Tuesday, May 6, 2025
Blog Page 251

John Evelyn: 5th Week, Hilary Term 2022

0

Well it’s been more of the same filth in the Union, but John Evelyn did promise that this week’s entry would be a little less raunchy. So, wild tales of the sexual deviance of committee will have to wait for another day. John Evelyn knows a few people who will be happy about that. Instead, we turn to the second most important thing in the Union: politics, ugh. 

But with elections just two weeks away things are hotting up for our lovely hacks. The Univ Queen’s crown has been slowly slipping, as after finally finding a rather Rad(ley) final officer candidate, disaster struck as he had a change of heart. The Garbage Collectors are now digging deeper and deeper into the bin, checking each piece of trash again and again to see if it could make a good officer candidate. Rumour has it a particularly stinky Fish carcass has been inspected somewhere around 8 times.

After a slow start to their hacking, forgetting to host any dead library bops or attend any Hayek not-sex parties, Connect 2.0 have launched themselves into the game with a huge play on the pages of this very publication. John Evelyn can confirm that with the assemblage of Union hacks and student journalism we are now officially at the very centre of hell.

Secretary’s committee is always a fun place to hang out in the weeks before an election, as senior hacks attempt to convince junior hacks that, no, it is really worth going into you social capital overdraft to earn the honour of sitting in endless meetings all Monday. Here too, it’s been more bad luck for the Univ Queen, with the LMH Enforcer going full Clyde Barrow and snatching her only seccie. Rumour has it he has found his Bonnie somewhere on seccies committee.

Meanwhile, the Ultimate Bromance has had to make the crushing decision to have one half pull out of the contest, as their love was too strong to bear competing with each other. This term has seen the usual number of spiritual awakenings on secretary’s committee, as most choose not to run on. John Evelyn hears there are some cushy appointed positions from which to collect great gossip, if anyone is interested.

Just a little bit more to come. John Evelyn x

Law Society Chaos: Constitutional crisis, £6,000 lost on flowers

Internal communications and financial documents reveal how the Michaelmas Term 2021 Law Society President appointed his friends to influential positions, tried to amend the constitution to allow appointments until graduation, and splashed out on a lavish, cancelled ball. Many hours of conversation with high-ranking members and exclusive access to internal papers paint a picture of a society wracked by power struggles and struggling to administer itself, exacerbated by what members of the executive told Cherwell was a £50,000 loss on the ball cancelled at the end of last term. 

The president, of Christ Church, first won election to the presidency in Hilary Term 2021. Serving as president-elect throughout Trinity Term 2021, he became president at the end of that term. The handover was messy; the bank account of the Law Society was still in the name of a long-gone student, leading Lloyds to finally block the issuance of a new card. A new signatory was eventually found in Marcus Smith*, a friend of the President, as the President himself had a non-British phone number which precluded his participation. Smith had previously resigned in TT21 under the threat of impeachment, as the then President tried removing him for dereliction of duty and misconduct. Smith told Cherwell, “I had a strenuous [sic] personal relationship with the President TT21, I stepped down for personal reasons and it is entirely misleading to suggest that this was because I felt that I would be impeached and removed.”

The Friends

Smith was appointed Secretary for MT21. Additionally the role of Treasurer was also filled by Smith, whom the President had appointed to fill the position in an acting capacity. The position of the Treasurer is an elected one while Smith had been chosen by the President despite resigning in the previous term. As acting Treasurer and signatory, Smith had sole control within the society over the bank account which contained the Law Society budget, amounting to tens of thousands of pounds. 

This was not the only appointment of close friends. Enrico Pelganta, also of Christ Church and President of the Hayek Society, was another close friend of the President. He had originally been appointed IT officer. This position is necessary to enable further promotion, as other positions require experience on committee. Pelganta told Cherwell, “my appointment as IT Officer was perfectly constitutional. I have gone above and beyond during my involvement with the Law Society: I personally had in several occasions to stretch my capability to ensure the well–running of the society affairs, without any sort of gain from my side.” However, on the 28th of October, at 00:27, the President messaged the executive committee declaring that he was “hereby appointing Enrico advisor to the President”, a role which did not previously exist. Another member of the society responded: “It’s the tendency for mid-party drunk appointments for me [crying laughing emoji].” The President and Pelganta deny that the President was inebriated at the time. Pelganta would later feature in some of the largest expenditures made by the Law Society that term.

A screenshot from a chat in which Pelganta’s appointment was announced.

The President had now managed to appoint two of his friends to powerful positions within the society. According to the constitution, the Vice-President, which is an elected position, alongside the rest of the committee, can exercise a restraining force. In reality, the Vice-President had resigned, claiming that she could not work with the President and his friends, and the rest of the committee almost never met, despite section 4.1 of  the constitution prescribing biweekly gatherings.

By now, the President had almost unfettered control over one of the largest and – crucially – wealthiest student societies. According to one high-ranking member of the executive committee during that term, the President managed to raise over £150,000 from law firms. According to a member who spoke to Cherwell, this was an exceptionally successful round of fundraising.  The President also decided to amend the constitution in a way that could have enabled him to assert control over the society for many terms to come.

The Faux pas

The first notice some on the committee received of the Presidents’ attempt to rewrite the constitution was the arrival of the proposed amendments in their inboxes. As President, he had unilaterally commissioned a constitutional review from his associate and fellow student Christopher Collins, and scheduled the meeting for the 14th of November without communicating the amendments until the 13th of November. Collins justified his proposed amendments on the grounds that they would “increase transparency and accountability”.  

Cherwell has seen these proposed amendments, which provided for the creation of an Advisory Board, whose members would be appointed by the incumbent executive committee, which at the time was dominated by the President and his friends. This new body, consisting of a Treasurer, a Returning Officer and a Deputy Returning Officer, would be ultimately responsible for the running of the society and its financial affairs. The only term limit imposed on these appointed positions was graduation. The Advisory Board also had the power to overturn the impeachment of any member through an appeals process. This raised the prospect of the President being able to wield considerable influence within the society over a period far in excess of his presidential term. Through friends on the Advisory Board, and with possibly himself as Returning Officer, he could have controlled access to the committee and supervised the discussion on the society’s administrative and financial affairs.

The constitutional amendments also explicitly excluded any appointments not made by the executive committee from forming part of the new body. This meant that the current Returning Officer and HT21 President, Svetoslav ‘Svet’ Karagueorguiev, would not sit on the Advisory Board. However, his successor, appointed by the executive committee, would. 

The President told Cherwell that, “upon becoming President, I immediately realised severe structural shortcomings were present in the society. I brought in Mr Collins as an external consultant who had significant relevant experience relating to constitutional matters. Mr Collins acted purely as an advisor and had no decision-making capacity, which was left, as stipulated by the constitution, to members of the committee.” 

Cherwell has been told that Collins “expressed reservations” about whether the proposals would be accepted by the committee.

The President’s actions kicked off a brief but messy constitutional crisis. The meeting that the Presiden had called was cancelled by the Returning Officer. Karagueorguiev took this course due to “the complete non-responsiveness from the executive committee about the location of their proposed meeting and their failure to notify of the proposed measures to be discussed”.  

Labelling the meeting unconstitutional and citing fears that the short notice would artificially decrease voter turnout, he further directed committee members to “disregard the draft constitutional changes sent out… by Christopher Collins, who is neither a member of the committee nor authorised to advise the Society in any meaningful way.”

The President responded later that day by postponing the meeting in order to “ensure the highest possible turnout and a transparent and fair discussion of the proposed changes”. Somewhat chastened by Karagueorguiev, he stated that “At the same time, I would like to inform you that the “decision” of the Returning Officer, … to cancel the meeting is ultra vires [beyond their authority] as the Constitution does not equip the Returning Officer with the power to make such a ruling, and therefore [sic] ineffective.”

Arista Lai, a former President of the Law Society, waded into the controversy. She expressed concern over the handling of the affair, noting a series of issues with both the scheduling of the meeting and the proposed constitutional changes. Initially, Lai observed that communications concerning the meeting called to discuss the constitutional amendments were not sent out within the required seven days’ notice. In her email to the committee, she then proceeded to pick apart the proposals and the review process.

She wrote “Who is Christopher Collins?… The constitution does not provide for a “consultation” to be unilaterally called by Exec without notifying anybody”. Lai continued, “How can somebody who “never had any formal role within Lawsoc” have any right or capability or knowledge to rewrite our constitution? And if he was advised by Exec, then it is not an independent perspective at all.” 

Lai also highlighted the unconstitutional actions of the President, condemning the attempted side-lining of Karagueorguiev, who was the “final interpreter of the constitution”, as well as drawing attention back to Smith’s appointment, saying he “should not even have been appointed to Exec after having quit (under threat of impeachment) before fulfilling his first and only term on committee”. Labelling the proposal for an Advisory Board as “profoundly undemocratic”,  Lai stated that it was the opposite of increasing “transparency and impartiality”. In a similar vein, she said “the proposals… that allow the appointed RO and Treasurer to continue in office for the rest of their student life are entirely ungrounded and would mean that the current Exec who appoint the inaugural Advisory Board will have significant influence, and the Treasurer [Smith] will have access to Lawsoc funds, for a looooong time.” 

Smith told Cherwell,”I was appointed Secretary based on my past administrative experience and I believe this was entirely appropriate for the president to do. There is no requirement to have served a full term to be Secretary and there is no requirement to not have resigned previously.”

Faced with this criticism, the President climbed down in an email sent the following day. In the email, he disavowed the constitutional changes, encouraging the committee “to disregard the draft that was shared with you”. He apologised for his “conduct” and conceded that “the meeting was rightly and validly cancelled by Svet.” Eventually, that plan was put on hold. But less than two weeks after this internal crisis, the committee would find itself faced with another, public, debacle. 

The Flowers

On the 27th of November in Michaelmas Term, 2021, the Law Society sent out an email to ticket holders announcing the cancellation of  the termly ball due to be held the very next day. The reason given was ‘major unsurmountable logistical issues.’ These complications are still affecting society today.

A source closely involved with the planning of the ball told Cherwell that despite previously having had difficulties processing payments,  the MT21 executive pushed ahead with the event. After they were unable to transfer funds to the ball’s venue, they reached out to Hogan Lovells, the law firm sponsoring the event, the day before the ball. The firm accepted the request that they pay the deposit for the Natural History Museum. A representative from Hogan Lovells clarified that they made this payment on an exceptional basis and did not play a role in any discussions over the cancellation, telling Cherwell: “As in previous years, the firm paid the sponsorship funds directly to the Law Society in good time ahead of the event. The firm was alerted the day before the event that the Law Society were having difficulties in transferring funds to the venue, and required some assistance. The firm kindly offered to step in and paid the sums required directly to the venue. Unfortunately, we were later informed that, due to some administrative hurdles, the event was unable to go ahead despite everyone’s best efforts. We understand that the ball has been rearranged and the firm’s sponsorship funds are being put towards this new event as a continuation of our support.” The last-minute cancellation of the ball, due to what the President has described to Cherwell as “unforeseen circumstances,”  lost the society approximately £50,000, a figure confirmed to Cherwell by multiple members of the previous and current executive. It was too late to retrieve many of the deposits made on what was going to be an incredibly lavish ball. 

Invoice from Gail Smith showing £6,208.08 spent on flowers for the ball.

Cherwell has seen an invoice for just one of the lost deposits, from a business called Gail Smith, for a total fee of £6,208.08 invoiced to Pelganta’s account. Gail Smith, it turns out, is a florist. 

Over £6,000 in flowers is just one of a variety of transactions that went into the ball’s planning, and various invoices are linked to different members of the society. This is not a unique event; many financial dealings have involved reimbursements to personal accounts from the law society account, complicating the current executive committee’s ability to get an accurate picture of the society’s transaction history – a complex web of personal invoices and large transfers.

After months, would-be ball goers had yet to receive refunds. Oxfesses began to surface, all voicing upset at the cancellation and lack of refunds. On one of these anonymous Oxfesses, which was complaining about both the lack of refunds and the lack of events happening for the first few weeks of Hilary, the current president responded: “I’m sorry about the lack of in-person events, but unfortunately the past Exec has failed to pass ANY financial information onto me, which means I have 0 money to process your refunds or put down deposits for drinks, socials, or other networking events.” 

In addition, Scharff-Hansen did not receive a list of students who required refunds until the 2nd of February. This, coupled with the current executive committee’s complete lack of access to the bank account until well into Hilary Term, made the process of refunding students nearly impossible in a timely fashion. Some students are still waiting for refunds.

Causing further frustration, payments for tickets to the ball were not all processed in the same way. Tickets were distributed to Law Society members via QPay, a platform for ticketing on university campuses. While QPay has a convenient refund option, some refunds apparently have not gone through. More notably, some students never bought tickets through QPay at all, but informally via bank transfer directly into the society’s bank account. The list Scharff-Hansen received did not include students who had bought tickets in this way. 

Some students have approached the current executive committee to have a refund processed through bank transfer, as they purchased their tickets as ‘a friend of Bartek,’ as one of ‘Bartek’s exec invitees,’ or as a result of being on top of the President’s ‘informal waiting list.’ At this stage, refunds are currently being issued after the temporary standstill in the society’s financial liquidity. The current committee has sent out a google form allowing students to explain how they paid for their ticket, and consequently how they want to be refunded. 

The Finances

Both the Michaelmas Term executive and the current executive for Hilary Term have confirmed that the bank account was handed over (albeit in a delayed manner) to the current executive with over £50,000 in it. The signatories on the account include the current vice president of the society, Darian Murray-Griffiths, and former Secretary and acting Treasurer Marcus Smith. 

The official handover was completed by Smith and Murray-Griffiths on the 30th of January, which fell at the end of week 2 of Hilary Term. In an email explaining this delay, Smith told Scharff-Hansen, Murray-Griffith, the President, and current President-Elect Geoffrey Cheng, that he had not been seeing messages from Scharff-Hansen in his Facebook Messenger inbox. Cherwell has seen these messages, which date from the 11th of December to the 19th of January, with approximately a dozen messages from Scharff-Hansen left unread by Smith. 

Smith explained in the handover email, seen by Cherwell, that, in total, he had requested three authentication cards from Lloyds Bank. The first two only arrived after Smith had already left Oxford at the end of Michaelmas Term, and were rendered invalid by the request of a third card, which arrived in Week 1 of Hilary Term. The PIN arrived early in Week 2. Ultimately, the email emphasised that until the end of Week 2, it was not possible for Smith to have handed the bank account over earlier. 

The lack of funds available to the current executive committee put a cap on not just Michaelmas ball refunds, but also on outstanding fees owed to entertainment companies Merlin Entertainment and Curzon from the Trinity Term ball, which had been postponed to the beginning of Michaelmas term following an extension of COVID-19 restrictions. The society was issued a Level 2 Collection Notice for an outstanding fee of £2,687 from Merlin Entertainment. This type of notice comes after several unsuccessful attempts to settle the outstanding balance. The email, which has been seen by Cherwell, was sent on the 19th of January, which is during Week 1 of Hilary term. When Scharff-Hansen replied explaining that she was unable to pay for a lack of access to the account, Merlin Entertainment responded saying the fee had been settled. A later look at the transaction history revealed that Smith had paid the amount from the Lloyds account, as he was still active on the account despite no longer having any involvement with the society. Smith told Cherwell that he intends to be removed as a signatory at the earliest possible time. 

The Law Society would pay for expenditures by transferring large reimbursements to personal accounts of committee members; Cherwell found upwards of £20,000 transferred to Smith’s personal account and  £6,000 transferred to Pelganta’s personal account. Cherwell has seen invoices showing that both Smith and Pelganta have been able to account for the full sums of the transfers, through receipts for ball related transactions, other society events, reimbursements to other students for Law Society related expenses, and money transferred back into the society’s bank account. Smith told Cherwell that, “the desperate state of lack of access to the bank account meant that we had to rely on emergency measures such as this.” 

The transaction history also revealed that £2,172.96 was transferred into the personal account of Christopher Collins, who performed the review of the society’s constitution. Cherwell has seen receipts that prove Collins used the total amount to pay for two Law Society events: Burritos & Mojitos at The Alchemist, and a dinner with a law firm at Malmaison, despite Collins not being involved with the Law Society. Collins said that he was approached by the President after problems with the society’s ‘frozen’ bank account, putting Collins in the ‘uncomfortable position’ of paying for two events. 

Two events paid for by Collins, for which he was reimbursed from the Law Society’s account.

Scharff-Hansen is currently in touch with a team of accountants who are going through the transaction history looking for any anomalies. If there are any personal transactions that cannot be accounted for, the current executive committee has been encouraged by a representative from the Oxford University Clubs Office to either pursue a civil claim, or contact the police. 

Despite this, former President and Returning Officer Svetoslav Karagueorguiev told Cherwell that Scharff-Hansen “has been leading by example and restoring the Society to its former position. Most recently, she is working on all the ball refunds which are in no way her fault and it is a shame she has had her term overshadowed by the negative impacts of the previous administration.” In a response, the MT President told Cherwell that the above “allegations” made to Cherwell “are wholly false and defamatory. They are politically motivated in order to deflect from the incompetence of the current Law Society executive. I, and the former executive of the Oxford Law Society, reserve the right to legal recourse should these false and defamatory allegations be published.”

*Some names in this article were changed.

Image: Oxford Law Society/CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons

A nuclear-fusion future looms closer than ever

0

In the wake of a series of recent experiments, European scientists are now closer than ever to recreating nuclear fusion, which powers the Sun and the stars, on Earth.

The Joint European Torus (JET), a magnetically confined plasma physics experiment sited in Oxfordshire, has witnessed a breakthrough in its 40-year old endeavour to extract nuclear fusion energy by forcing together two forms of hydrogen.

The energy output produced by JET may not be massive, but it provides strong support for the conviction that nuclear fusion can be replicated on our planet successfully via a particular machine. In the words of Dr. Joe Milnes, the head of operations at the JET reactor lab, “The JET experiments put us a step closer to fusion power. We’ve demonstrated that we can create a mini star inside of our machine and hold it there for five seconds and get high performance, which really takes us into a new realm.”

The energy output generated by JET’s recent experiments is more than double what was produced through similar efforts in 1997.

The JET breakthrough gives hope for the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) experiment conducted at the moment in France – an internationally led endeavour projected to become the world’s largest magnetic confinement plasma physics experiment in the world by 2025. The experiment aims to recreate the fusion processes of the Sun.

Operating on the principle that energy is released through squeezing together atomic nuclei instead of separating them, fusion is produced in the Sun’s core through enormous gravitational pressure. Given the significantly lower pressure sustained on Earth, temperatures of more than 100 million Celsius are necessary to achieve fusion. Since no materials can resist contact with such high temperatures, scientists have designed a heated gas, or plasma, that is held within a magnetic field.

Efforts to produce fusion on Earth are particularly urgent at this juncture where the need for carbon-free energy is greater than ever. Fusion-based power plants would generate no greenhouse gases and only small amounts of radioactive waste.

There is, however, skepticism as to whether the recent breakthroughs into the production of fusion will result in its commercialisation imminently. As BBC science correspondent Jonathan Amos notes, “Fusion is not a solution to get us to 2050 net zero. This is a solution to power society in the second half of this century.”

Another obstacle to fusion production in the immediate future is the fact that lab fusion reactions consume more energy than they produce. JET can no longer operate because its electromagnets tend to get too hot, while ITER will need to rely on internally cooled magnets.

This challenge can be overcome in the future by scaling up the plasmas used, but this will take time, concerted efforts, and long-term commitment. Around 300 scientists or so are working for JET at the moment, while the EUROfusion consortium, partnered with ITER, consists of around 5,000 experts. Around a quarter of the scientists working for JET are at the early stages of their careers. As Dr. Athina Kappatou has pointed out, “Fusion takes a long time, it is complex, it is difficult. This is why we have to ensure that from one generation to the next, there are the scientists, there are the engineers and the technical staff who can take things forward.”

Apart from technical hindrances, Brexit poses another challenge to getting as many countries on board as possible. The UK may still be a member of EUROfusion, but it will need to affiliate itself with certain EU science programmes to get fully involved in ITER. It has been unable to do so thus far as a result of disputes over trading arrangements post Brexit.

The world is watching as the promise of a nuclear fusion future looms closer. It is likely that JET will be decommissioned after 2023, while ITER is planning on commencing its plasma experiments around 2025. 

Image Credit: NASA

Christ Church buys back book donated in 1587

0

Christ Church has re-purchased a book that its students clubbed together to buy for the college in 1587. The 1570 edition of Euclid’s The Elements of Geometrie was the first English translation of the work. It was donated by a group of nine scholars after they received their Master of Arts degrees in the late 16th century. Christ Church Library then sold it in the 18th century because they already had a copy of the tome.

The names of the nine graduates who bought the book were written on the title page. Among them are James Calfhilll, later headmaster of Durham Grammar School, Edmund Gwyn, later Vicar of Market Lavington and grandfather of Nell Gwynn, actress and mistress to Charles II, and George Limiter, civil servant and solicitor to the Dean and Chapter of Westminster.

Christ Church was the first Oxford college to encourage recent graduates to donate money or books to the library. This system became more widespread in the 17th century. Often, wealthier colleges could afford to uniformly rebind some books with college binding, seen through the many uniform 18-19th-century re-bindings at the Queen’s College. Meanwhile, some colleges were more reliant on individual donations, in whatever bound form they came. This is evident from the rare books collection at Hertford College library, which exhibits the generous individual responses to a 17th-century call out for book donations.

Many of their bindings were quite personalised, such as the proud red leather label with gold tooling, spelling ‘Martha Moor 1700’, on the calfskin leather of an edition of Whole Duty of Man necessary for all families and the stamps of initials “R.C.” and then ‘R.H” on the possibly 16th-century binding of Libri Prophetarvm.

Other donors to college libraries sought to represent their book ownership through symbolic means, with Magdalen home to various armorial bindings. These include Magd. R.3.19, a fifteenth-century golden-brown leather calfskin-bound Psalmes of David in meetre, featuring gold-tooled double-fillet borders with floral and leafy stamps and the arms of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales and son of James I. Sometimes the colleges themselves have left ownership marks on their books. A late-twentieth-century librarian at Lady Margaret Hall is responsible for all of the rare books having marker pen catalogue numbers on their spines and many heavily covered in black tape as repairs.

Gabriel Sewell, Christ Church College Librarian, said: “The purchase of the book sheds light on the early history of Christ Church Library and the study of material culture as well as supporting research into the history of mathematics at the college, in Oxford and further afield. 

“It was important for Christ Church to be able to bring the book ‘home’ as it is a rare example of a book donated by a group of students when the college was still a relatively new foundation. 

“The book is a link to the College’s history and to the students who gave funds to buy the book in 1587.

“The book has been catalogued and is ready to be accessed by members of the University and the wider community in our Special Collections reading room. 

“Christ Church is very keen to make its rare books and manuscript collections as accessible as possible and encourages anybody with an interest in using our collections for research, teaching or enjoyment to get in touch.”

Christ Church also suggests that the donation may shed light on maths teaching at the college, with the fact that they donated a vernacular version perhaps indicative that the donors felt that it was time the College started teaching mathematics in the vernacular, rather than in Latin. Having gone through various private collections and a spell in the John Rylands Library in Manchester, Christ Church has bought the book back using donations from the Friends of the National Libraries, Dr Fiona Hollands and Ethan Berman. The College intends for the book to be available for research and public engagement.

Image: Christ Church library in the early 19th century / public domain

Chiang Kai-shek must fall: An introduction to fallism in Taiwan

0

When coming to Taiwan in September 2021 for my year abroad, I never expected to be taken back to the debate raging in Oxford over the legacy of the Cecil John Rhodes statue at Oriel College.  As someone who participated in a demonstration earlier that summer, chanting “Rhodes must fall” outside of Oriel, I did not anticipate that Taiwan and its public spaces would be facing the same issues that we face back in the UK. Yet, on my first visit to the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall 中正紀念堂in central Taipei, I quickly realised that the fierce debate around statues also exists in Taiwan.

To many in the West, it may come as a surprise that Chiang Kai-shek 蔣介石 is seen as a controversial figure in Taiwan. As a fervent anti-communist, who fought against Mao Zedong 毛澤東 and the Communist party – eventually losing and fleeing to the island of Taiwan – he is praised in the West for his stand against communism as well as his earlier fight against the Japanese during World War II. It may also come as a surprise that this debate around his legacy stands outside of the divide between those who seek a reunification with mainland China, led by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), and those who want an independent democratic Taiwan. In reality, the percentage of Taiwanese who seek to be ruled by the CCP is so low that it could hardly shape this debate.

Instead, this is a debate over the legacy of Chiang’s government as well as that of his son Chiang Ching-Kuo 蔣經國. Chiang is controversial for the implementation of oppressive martial law, as well as for violent activities such as those of the 228 Incident in 1947. The 228 Incident took place at a point of high tensions between the government and civilians. Government officials were seen as corrupt and ineffective. Improper regulation of the economy led to an economic slump. Taiwanese veterans that served under the Japanese were unable to find employment, forming the undercurrent of resentment towards the Taiwanese government.  

The strict language policy also raised tensions; at the time of the reunification with mainland China, 75% of Taiwanese people spoke Japanese, yet, within a year, Japanese language newspapers were banned. The main form of information was therefore made less accessible to Taiwanese people. Taiwanese people were also faced with the stigma of being labelled traitors given their level of assimilation with the Japanese. The incident itself started when agents of the State Monopoly Bureau arrested a woman selling cigarettes illegally. When she demanded the return of her cigarettes, she was struck by one of the officers. The surrounding crowd was outraged, and they confronted the agents. As the civilians fled, one of the agents shot a civilian, who later died of his wounds. This started a national movement of protests. The crackdown on the movement led to the deaths of up to 18,000 Taiwanese and ended with the implementation of martial law.

While Taiwan has been hailed recently as the most democratic nation in East Asia, this was not always the case. When Chiang’s government relocated to Taiwan, he implemented martial law and ran an authoritarian government – which, like many others, murdered and disappeared their own citizens. Martial law was active in Taiwan from May 1949 all the way until July 1987. During this period of oppressive rule, there was no freedom of assembly, the press was restricted, and the government had the right to arrest anyone who voiced any opposition to the government. In addition, no political parties were allowed to be formed outside of the Kuomintang (KMT – the republican party) 國民黨, the Chinese Youth Party, and the China Democratic Socialist Party. The latter two were closely linked ideologically with the KMT. The period of martial law coincides with the period known as the White Terror. During this period, the government made use of their secret police – the Taiwan Garrison Command – to crack down on civilians and in some cases executed them extrajudicially. Up to 4,000 people were killed and there were 29,000 cases of political persecution. There are now musuems dedicated to the White Terror and the 228 incident across the island, including the 228 Memorial Park in the heart of Taipei.

It was in this context that Chiang’s statues were erected. Chiang sought to enhance the legitimacy of the KMT’s rule of the island during his presidency, in the face of it being viewed as colonial rule by some.With the takeover of government by the KMT from the Japanese, the Taiwanese people began to be ruled by ‘their own people’ rather than a foreign people. Yet, the KMT viewed the Taiwanese as different to mainland Chinese, creating a divide between those who came from mainland China – waishengren 外省人 – and the Taiwanese who lived in Taiwan before 1945 – benshengren 本省人. This difference in treatment between the two peoples has meant that the KMT rule has sometimes been seen as colonial, as the KMT did not see the benshengren as compatriots. In order to legitimise KMT rule, he enacted a series of “de-Japanification” 去日本化 and “re-Sinification” 再中國化 policies. Re-Sinification lasted from the 1950s for nearly four decades until the 1990s. 

As part of the re-Sinification, the government started to erect statues of Chiang across Taiwan in order to portray him as a strong leader. This occurred throughout his own presidency and that of his son Chiang-Ching-Kuo. During Chiang-Ching-Kuo’s presidency, the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall was built, and a massive bronze statue of Chiang was installed. Jeremy E. Taylor, Associate Professor in Modern Asian History at the University of Nottingham, argued in 2006 that the aim of this as well as the naming of main roads and districts in cities was ultimately to connect Chiang with the history of Taiwan as well as engrain him into the society. By constructing these statues and promoting a traditional Chinese style of architecture, which can also be seen in the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, Chiang aimed to reconnect the national history and collective memories of the “old Republic of China” established in the mainland with the “new Republic of China” established in Taiwan. This is why the debate around the Chiang Kai-shek statues remains so important. The question is: should someone with such a controversial legacy be engrained into Taiwan and its society?

Like the statues debate in the West, the divide between the two sides of the argument falls along political lines. However, rather than adhering to the typical political divide of left and right, the debate centres on the pan-Blue 泛藍 and pan-Green 泛綠 divides. The pan-Blue 泛藍 grouping mainly takes the form of the KMT; they largely oppose the removal of Chiang statues, as they hold a more positive attitude towards him. Some politicians in the pan-Blue coalition even believe that, without Chiang, Taiwan and some parts of the mainland might still be colonised by Japan. Therefore, they consider Chiang a hero for all from a Chinese ethnic group 民族的救星. The pan-Green 泛綠 is the other political force. They mainly come in the form of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) 民進黨. They tend to view Chiang as a murderer and unworthy of people’s respect, and support the removal or dismantling of Chiang’s statues.

Chiang’s reputation began to change significantly under the first DPP pan-Green administration from 2000 to 2008. This was the first government not run by the KMT after the transition to democracy allowed people to vote directly for the president in 1996. Under the rule of President Chen Shui-bian 陳水扁, the DPP government sought to change completely the image of Chiang and the political narratives surrounding him. This led to them reconstructing him as a terrible, authoritarian leader and in some cases straightforwardly as a murderer. Since they viewed the remnants of Chiang’s rule, such as schools, roads, and infrastructure under his name, as reminders of the authoritarian, oppressive rule the people of Taiwan suffered under, they tried to eliminate or remove Chiang’s link to them. As a result, Chen and his government enacted a set of policies which Charles Musgrove, Professor of History at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, labels as qujianghua 去蔣化 or “de-Chiang-Kai-shek-ification”, allowing for the renaming of many roads and removal of his statues. The most clear example of this was seen in 2007 when Chen’s government changed the name of theChiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall in Taipei, which includes the largest statue of Chiang in Taiwan, to the National Taiwan Democracy Memorial Hall 國立台灣民主紀念館, and the name of the surrounding square to Liberty Square 自由廣場. However, the effectiveness of this is questionable, as the nearby Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) station is still called Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall Station or 中正紀念堂站.

Chen’s policy of qujianghua encouraged many of his fellow DPP party members to join the campaign arguing for the removal of Chiang’s statues as well as any heritage symbolising him from schools, public spaces, and cityscapes. Like in the West, university students were one of the main groups who enthusiastically participated in the political movement to remove Chiang Kai-shek statues. From 2000 onwards, it is estimated that Taiwanese university students organised dozens of student-run movements calling for Chiang’s statues to be destroyed or removed from their campuses.  Nevertheless, given the vastly differing views on Chiang Kai-shek and his legacy, each university experiences different amounts of conflict.

After the DPP won the 2016 election, Tsai Ing-wen, the current president of Taiwan, set the aim of “achieving transitional justice” 落實轉型正義 as one of her top five goals. Following her election, Tsai set up the “Transitional Justice Commission” 促進轉型正義委員會 in 2018.  One of the main tasks of the commission was to address the issue of statues of Chiang Kai-shek. According to the Transnational Justice Commission, in 2018 there were still 1, 083 Chiang Kai-shek statues in Taiwan. Many of them were located on school and university campuses.

‘Fallism’ – campaigns for something or someone, often a statue of an ethically questionable figure, to fall – remains a contentious issue in Taiwan today. Many people, like in the West, view the removal of important statues as an erasure of history. Tsai Ing-wen and her DPP government face the challenge of enacting their aim of achieving transitional justice whilst accounting for differing views on fallism so as to not alienate any potential voters. Yet, young people largely hold negative views of Chiang Kai-shek, so even if Chiang Kai-shek statues and his legacy in general manage to survive Tsai’s administration, it is hard to see a future in Taiwan where they remain so prominent as the debate continues to rage.

Photo by CEphoto, Uwe Aranas

Oxford’s outreach is great: How do we make it even better?

0

My introduction to Cherwell was reading a Features article, just after I’d received my UCAS offer. It was a well-written expose on Oxford’s secret drinking societies. One section of that article caught my eye; a reference to how the infamous Piers Gaveston society had started selling ‘reduced price access tickets’ to its balls. 

Access, outreach, support, opportunities. Oxford’s new buzzwords – and rightfully so. Nobody can deny the success of schemes like UNIQ, Opportunity Oxford and Target Oxbridge. I certainly can’t – if it wasn’t for the opportunities the week-long UNIQ residential gave me, I wouldn’t be writing these words today. I wouldn’t be at Oxford at all. This institution needs to be open to the world, not a closed-off cesspit. 

But those ‘reduced-price access tickets’ did little to allay the same fears I’d felt before my UNIQ residential, in that they continued the same imbalances and inequalities UNIQ had tried to prove didn’t exist. Access and outreach are being commodified in box-ticking exercises, without attention being given to why such access schemes are necessary at all. Oxford’s access schemes prove that the University is changing, but the students it attracts are still stuck in their archaic past, drenched in privilege and faux-exclusivity.  

The success of schemes like UNIQ and The Sutton Trust’s residentials is that they don’t just make the information regarding access available, but they enable a holistic experience of Universities, just like we have as Oxford students. There is a limit to this, however. The most recent pre-pandemic figures available online indicate that UNIQ accepts somewhere around 1500 students to attend in-person, with more invited to an online programme. Yet Oxford normally has upwards of 3,300 undergraduate places per year; with just 1 in 18 of these being a UNIQ graduate. The scheme is increasing opportunities, absolutely; but it is limited by its size and funding. 

This might be addressed by Colleges taking on their own access work, but the majority of such schemes fall into the pitfall of simply making the information available – meaning they are simply not as effective as more holistic University experiences at inspiring people to apply. YouTube videos – like those released by Jesus College – are informative but limited. They often don’t offer a student’s perspective – instead focussing on how an academic perceives the admissions process. Their ‘natural’ audience is small, so they rely on clickbait titles and atrocious thumbnails. If they don’t indulge in such practice – as my own College‘s YouTube channel proves – then much of the engagement is from alumni disagreeing with the direction their ex-College has taken. Don’t believe me? Just check out the comments on Hertford College’s 2030 Masterplan video

Such videos don’t reach the desired audience; appealing to those who want to know about Oxford as an institution, rather than Oxford as a potential university. Their comments are filled with questions from those looking to affirm that they have ‘Oxford intelligence’, and not what the reality of studying here is. 

It hasn’t always been this way, though. Hertford – my college – pioneered a revolutionary scheme in the 1960s to address the imbalance in Oxford admissions. Neil Tanner – then Hertford’s Tutor for Admissions – would visit schools that had never sent anybody to Oxford. He would interview those selected by the school’s senior leadership – those that actually understood the pupils. He would interview these pupils early, without an admissions test, and give them an offer to study at Hertford if they got two ‘E’ A Level grades. Hertford would shoot to the very top of the Norrington Table as a result. Ironically, the scheme was killed by the standardisation of admissions across the University – the very same standardisation that would eventually spawn UNIQ. 

This historic approach addresses all of my concerns about ‘modern outreach’. It isn’t a Piers Gav-style box ticking exercise, as Tanner himself knew the difficulties faced by disadvantaged students in accessing higher education, having himself received a scholarship to Cambridge. It didn’t just make information available, as they connected directly and personally to the students in question. It didn’t require an active search for information about Oxford, as word of the scheme was spread by teachers; those that truly understood their pupils.  

As a (occasional) history student, I’m not a fan of the cliché that we should look to the past to learn for the future. There are eminently more practical, useful applications for history. But this scheme is worthy of modern emulation, bringing ‘reach’ back into outreach. 

I’m not trying to talk current access schemes down – instead I’d love to see them expand. Everybody who has a chance of studying here should be aware that they have that chance. I wasn’t aware; a teacher had to email and tell me to apply to UNIQ. How many more potential students will be denied all the opportunities of Oxford simply because they weren’t aware of them?

I fear that it will come down to us, as students, to do the heavy lifting. Studytubers (as much as I dislike the term) offer a realistic and personal take on applying to Oxford, drastically better than the corporate style currently shared by Colleges. Social media is a powerful tool to share the personal stories of applicants – just look to @humans_of_Oxford_University. 

I’m proud that I arrived at Oxford having benefited from its access schemes. I’m just worried that there will be countless more ignorant teenagers like me, denied opportunities through no fault of their own. 

Image Credit: Thomas Coyle

Val Lewton’s 75-Minute Masterpieces

0

A lot of old movies are boring. That admission may cost me my credibility as a film nerd, but it’s true. Even though I’ll complain about how modern movies are formulaic and overburdened with action scenes, I’m not always in the mood to watch something slow, old-fashioned and in black and white. But there are classic films that even my limited attention span can wholeheartedly enjoy, and very high on that list are the horror movies of Val Lewton.

Chances are that you’ve not heard of Lewton before. He was never very famous, and the beginnings of his filmmaking career were hardly promising. In 1942, he signed on to produce horror movies for the studio RKO Pictures, with his superiors setting three requirements. The first rule was that each film’s budget had to be under $150,000, or approximately $2,520,000 adjusted for inflation; for comparison, Investopedia estimates that an average movie’s budget is currently around 65 million dollars. The second rule was that each film had to be under 75 minutes long. The third was that his superiors would supply the titles—lurid, dramatic ones like I Walked With A Zombie and The Curse of the Cat People—leaving Lewton to develop them into full stories.

I Walked With A Zombie, Lewton’s second movie for RKO Pictures, is a good example of how Lewton made this system work. Working with up-and-coming director Jacques Tourneur, Lewton and his writers created a story about a nurse employed by the Hollands, a wealthy family in the Caribbean, and her discovery that the invalid woman she cares for may be a mindless zombie cursed by a family member. It’s well-paced and full of intriguing twists, not wasting any of its short 70-minute running time.

The movie’s horror is built on implication and uncertainty—the titular zombie may merely be a sick woman, but other scenes imply the reality of the supernatural. And the film’s conclusion, intercutting between a ceremony to destroy the zombie and a character’s efforts to put the woman out of her misery, is ambiguous and eerie in the best way.

But beyond its atmosphere of doubt, what makes this movie scary? Well, it’s a cliche, but the real monster of the story is humanity. The Hollands grew rich from slavery, and a slave ship’s figurehead—depicting a man shot through with arrows—proudly adorns their gardens. Instead of depicting Caribbean voodoo as evil, the film reveals that its ceremonies are manipulated by one of the Hollands, masquerading as a voodoo priest to convince islanders to embrace modern medicine, a plot point highlighting the morally ambiguous power dynamics of colonialism. The film concludes with a character plucking an arrow out of the slave ship’s figurehead and using it to free the zombie from living death, a literal but still effective symbol connecting the story’s conflicts to a real history of violence.

It’s not a perfect story—the film’s brevity leaves some characters underdeveloped, and Black and Caribbean characters are confined to the background—but its thought-provoking themes are characteristic of the movies Lewton produced. Cat People, for instance, explores contemporary attitudes towards marriage and female sexuality, and builds some truly tense scenes out of a female character’s sense of isolation when alone at night, while its loose sequel, Curse of the Cat People, explores threats lurking within an idyllic neighbourhood—mental illness, parental neglect and hints of the supernatural.

If you ask a film nerd like me what they think about modern blockbusters, you’ll probably get lectured about how, even when studios bother to hire innovative directors, their vision either gets ignored by higher-ups, or ends up dividing audiences. Even Marvel’s box-office dominance was recently shaken by the mixed reception to Chloe Zhao’s Eternals, whose unusual storytelling choices polarized viewers. But despite these limitations, there are directors who’ve made blockbusters and started franchises, and still layer in emotional complexity and thematic nuance. Just look at Ryan Coogler’s Black Panther, or the Wachowski sisters’ Matrix series, or even contemporary horror filmmakers like Mike Flanagan.

Maybe that’s why I like Val Lewton’s work so much. I admire the craft behind his movies,  their efficient storytelling and eerie visuals, but what lingers in my mind is how Lewton challenged the boundaries his studio set. His films are a reminder that directors have always worked to be creative even within difficult circumstances—and that, with some effort and a lot of luck, they’ll continue doing just that.

Artwork by Wang Sum Luk

When Disaster Strikes: Don’t Look Up’s Rally Cry Against Climate Change

0

“You cannot go around saying to people that there’s a hundred percent chance they’re going to die.” So says President Orlean, played by none other than Meryl Streep, in director Adam McKay’s new apocalyptic black comedy Don’t Look Up. And yet this is exactly what Dr Randall Mindy (Leonardo DiCaprio) and PhD candidate Kate Dibiasky (Jennifer Lawrence) did. They discover a comet is heading straight towards earth, a so-called “planet killer”, that will wipe out all life. And there are only six months before it hits.

The film follows the two scientists’ attempts to persuade the world, including the US President, that there really is a comet hitting. Yet their desperate calls for action are left unheard. McKay encompasses the world of social media, fake news, political manoeuvres and mass inaction that we live in, providing frequent parallels to events taking place in real life.

McKay makes clear that the film is intended to be a representation of our current inertia about climate change. According to scientists, the earth is facing a crisis, with increasing global temperatures bringing with it warming oceans, rising sea levels and extreme weather events. If we do not soon reduce the high levels of carbon dioxide we are producing the crisis may be irreversible. Scientists have been seeing the trend in rising temperatures for many years, with most of the warming occuring in the past forty; 2016 and 2020 were the joint warmest years on record. But little action to prevent global warming has been taken by governments and businesses: those that McKay targets in the film.

Impending disaster. And yet little to nothing is being done about it. The film’s portrayal of a disaster that could be averted but is being ignored offers a clear message about the climate crisis to the audience. So is the movie’s intention to push people into action? 

Clearly, a film needs to be entertaining, but this is not mutually exclusive from also creating a reaction from audiences, in this case a shock factor. The use of comedy intends to make its serious message more palatable. But tonally the film did not quite hit the mark. At moments it was funny, but at others it was cringe-worthy. The dark comedy aspect sometimes became jarring and a little forced. Especially at moments such as when they discovered the scientists discovered the comet was going to hit, I felt unsure as to whether this was supposed to come across as comedic or devastating.

I struggled at points with the lack of subtlety in the direction. The frequent allusions between President Orlean and Donald Trump became increasingly exaggerated, especially when it came to her speech against the scientific evidence, using the slogan ‘Don’t Look Up’ – comparable perhaps to Trump’s 2016 election campaign slogan ‘Make America Great Again’ or claiming something he disagreed with was ‘fake news’. Her wearing of a cap similar to Trump’s crossed the line into being almost farcical. Despite a star-studded cast, the execution of the film failed to live up to its hype. As Mindy says: “Not everything needs to sound so clever, or charming, or likeable all the time. Sometimes we need to just be able to say things to one another. We need to hear things.” Perhaps this is a valid point. Often all we want is for politicians to not avoid questions or skate around subjects for their political advantage. But this is taken too far: the film could do with a little less obvious.

McKay’s focus on an issue like this is well-meaning, with an intention of creating shock at our lack of action in the face of apparent world disaster, but it is important to recognise the intelligence of the audience to avoid seeming condescending. However, it is undeniable that the meaning of the film could be lost on anybody, and personally I did find that it made me think. I frequently consider the future, what it will look like with global warming, and try to make an effort as an individual to reduce my carbon footprint. But is this enough? McKay’s focus in the film is an important one. It looks at the big actors in politics, business and technology, and how they are loath to act, concentrating instead on the financial and political benefits or disadvantages, rather than taking responsibility. The monetary gains seen in the minerals available on the comet outweighed the need to prevent the comet from hitting, perhaps an apt metaphor for our financial-driven world. In relation to the climate crisis, it is of course vital to individually contribute to reducing emissions, but the only way we are going to prevent a disaster is wider government action. In comparison, with a comet hurtling towards earth, the individual could do nothing: only those in power had the capacity to try to stop it.

Not every film has to have a deep moral message, and can be there purely to entertain. Don’t Look Up did prove to be an engaging watch whilst also clearly intending to educate its viewers. Its comedic elements and overall premise provided an entertaining piece, but the unconvincing and shaky handling of the black comedy and excessive emphasis on its parallels to the real world impacted its intended rallying call against climate change.

Artwork by Wang Sum Luk. Image credit: JuergenPM//Pixabay

Pinks ribbons: The stagnation of a story

0

A pastel pink ribbon, looped once, pinned to the lapel of a photogenic model, iced onto a biscuit or sold at a charity fundraiser. Now made gigantic and carried out on to a football pitch. A pink ribbon is lightweight, neat, cheerful – everything breast cancer is not. Perhaps because of this, as a symbol of awareness for the disease, it has endured.

You may even be familiar with the story of its origin.

It is 1992, and Self – “a magazine for women that specializes in health, beauty and style” – is compiling its annual breast cancer awareness special issue. Editor in chief Alexandra Penney, and Evelyn Lauder – senior at cosmetics company Estée Lauder – read a column about 68-year-old Charlotte Haley, who is distributing peach-coloured ribbons with the accompanying message

“National Cancer Institute annual budget is $1.8 Billion. Only 5% goes for cancer prevention. Help us to wake up our legislators and America by wearing this ribbon.”

Haley’s work is covered in the LA Times, described as a “personal, simple effort”. Alexandra Penney, market savvy, sees promise in the little peach ribbons, and calls Haley up to ask permission to use her idea in Self’s national campaign. Haley starkly refuses: ‘Too commercial.’ Taken aback, Penney and Lauder consult their lawyers. They are told, to their joy, that if they change the colour of the ribbon, they avoid the problem of permission. Peach loses its blush and becomes pastel pink. The edition of the magazine is a success and ribbons are distributed at Estée Lauder cosmetics counters nationwide. It only gains more traction after that; today the pink ribbon is the most recognisable symbol of breast cancer awareness.

This is a succinct narrative, perhaps even an accurate one.

Online coverage of this story is patchy, with  evidence of cut and paste from a 1997 account of it by Sandy M Fernandez, in which Alexandra Penney is interviewed. “You know how it is when things are in the air,” she says breezily to Fernandez of the atmosphere in the Self office before the special issue was released. Being the one who popularised the ribbon, Penney gets the last word.

There is something in the story that resists reimagination. For a start, the tale – a small-scale campaign engulfed by corporate power – has a strong arc, and feels complete. Secondly, Charlotte Haley passed away in 2014, so opportunities to interview primary sources are dwindling.

On top of this, rather than historical truth, pieces covering this story are often preoccupied with a different purpose – usually advocating breast cancer awareness. To illustrate the lack of imaginative re-examination of the story: the cards Haley distributed with an attached peach ribbon implore their recipients to “join the grassroots movement.” The word ‘grassroots’ has been latched on to in almost every account I have found online. “Haley was strictly grassroots,” “It’s a grassroots movement,” “a grassroots effort,” “Charlotte’s grassroots campaign.” It is clear that in the pink ribbon story each rewrite did not have access to any new material.

Due to the PR success of the pink ribbon, the story is looked back upon uncritically. Charlotte Haley is rightly seen as inspiring; the more controversial Alexandra Penney is not an idea thief but merely “market-savvy”.

There is one notable dissenter: Katherine O’Brien, on her blog ihatebreastcancer. After a rare well-researched account of the pink ribbon story, she wonders if the profits from that year’s breast cancer awareness issue of Self will be donated to research, or, more likely, kept by the company. O’Brien ends the blog post with a burst of righteous anger:

“Well, as one of 150,000 U.S. people currently living with metastatic breast cancer, I want people to know that Oct. 13 is National Metastatic Breast Cancer Awareness Day. In the U.S., incidence of stage IV breast cancer—the cancer that is lethal—has stayed the same over the past 20 years; screening and improved treatment has not changed this.

“I am not among the millions of people who subscribe to Self. If I were, I would rip out every page of breast cancer related advertising and return it to editor in chief Lucy Danziger and tell her I support groups that support research. I would ask her to write about people with metastatic breast cancer and help readers understand why it is different from early-stage breast cancer. I would ask her to do an article on recurrence. I would ask her if she thinks we have enough awareness.”

This shatters abruptly images of pastel pink ribbons adorning photogenic models. The post begins to chip away at the original narrative from an oblique angle. O’Brien does not refute the facts, and instead highlights how tangential – and potentially obscuring – the media friendly pink ribbon tale can be to more painful issues. Like the fact that breast cancer is the second most common cause of death in women in the UK. Or that an estimated 12,000 women are living with undiagnosed breast cancer due to the pandemic’s disruption to screening services.

Only the journalism from 1992 manages to capture any of the urgency and momentum of Charlotte Haley’s project. The story and imagery today has become folklore, an American tale of the elephant and the mouse, disconnected from crueller realities. The story functions the way a pink ribbon does. Both bring to mind ideas of ‘awareness’, which can certainly be positive, but are unproductivel if the thought goes no further than that.

Neither bring home the grief of living with, or living alongside someone with, breast cancer. As much as progress has been made, breast cancer remains a deadly, frightening disease that has cut many, many lives tragically short.  For the pink ribbon, superficial awareness is a start, but its inability to capture the devastation the disease still causes is where its symbolism ultimately fails.

Image Credit: Marianne O’Leary/CC BY 2.0

The 2022 Midterms: An oversimplified guide to why Democrats are (probably) screwed

0

It is a truth universally acknowledged that an American politician in possession of a House or Senate seat must be perpetually engaged in campaigning. The United States is a nation forever embroiled in one election or another. Every two years, all members of the House of Representatives and around one third of Senators face the voters. On half of these occasions, a presidential race also takes place concordantly – for the sake of simplicity, this article is only concerned with these positions, the federal offices; to delve into statewide races or the fates of the other half a million (!) elected American office holders would be far too complicated. Besides, when people talk about the midterms, they mostly mean congressional elections. One might be forgiven for thinking that major elections every two years does not sound that bad; after all, the UK held general elections in 2015, 2017, and 2019. We (sort of) survived those. However, the core difference is that in America the campaign process is protracted to say the least. On 6th November 2019, Parliament dissolved in anticipation of an election held around a month later on the 12th of December. By contrast, the first major Democratic candidates for the 2020 Presidential race (Sanders, Warren, et al) announced their candidacies in February 2019; election day was the 3rd November the next year.

In addition to being long, American races are expensive. The 2020 cycle cost in the vicinity of $14 billion, a sum roughly equivalent to the GDP of Mongolia. In the modern era of nationalised, polarised politics, a prospective or incumbent office holder must never cease fundraising; one never knows when one might have to spend $140 million to win their seat. (the cost of Jon Ossoff’s senate race in Georgia). American elections therefore are the political equivalent of Titanic: interminable, costly, and frequently culminating in the metaphorical equivalent of a sinking cruise liner. Nevertheless, like Elizabeth Warren, they persist. On 8th November, America is once more going to the polls. The results of the day’s vote will determine which party controls Congress for the next two years with corresponding powers over legislation, oversight, and appointments to the federal judiciary. The question of who will win is essential. Will it be the incumbent Democrats, or the insurgent (in more ways than one) Republicans?

Mark Twain said that “history doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes”, and there are certainly identifiable historical trends in midterm elections over the last twenty-five years. The last two Democratic Presidents, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, both entered office with larger mandates than Joe Biden. In 1992 and 2008, the two won by larger margins in the popular vote and significantly larger margins in the electoral college than the aforementioned  46th President of the United States. Democrats in Congress also had significantly larger majorities than they do at present; when Clinton entered office, he had 57 Democratic Senators and 258 members in the House, while Obama also began with 57 Senators (rising to 60 at one point) and 256 members. It is worth making abundantly clear that these numbers did not insulate Clinton or Obama from a midterm battering, or “shellacking” as Obama famously, and aptly, called it. By contrast, Biden has 222 members in the House and a Senate split 50/50. In short, the two current Democratic Caucuses are utterly incapable of absorbing the losses suffered in the past. Republicans require five seats (or will once a special election in June is conducted) to win the House and permit Kevin McCarthy to wrest the gavel away from Nancy Pelosi. In 1994 they won 54, and in 2010 they won 63. The outlook in the Senate is similarly bleak for Democrats. In an evenly divided chamber, the loss of a single seat is tantamount to Mitch McConnell reclaiming his job as Majority Leader; eight seats were lost in 1994 and six in 2010. 

Probably the Republicans. 

It is not just Democrats who have suffered in their first midterms; significant backlash against Donald Trump and Congressional Republicans led to Democrats regaining the House in 2018 after eight years in the minority. Of course, to some extent it is fatuous to simply quote historical election data. The occurrence of an event in the past is no guarantee of repetition or rhyme – these are elections after all, not Shakespearean sonnets. Furthermore, an eagle-eyed reader will have noted the absence of George W. Bush’s name. In his first midterms in 2002, Republicans in fact reversed the tides of history, picking up seats and padding their majorities in both the House and the Senate… but it would take a bold pundit to predict Democratic gains in the House this November, though the Senate is a slightly more complex beast. What must be examined then is what causes the party of the President to suffer in the midterms and how success is possible. 

Every single President from Bill Clinton onwards has entered office with government trifectas, meaning one party control of the presidency and both houses of Congress. Consequently, whilst they have not been able to legislate unimpeded (no one following the first year of the Biden administration could argue such a thing), they have been able to pass more of their agenda than an empowered opposition would have otherwise permitted. Before the 1994 elections, the Democrats passed major tax increases (without a single Republican vote), particularly on wealthy Americans, gun control legislation (as part of a larger Omnibus Crime Bill, now highly controversial for its contribution to mass incarceration), and failed in an attempt to pass universal health care. Putting aside Bush for the time being, Obama’s administration pushed through Congress an economic stimulus package, financial regulation in the form of Dodd-Frank, a repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell”, the internal policy which had prohibited LGBTQ+ Americans from serving openly in the military, and, most famously, Obamacare. The Trump administration managed massive tax cuts and failed to repeal Obamacare (in a very dramatic fashion), but then again, Democrats are typically more prolific legislators and, frankly, are also better at governing. 

Passing bills is great and much of the work done under those trifectas, particularly at the beginning of the Obama years, has made America a tangibly better place. The political problem is that it gives your opponents something on which to run against you. In 1994 (a complex election cycle not to be oversimplified), Democrats were frequently attacked, in particular for the failed attempt at health care reform and the tax rises. In 2010, fiscal conservative rage towards Obamacare was a white-hot, potent motivating force, crystallised into the grassroots Tea Party movement. The ideology of this reactionary sect is reasonably easy to understand; Ian Hislop explains that the Republican Party is “very, very right wing” and the Tea Party “is mad”. Ironically, in 2019 almost every frontline Democrat running in a competitive House district put Republican attempts to repeal Obamacare at the centre of their campaign. It is an aphorism of life that has come more and more to dictate politics that people react far more strongly against what they perceive to be negative than in favour of what they perceive to be positive. There are moments when campaigns can sincerely motivate people, when calls for hope and change are a driving force – Obama in 2008; Bernie in 2016 and 2020 – but far more often, people get out to vote because of what they oppose and what they fear. Hence the problem for a party with trifecta: when you have had all the power for the last two years, your partisans have less to dread and loathe, whilst the opposition has spent two years preparing for midterms. 

Regrettably, for Biden and the Dems, this pattern appears to be holding going into 2022. The party has passed massively consequential legislation, most importantly the American Rescue Plan or ARP ($1.9 trillion of COVID relief and anti-poverty measures) and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act  (bipartisan in the Senate at least) which instigates new spending worth $550 billion. These bills did and will do good things; the ARP’s yearlong expansion of the child tax credit clearly slashed the child poverty rate and reduced income volatility for millions (though the data is not yet quite clear on how much / many). Nevertheless, as with Obamacare, they give fiscal conservatives something to sink their teeth into and to run against.

However, this is not 2010 and the energy on the Republican side does not seem to be consolidated around opposition to government spending (any more than is ‘normal’) as it was then. Thus, the danger for Democrats, as it was to a lesser extent for Clinton, appears to be what did not get passed. The legislative wrangling during the Summer and Autumn over “Build Back Better” (BBB), Joe Biden’s signature policy proposal, is far too convoluted to get into here, but suffice to say Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia ultimately killed it, announcing his opposition to the bill unexpectedly after months of negotiations – oh, the joys of a 50/50 Senate! The other big miss was on voting rights, another very messy and far more predictable failure. The reason for that legislation’s collapse is complex in a way only American politics can be and I have done my best to explain it somewhere less prominent [See Appendix]. The problem with partisan legislation that crumbles in Congress is that it ends up as the worst of both worlds. Members in the House and Senate are forced to take tough positions and votes that can be used against them without the commensurate benefits derived from (a) the perception of competence that accompanies legislating and (b) the actual good conferred by progressive legislation. House Democrats in tough districts are already fending off entirely predictable attacks from challengers over the contents of BBB without any ability to respond by pointing to its benefits which remain entirely hypothetical. 

The inverse of this phenomenon is just as problematic (hence “worst of both worlds”): the voters of the party in power are not given an incentive to reelect their politicians. Many of those who supported Biden and other Democrats in 2018 and 2020 will not vote for the party in 2022. Some may vote Republican; many will not vote at all; and this will be in large part owing to an apparent inability to keep promises. One can debate the extent to which Biden is culpable (a little, but not much), but the numbers are reasonably clear that the President’s approval ratings began to fall consistently as the media narrative solidified into “Democrats in disarray” and bills did not get passed. Based on the lessons of legislative history taught by Clinton and Obama, and the realities of the first Congress under President Biden, one can make a compelling case based on one important facet of the election that Democrats will get hammered.

So, things are bad on the legislative front; another factor fundamental to determine success or failure in the midterms is public perception of the President. All elections are, at their core, either treated by voters as choices or referenda. In the former, voters compare two options and make their decision based on an affirmative preference. In the latter, voters make their decision whether to support a candidate / party based primarily on the actions of that one candidate / party; thus any vote for the opponent is primarily a vote against, not a vote for. Presidential elections are more likely than midterms to be perceived as a choice, yet even then, one campaign might seek to make the race more of an up or down vote on their opponent. The 2020 election is a very good example of this; whilst Joe Biden undoubtedly put forward a significant policy platform, the strategy pursued by Jen O’Malley Dillon, the campaign manager, and other senior figures was to run somewhat quietly – hence Trump’s “basement” jibes. This encouraged voters to reflect on Donald Trump, whose unpopularity, they judged, would decide the race. By contrast, Obama won reelection in 2012 in large part because his team shifted the perception of the race from a referendum on his first term to a choice between the President and former Governor Mitt Romney, someone they did a very good job of portraying as a ruthless, offshoring capitalist. 

Unlike Presidential races, midterms, before which one party tends to have spent two years making most of the decisions, are almost always taken by voters to be a kind of Presidential report card and thus a referendum. After all, the President is the single most visible and important representation of their Congressional party, setting the agenda and driving the legislation. As a result, generic presidential approval ratings are a reliable indicator of performance in the House and ratings in the Battleground states tie closely to Senate success. Looking at the data from Gallup, Bill Clinton’s ratings in the last poll before the 1994 elections were even, with 46% approval and 46% disapproval – a slight outlier given that every other result since July had shown his ratings and between -5 and – 15. Barack Obama was at -3 (45% approval, 48% disapproval) immediately prior to the midterms, numbers pretty consistent with opinion for the last few months which had skewed very slightly negative. Donald Trump was less popular than his Democratic predecessors with approval ratings of -14 (40% approval, 54% disapproval) in the last poll before Republicans lost the House, numbers once again reasonably consistent with the preceding months. 

Herein lies the key to George W. Bush’s midterm trend-busting. The vast spike in approval which he enjoyed following 9/11, one of the most striking examples of the “rally around the flag” effect in recent memory, proved rather robust. The 90% approval he was given at the end of September 2001 was significantly preserved through 2002. In the last Gallup poll before the midterms, his approval rating was + 34 (63% approval, 29% disapproval), numbers actually below earlier figures. In short, the Republican secret to success in 2002 was not really a secret; the President was immensely popular and voters rewarded his party. In 2006, Bush’s second midterms, by which point Iraq looked a disaster and his ratings were deep into their terminal decline, Democrats won both the House and the Senate. 

So, Joe Biden – is he liked? FiveThirtyEight, the polling aggregator, as of 8th February has him at – 11.7 with 41.2% approval, 52.9% disapproval – closer to Trump numbers than those of Obama or Clinton. No President in the modern era has significantly improved their approval ratings in a midterm year. If the November elections are perceived as a referendum on the President, as they have been since the days of Bill Clinton and, in fact, since far earlier, then Democrats look almost certain to lose the House and likely to fall short in the Senate. If you would rather see Democrats than Republicans empowered, which I imagine is true for most Oxford students, then it would seem that the situation looks bleak to the point of foretold. 

And yet, in the midst of all this sludge, there are the glimmers of something: a case not for Democratic optimism, not even close, but perhaps for hope. Going into 2010, Nancy Pelosi’s caucus contained over 250 members; now there are 222, and it remains true that anything below the magic number of 218 means the minority. However, twelve years ago, Democrats’ numbers had been padded by two very successful cycles immediately prior. 2006 had ultimately comprised the long overdue reckoning with the Bush administration which handed Democrats the House, and in 2008, the party had benefited from the coattails of an immensely popular presidential candidate who had won in red territory (Indiana, North Carolina, Virginia) and run John McCain ragged in crimson strongholds (Missouri and Montana). What this meant was that the Democratic caucus was filled with a lot of fresh members who had never fought a tough campaign, representing territory that had gone blue only in historically triumphant cycles. Indeed, this is a point which Pelosi has made several times in recent press conferences. The losses posted in 2010 were of course related to Obama’s approval ratings, the legislating done by Democrats, and the energised / fanatical Republican response these provoked, but the numbers were inflated by overextended members unable to fight and win a tough cycle. 

This will not be the case in 2022. In 2020, Democrats had expected to pick up somewhere between eight and 15 seats; instead they made a net loss of 13 with Republicans picking off 14 incumbents. The frontline Representatives who built the 2018 majority ended up fighting bruising campaigns in a cycle that was meant to be comparatively easy. The ones that have survived into the present Congress are hardened politicians in difficult but winnable territory, who know what it means to face a highly challenging reelection campaign, and, most importantly, labour under no delusions that 2022 will be anything but brutal. Even in a cycle which was as bad as 2010, it would be difficult for Democrats to lose more than 25-30 seats, and even this would appear less likely given the strength of the party’s remaining incumbents. 

There is a major caveat here though. Democrats have also been roiled by massive numbers of incumbents declining to seek reelection: 30 as of 15th February, compared to 13 Republicans. Many are doing so out of a desire to leave before suffering the indignities of the minority in a likely Republican, likely (even more) toxic House. The issue is that whilst Democrats have their experienced, successful members elected in 2018 and 2020, they are also losing long-time incumbency boosts in other tricky territory. Representative Cheri Bustos, for example, has represented a reddish district in rural Illinois since 2012 and has now chosen retirement. In 2016, she was the only Democratic member to win by over 20 points in a district carried by Trump the very same day. Trump won it again in 2020, even as Bustos retained the seat for House Democrats. Such politicians, skilled in winning where Democrats struggle more and more to win, are significant losses for the party and will imperil the majority. 

One area in which the Democrats are experiencing entirely unforeseen success is in the redistricting battle. Every ten years, the United States conducts its census, relevant in no small part because the data which it provides becomes the basis for the decennial redrawing of Congressional districts. Each state has undergone / is undergoing this process in order that the new map can be used for the midterms. In most states, the new map is conceived by the state legislature and consented to by the governor, a political route which can make the process highly partisan. The single most effective way to lock in an electoral advantage for the next ten years is by drawing a map conducive to the interests of your party – to dabble in what is called gerrymandering. To gerrymander is to strategically allocate voters to districts so as to win one party the most seats possible, either by grouping opposing voters together into one overwhelmingly safe district, allowing your party to pick up all surrounding districts by smaller margins, or by “cracking”, breaking up areas areas of opposing voters to prevent them voting together as a bloc in a single district. 

After the 2010 midterms, Republicans took control of vast numbers of state legislatures, picking up more seats in statehouses than any party ever had before. They then dominated the redistricting process, locking in the progress made in the previous cycle. In 2012, House Democrats won the popular vote by 1.1%, almost 1.4 million votes, but flipped a mere eight districts, ending up with 201 seats to the Republicans’ 234; this, for the record, is almost the precise inverse of the party composition after the 2018 midterms when Democrats had won 8.6% of the popular vote. As a result of Republican gerrymandering in 2011 and 2012, they held the House for eight years, losing it only in a “blue wave” cycle and once demographic change had already negated some of their map-given advantage. 

Following the 2020 races, when Democrats failed to make gains at the state level, and with their majority in the House hanging by a thread, there were fears of a similar “redistricting armageddon”. Now, however, strategists and party officials are cautiously optimistic. Republicans have moved aggressively in some states, Texas being a good example, but for the most part seem to have been content with securing the districts of the party’s incumbents. There have also been some favourable court decisions from the Democratic perspective. The provisions of the Voting Rights Act which still have teeth after various Supreme Court defangings do offer some protections for minority voters. Such communities still have a right to representation, and thus “cracking” when it prevents large numbers of marginalised voters from having their own representative remains frowned upon. That being said, a lower court ruling which demanded a more favourable map for Democrats in Alabama was recently overturned by the Supreme Court, demonstrating the potency of a conservative majority of six to three, since Chief Justice John Roberts siding with the three liberals did not prevent that coalition ending up in the minority. To sum up, there were fears that gerrymandering alone would doom the House Democratic majority, and it now does not appear that this will be the case. 

It is also worth saying, since it would be journalistic malpractice not to, that in the fewer states which Democrats control, the calculus has changed. Democrats in state legislatures are pursuing partisan gerrymandering as aggressively as Republicans ever have. In New York, whilst the process is technically controlled by a nonpartisan commission, at least one official has conceded that this was set up in the knowledge that failure would be inevitable. Now Democrats, with the quasi-cartography back largely at the purview of the state legislature, are looking roughly to halve the size of the state’s Republican delegation; a similar strategy is being pursued in Illinois – and elsewhere, but frankly in the biggest blue states it matters more; gerrymandering in, say, New England where every Representative is a Democrat would not really upset any balance. Given vocal Democratic opposition to gerrymandering in the past, this has provoked rather a few cries of hypocrisy from opinion writers and the more shameless elected Republicans. 

This is an approximation of a valid critique, but it is not made in anything approaching good faith. Democrats making decisions say that they oppose partisan gerrymandering, and they are telling the truth. Legislation which passed the House this Congress would have ended the practice, and Democrats in the House supported it, while Republicans opposed it. The same is true in the Senate; the bill failed because it was the subject of a Republican filibuster which, for reasons explained in this article’s appendix, could not be broken. One party wishes to end gerrymandering, one wishes to perpetuate it. Both use it, but only because from a Democratic, frankly a democratic, perspective, it is ludicrous to suggest that in order to prove their sincerity, Democrats should unilaterally disarm, ceding all advantage to the unchecked minoritarian fantasies of Republicans. Sincerity has been proven; Democrats sought to pass the legislation. At any rate, successes in the redistricting process are unlikely to save Democrats in the House, but they may make it easier than in the 2010s to return from the oblivion to which 2022 is likely to consign them. 

I alluded earlier to the Senate being a much trickier beast to judge than the House. The House of Representatives is far more responsive to prevailing political winds since all its members are elected simultaneously whilst only about a third of Senators are up at any one time. Additionally, it has 435 seats rather than 100, so individual races and the contingencies of these are less likely to decide overall control, and candidate strength, whilst important, matters less than in Senate races. As a result, the Senate can occasionally produce rather anomalous results. 

In 2018, even as Democrats won the popular vote in the House by 8.6%, Republicans added two seats to their Senate majority, largely on account of Democrats facing an almost laughably unfavourable map, perhaps the most challenging in history. Republicans were defending nine seats, only one of which was in a state carried by Hillary Clinton in 2016 (Nevada), whilst Democrats were defending 26 seats, ten of which were in Trump states (many of which had not even been close two years earlier). Of these 10 incumbents, Democrats defended six, picked up the Nevada seat and won with Kyrsten Sinema in Arizona, ending up with strong results given the context, despite the loss of four incumbents (Indiana, Missouri, North Dakota, and Florida). Still, despite Republican success in their own bad midterms, Democrats lost several seats in 1994 and 2010, evincing the fact that the Senate is by no means immune from the wider climate. 

Nevertheless, looking at the map from cycle to cycle is immensely important, and the 2022 map is… alright. Republicans are defending more seats this time, and several of these present tentative pickup opportunities for Democrats. Republicans have two seats up in territory won by Biden: incumbent Senator Ron Johnson in Wisconsin, and an opening in Pennsylvania. Quite honestly, both of these could go either way. Johnson is a loose cannon, unpragmatically so for a Senator representing a swing state, and yet he won in both 2010 and 2016, neither of which were especially razor-thin elections. Moreover, the Democratic candidate with a commanding lead in polling for the primary, Lieutenant Governor Mandela Barnes, is unabashedly progressive, supporting Sanders in both 2016 and 2020, also potentially unpragmatic in a state with distinct red and blue streaks. The very limited hypothetical polling between Barnes and Johnson is unpromising if inconclusive. Pennsylvania is similarly difficult to read, Democrats have two good candidates, Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman and Representative Conor Lamb, both of whom perform reasonably well in hypothetical polling, though Lamb is a moderate whose positions are slightly more relaxing for Democratic strategists. On the other side, Republicans lack an incumbent (because Senator Pat Toomey has eschewed a reelection bid to a third term), as well as any other top tier candidate. On balance, the better chance for a Democratic pickup appears to be in Pennsylvania, though both races look like they are going to be tight, unpredictable, and expensive. The opinion both humorously and morbidly being voiced by some Democratic strategists is that the Senate map looks much bluer if Joe Biden’s approval ratings climb by 5-8%.

These seats are perhaps the two likeliest to flip, but Republicans and Democrats could both struggle elsewhere. Part of the danger for Republicans, in more ways than one, is Trump. In his bizarre, psychologically revealing vindictiveness, he has been wading into Senate primaries, seeking to promote loyal candidates (essentially those concurring that the 2020 election was stolen) and to dislodge the disloyal. This has the capacity to produce primary winners who struggle in general elections given that their positions are unpalatable to most who are not MAGA partisans. As it happens, this phenomenon has been one of the more consistent patterns in Senate races in the last decade or so. To choose one from a litany of examples, Democrat Chris Coons defeated Tea Party-backed Christine “I’m not a witch” O’Donnell by almost 17 points in Delaware’s 2010 Senate race. The upsetting part from Republican perspectives was less that O’Donnell had been forced to declare that she had never joined a coven, and more that she had won an upset primary victory over Mike Castle, a Representative and former Governor, who polling showed defeating Chris Coons in the general election. In almost every competitive state, there is a Republican candidate who might well be a liability in a general election. 

Though perhaps this is wishful thinking; in an era of partisanship which seems categorically different to anything since the American Civil War, a world in which Marjorie Taylor Greene is a United States Representative, it seems hard to imagine a Senate candidacy derailed by derangement the way Todd Akin’s 2012 Missouri Senate Campaign was after his “legitimate rape” comments. Impressively, Democratic incumbent Claire McCaskill later admitted to having helped Akin win the primary, believing him to be the easier lift in the general election. (The cited extract in which McCaskill admits the boosting of Akin is a great example of an utterly brilliant political gambit. The Senator faced likely defeat before the race, and ultimately won by 16 points.)

So, the competitive seats in 2022 beyond Wisconsin and Pennsylvania on the Republican side are likely to be those with a retiring incumbent. In North Carolina, a state only a light shade of red, a nasty and inconclusive Republican primary is underway, whilst Democrats appear to be consolidating early around former State Supreme Court Chief Justice, Cheri Beasley; a unity always advantageous going into a competitive race. Ohio is a slightly redder state than North Carolina, yet its current senior Senator is a Democrat, so strange things can happen. Moreover, leading Republican candidates in the Buckeye State are conducting what appears to be the country’s most bruising primary. However, both these two states are undoubtedly more likely to be retained by the Republican Senate Caucus than they are to be lost. 

The Democrats, unlike in 2018, are defending no Senators in states carried by Donald Trump in 2022. Their two most vulnerable incumbents are both 2020 special election winners who are required to run again for a full term, Raphael Warnock in Georgia, and Mark Kelly in Arizona. Both men fought tough campaigns in the knowledge that they would soon be back before voters and have thus posted strong fundraising figures. Kelly appears slightly more secure than Warnock given the marginally more favourable character of Arizona than Georgia for Democrats, alongside the failure of the Republicans to find a field-clearing candidate. Part of the peril for Warnock is Republican enthusiasm for the candidacy of Herschel Walker, a Heisman Trophy winner and successful former American football player – though the American obsession with athletes-celebrities-turned-politicians remains mysterious to me. In short, control of the Senate turns on a knife’s edge; even Ted Cruz, the most partisan of all partisans, puts the odds at around 50-50. The chamber’s majority will be decided by narrow margins in a few key states, none of which have predictable races, and whichever party carries the day looks highly unlikely to hold any more than 51 or 52 seats; indeed a continuation of the 50/50 split is far from implausible. 

This article, up until this point, has largely looked at a macroscopic politics, examining history, strategy, and the broad currents and trends in Congressional elections. To wrap up, however, it is worth outlining one or two of the specific issues upon which these elections are likely to turn, and, in keeping with the ‘horse-racey’ tone of the piece, outlining which party is up and which is down. 

Democrats are rather down. 

A year or so ago this was not widely imagined, but the issue coming to dictate Republican attack strategies is inflation. Inflation in the US is up to around seven or seven and a half per cent, its highest level in decades, and sustained price rises is one of the few issues which really does motivate votes. It was central to British politics for years, and comprised the very raison d’être of the Thatcher government, because, to understate the issue somewhat, inflation makes people poorer in such a way that they are viscerally aware of it occurring. So much of the economy moves out of sight of day to day life – not inflation. A lot of American economists thought the inflationary pressures were a transitory by-product of exiting from COVID; consequently, the Biden administration largely dismissed the issue. Larry Summers, former Treasury Secretary, and Obama administration spending hawk, argued otherwise, believing in large part that the output gap being plugged by the American Rescue Plan was smaller than the legislation was designed to fill. 

This is not an article about economics. All that is immediately obvious is that Summers was right on the immediately pertinent point; inflation did not quickly get flushed out of the system. All due credit from a political perspective should go to a handful of Republicans, particularly Elise Stefanik, the number three Republican in the House, who anticipated well before it was on the radar of mainstream Democrats that inflation would become a potent attack-line. Republicans have been laser-focussed on the issue for months and have successfully repositioned themselves as the party of economic responsibility, another remarkable turnaround for the party actually of tax cuts and deregulation. If inflation has fallen somewhat and is trending down come November, then Democrats on the frontlines may have some room to breathe and to discuss other issues. If it remains at seven per cent or higher then that will be the election and Democrats will be swept aside. 

Another matter of concern is one that has been on everyone’s brain for a while now, COVID. Broadly speaking, Democrats have been the party of restrictions and Republicans have not. This, obviously, obscures a huge amount of nuance. It appears true that Democrats incorrectly assessed the risks at points, placing excessive burdens on children and parents, an issue which Republicans have well exploited. It is also certainly true that the abdication of responsibility by double or triple-jabbed elected Republicans who have obfuscated and danced around vaccination to play to a certain segment of their base is nauseating and reprehensible. You know things are bad when even Donald Trump criticises Ron DeSantis for refusing to clarify his (definitely triple-jabbed) vaccination status. 

In September 2021, California held its first recall election in almost 20 years. Frustrations with Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom, who had notoriously attended an event at The French Laundry, a three Michelin Star, Napa Valley restaurant, boiled over, and Republicans launched an ill-judged attempt to remove him from office. Newsom stomped it into the dirt. He won by an almost identical margin to his landslide 2018 election, about 24 points, winning more votes than in that race in the process. The problem was that some of the wrong lessons were learned. Newsom’s team took from this, and exported, that COVID responsibility was a winning issue (Newsom had run as a vaccine-mandating, COVID-managing governor). Yes, perhaps, in true blue California. However the far more pressing point for Democratic voters ended up being that Newsom’s leading Republican opponent, Larry Elder, was a Republican made in the Trumpy, conspiratorial, election-denying mould; the kind of Republican that gets Democratic base voters scared. 

Two months later, New Jersey and Virginia held their slightly quaint off-year gubernatorial races. Phil Murphy, an incumbent Democrat seeking a second term in New Jersey, leaned in to his apparently high marks from voters for handling the virus. He was almost universally expected to win; New Jersey had gone for Biden by just shy of 16 points in 2020, and Murphy had won by 14 points in 2017. This time he won by about three. The race was far, far, closer than it had any right to be. Still, ultimately all people remember about elections is who won, and Murphy won. The shock came in Virginia. Terry McAuliffe had been the governor from 2014 to 2018, but the state is one of the few that prevents its leaders from serving consecutive terms, so McAuliffe sought a non-consecutive second term after four years under Ralph Northam. The gubernatorial race has in the past been considered something of a microcosm. It tends to swing against the party of the president, but the Commonwealth had, in recent years, come to be more and more aligned with the Democratic column; as indicated above, McAuliffe won his first term when Obama still sat in the Oval Office. Moreover, Biden had won Virginia by 10 points. Whilst the polling by the end of the race did point to a narrow Glenn Youngkin (Republican) victory, the actual manifestation of the numbers, a Democratic loss by 2 points, was genuinely devastating. 

Of course, all close elections are to some extent contingent. McAuliffe made a lot of errors, particularly around education, an issue becoming more divisive and politically salient as Republican school boards seek to ban books and resist COVID restrictions. Youngkin ran a very good campaign (adequately Trumpy for the base but palatable for suburban women) and the race was overshadowed by the terrible Democratic House and Senate infighting. Therefore, there are dangers of reading too much into narrow defeats. However, it is worth making perfectly clear that one Democrat was defeated in a blue-tinted state whilst running a campaign focussed in large part on COVID measures and vaccine mandates, while the other only just scraped by in deep blue territory whilst doing the same. 

One rather interesting data point which Virginia produced might reveal something about the midterms or, frankly, might not. Northam won the governor’s mansion in 2017 by nine points, with 53.9% of the vote, and just over 1.4 million ballots in his favour. McAuliffe lost in 2021 by two points, with 48.6% of the vote, but with 1.6 million ballots cast for him. Democrats turned out enough voters; it is just that Republicans turned out more. There is a possibility come November that even if Democrats mobilise an awful lot of their voters, which would not surprise me, the Republican party is easily identifiable as profoundly dangerous, and millions more people are more engaged in politics post-Trump, it may be that nothing they can do will withstand the wave that appears to be building.

Whether that is true or not, in recent days Democrats have pivoted aggressively on their COVID messaging. A spate of governors, Murphy among them, ironically, have announced plans to loosen mask mandates, and House Democrats are shifting on masks as well. A critical mass appears to have developed of people who believe that being seen as the party of continued COVID malaise is now more damaging and more likely than being seen as responsible leaders; the elections in 2021 have been a large part of this shift. As with a lot of things in this cycle, minds on COVID might already be made up; it is hard to see anyone who intends to vote based on desiring fewer restrictions deciding to vote Democrat.  

To be blunt, very few people not paid to say it think that Democrats will win in November. Even Democratic strategists or members in the House talk to reporters with the shared assumption that the House is doomed and the Senate can maybe be held if inflation drops, COVID recedes, the Republicans nominate candidates on the nuttier end of nutty, and good campaigns are run. In their less optimistic moments, Democrats fear being wiped out. It might not happen, but all the ingredients are there. A Republican backlash of significant proportions is evidently mounting and a taste was given in Virginia and New Jersey. The President’s approval ratings are underwater in every state where they need to be inverted, whilst the White House does not appear to see a clear path to get them back up to the high 40s. For all that is good in the economy -indeed much has been achieved during the Biden administration – inflation has become the headline issue, and Republicans have done a very good job of drawing the battlelines there early. Also Democrats are now worrying that they might have put themselves on the wrong side of the shifting COVID fence, as well as fearing that legislative missteps with BBB and Voting Rights will cost them in terms of base turnout and undercut attempts to present themselves as competent. If Republicans do take back the House, and perhaps the Senate too, it will be in part because of self-inflicted Democratic wounds and in part because of trends and circumstances outside of their immediate control. It will also be a profound victory for a deranged, toxic party, devoid of any policy beyond cruelty. It will also be a profound victory for stupidity – I refer you to Marjorie Taylor Greene’s latest faux-pas, mixing up the Gestapo with Gazpacho. The wheel turns; hundreds of millions are raised and spent; we watch with horrified anticipation.
 

Appendix

The attempt by Democrats to pass voting rights legislation reflected one of the party’s long-term goals, properly imbued with a particular sense of urgency by the Republican party’s accelerated pivot towards authoritarianism. Every Democratic Senator supports the principle of much of the legislation and Senator Lisa Murkowski (an Alaska Republican) also backed the John Lewis Voting Rights Act (one of the possible bills). However, owing to unintended consequences and arcane procedural rules, the United States Senate is held hostage by the filibuster. The filibuster is a quirk of the chamber which means that whilst any bill can technically be passed on a simple majority vote, opposing Senators have the opportunity to to prolong the period of debate on a bill indefinitely, effectively ‘killing’ it. Invoking cloture (the procedure to end debate and vote on the bill) requires sixty votes. And any and every bill can be filibustered, save for certain types of legislation pertaining to federal taxation or spending. The rule has technically existed since the 19th century, though for much of its history it went unused, in part because of reduced partisanship, and in part because it was not initially clear that a monster had been created. In 2022, it is an absurd relic; neither party is likely to get anywhere near 60 senators in the foreseeable future and there are very rarely sufficient willing opposition lawmakers to invoke cloture on major legislation. What this subsequently produces is a lot of gridlock and very little lawmaking. 

Chuck Schumer, the current Democratic majority leader, sought to evade the filibuster by changing the rules of the chamber to permit voting rights legislation to pass with 51 votes (all Democrats plus Kamala Harris). Amusingly, Senate rules can be changed by a majority and in the last ten years, this so-called “nuclear option” has been used twice. The first was in 2013 when Harry Reid (the recently deceased Democratic majority leader from 2007-2015) killed the filibuster on all presidential nominations, executive and judicial, save for to the Supreme Court. In 2017, Mitch McConnell (current Republican minority leader and majority leader from 2015-2021) finished the job, ending the filibuster for Supreme Court nominations. Both leaders and senate caucuses did so in the face of perceived intransigence by their opponents. In 2013, Republicans were making it hell for Obama to confirm federal judges and his desired second-term cabinet. In 2017, the overwhelming majority of Democrats were utterly unwilling to confirm Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court, after believing the seat to have been stolen from Obama by McConnell. No party had attempted to touch the legislative filibuster in recent memory until Schumer attempted to create a voting rights carveout. 

The move failed because two Democratic Senators, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Joe Manchin of previously mentioned fame, opposed the measure, causing it to fail 48-52. Both made a decision I believe to be incorrect, citing traditional, and clearly erroneous, arguments that the filibuster helps to preserve the Senate as an institution, protect the minority, and encourage bipartisan compromise. They both received massive flak for their votes, with swirling talk of primary challenges and being cut off from big donors. Sinema is in more danger than Manchin because she represents a state that Joe Biden won in 2020 and consequently Democrats feel that they could win again, even without her incumbency. Manchin represents West Virginia, a state which Joe Biden lost by around 40 points. Any Democratic strategist who is not an utter moron has dismissed the idea of challenging Manchin, knowing full well that that seat is either held by him, or by a Republican.  

Chuck Schumer, just like anyone paying even slight attention, knew that he would be defeated and that the vote would be 48-52. Both Manchin and Sinema had been very clear that they intended to vote no. The justification from Schumer’s perspective is that 48 Democratic Senators are now on record as holding some level of actionable opposition to the legislative filibuster, an achievement considering that many of these publicly advocated the opposite position as recently as 2017 or demurred whilst campaigning. The groundwork, therefore, is undoubtedly laid for a future push which might actually succeed. This is all fair and true. That being said, the criticisms of Schumer are also fair and true, whilst incidentally being more compelling. A floor leader should avoid splitting their caucus and isolating certain members; his responsibility is to lead them all. Certainly his failure to rule out backing primary challenges to Sinema and Manchin is unusual, irresponsible, and verges on a betrayal. The other big critique of his gambit is that during an election year, it has played into two of the narratives most harmful to his President and his party, both of which are examined in the article’s main body.

Artwork by Ben Beechener