we expect the people who run it to
- do the impossible. They must reflect the will of a large, disparate
- electorate, and yet be 100 percent consistent in their
- ideology. However, if we look at political behavior in terms of our own
- polarized, partisan attitudes, and if we can find
- a way to either reduce the competitive nature of campaigns, or reconcile
- pre-election hostility with post-election
- statesmanship, then we may find a way to elect politicians on the basis
- of how they will govern rather than how they run.
- It may be tempting to dismiss all this as merely "the way politics is"
- or say that "competition is human nature", or
- perhaps think that these behaviors are essentially harmless. But
- consider these two examples. It has been speculated that
- President Lyndon B. Johnson was unwilling to get out of the Vietnam war
- because he didn't want to be remembered as
- the first American President to lose a war. If this is true, it means
- that thousands of people, both American and
- Vietnamese, died in order to protect one man's status. In Oklahoma
- City, a federal building was bombed in 1994, killing
- hundreds of men, women, and children. The alleged perpetrators were a
- group of extreme, right wing,
- "constitutionalists" who were apparently trying to turn frustration with
- the federal government into open revolution.
- I do not think these examples are aberrations or flukes, but are,
- instead, indicative of structural defects in our
- political system. If we are not aware of the dangers of extremism and
- competition, we may, in the end, be destroyed by
- them.
-
-
- References
-
-
- Baron, B.M., & Graziano, W.G. (1991). Social Psychology. Fort Worth,
- TX. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
- Bradsher, K. (1995, November 18). Country may be losing money with
- government closed. The New York
- Times, pp.16
- Kohn, A. (1986). No Contest: The Case Against Competition. Boston,
- Houghton Mifflin.
- No Author. (1995, March 24). [internet] What Wilson has said about
- entering race. San Jose Mercury News Online.
- Address:http://www.sjmercury.com/wilson/wil324s.htm
- Thurm, S. (1995, August 29). [internet] Wilson's 'announcement' more
- of an ad: California governor kicks off drive
- for GOP presidential nomination. San Jose Mercury News Online.
- Address:http://www.sjmercury.com/wilson/wil829.htm
- Turgue, B., & Thomas, E. (1995, November 27). Missing the moment.
- Newsweek
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-