How conservatives use identity politics to shut down debate
https://theconversation.com/how-conservatives-use-identity-politics-to-shut-down-debate-89026
By Dennis Altman December 12, 2017
Conservatives
are currently obsessed with identity politics.
Almost
every issue of The Australian comes with a fusillade against the ways identity
politics threaten civic discourse. And a Financial
Review editorial in September warned:
… thoughts,
expression and questioning are now more likely to be silenced in the excess of
identity politics, where race, gender, sexuality and group-think declarations
have replaced class as the key political dividers.
Yet
one of the worst examples of identity politics came from Prime Minister Malcolm
Turnbull in his Q&A
appearance on December 11. In opposing the idea of an elected
Indigenous Advisory Council, he claimed that politicians such as Ken Wyatt and Linda Burney represent
Indigenous Australians. In fact, they represent the electors of Hasluck and
Barton – few of whom are Indigenous.
It
is great that there are Indigenous politicians in parliament (Turnbull somehow
forgot the two Labor senators, Pat Dodson and Malarndirri
McCarthy). But they are not there to “represent” Indigenous
Australians any more than Mathias
Cormann is there to represent Belgian-Australians.
Political party identities
The
primary identity of politicians in our system is their political party. Sometimes
other identities will seem more important, as in the case of the four openly
gay Liberal MPs who pushed their party toward a free vote on marriage equality,
or Michael Danby’s support
for Israel – which goes far beyond the views of his party.
What
these cases suggest is the complex and overlapping nature of identities, and
the trap of defining anyone by only one identity. Nor does belonging to a
particular group, whether through race, ethnicity or gender, mean one
automatically speaks “for” that group. Margaret
Thatcher or Bronwyn
Bishop never sought to speak “for women”.
Identity
politics, as we understand them, are often assumed to have emerged from the
women’s, black and gay movements in the early 1970s. There is an earlier
history, linked to the development of nationalist movements in 19th-century
Europe, and the growth of anti-colonial movements across European empires.
Identity
politics are born when people feel excluded because of something important to
their sense of self – whether it be race, gender, sexuality or language. But
they are also thrust upon people, as in the tragic case of those Jews who
believed themselves to be 100% German until the Nazis came to power.
A
sense of a shared history is crucial to empowering people who have been oppressed,
and sometimes made invisible. When I was a schoolboy in Hobart we were taught
that there were no Tasmanian Aborigines, who had effectively been wiped out by
settlement. Today more than 4% of the state’s population identify as
Indigenous.
Not necessarily born this way
Conservatives
are particularly disturbed by the idea that gender identities might be fluid,
which seemed their central concern in the marriage equality debate.
Ironically
many of those who defend ideas of gender fluidity also believe their sexual
identity is, in Lady Gaga’s words, “born this way”. In both
cases the rhetoric ignores the evidence of both history and anthropology.
Identity
politics are neither inherently left nor right. Some Marxists denounced the new
social movements as threatening class unity, in terms rather like those who now
see identity politics as fracturing a common polity.
One
of the common criticisms of
Hillary Clinton’s US presidential campaign was that she spoke too often to
specific groups, rather than in the language of inclusion. This is an odd
argument given Donald Trump’s blatant
attacks on Hispanics and Muslims, which were clearly an appeal
to white Americans who felt their identities were under threat.
Most
critics of identity politics speak as if they were above identity, when in
practice their identities are those of the dominant group. Pauline
Hanson excludes Aborigines, Asians and Muslims from her view of
Australian identity, cloaked in the language of patriotism.
Like
Hanson, those who attack identity politics are often most zealous in defending
their own versions of identity. Current proposed changes to citizenship
requirements are supported by an emphasis on “Australian values”, as if these
are both self-evident and distinguishable from more universal values of
political and civil rights.
On
the same Q0&A program Turnbull defined Australian values as based upon
“multiculturalism”, which acknowledges that contemporary society is a mosaic of
different and overlapping identities and communities. It is possible to argue
that respect for cultural diversity is a national value, while ignoring the
question whether Australian law treats all cultural values equally.
In
practice, cultural diversity is clearly subordinate to a legal and political
system heavily based on British precedents. A genuine multicultural identity
might start by extending the term “ethnic” to include people of British
ancestry, as much an “ethnicity” as any other.
Identity as a means of exclusion
Identity
politics threaten democratic debate when they become a means of shutting down
any comment that does not grow entirely out of experience.
Writers
have been criticised for
creating characters who do not share their author’s race or gender; speakers
shunned for expressing views that are deemed “insensitive”.
Writer
Germaine Greer may have views on
transgender issues that should be opposed. But they should be met with
rebuttal, not a refusal to listen. Critics of identity politics are right that
zealousness in protecting identities can itself become repressive.
Identity
politics become dangerous when they become an argument for exclusion.
Unfortunately,
the most dangerous examples of exclusion come from those who clam to speak for “the
people”, a term which itself depends upon a certain version of identity. The
populists who attack identity politics do so while creating their own, limited
image of national identity.
My Response:
This is much more of an opinion-based article, and the
author seems to condemn different leaders of his country, slapping labels on
people even as he says there should be less labels and more inclusive. The headline, intended to be a slap to get the reader's attention, seemed more to be a blanket statement and I did not really see the author prove his point throughout the article. I saw the world wide issue of gender identity addressed under
the more umbrella term of identity politics. Quoting Lady Gaga, though maybe a reference to culture, see unreliable instead of stating facts. There is a lot of statements that the author makes without ever backing it up with events. Something I found interesting is
how the author of the article suggested the possibility of social class no
longer being the defining and dividing factor but now it is what views you
hold, whether you are classified as "tolerant" or
"intolerant." I think the audience for this article would be very
different from most that I read from BBC or AlJazeera, which are more
worldwide, this is not so much stating an event to inform readers but to
broadcast opinions on society. The bias was pretty obvious, against many of the
different leading parties, almost scornful of conservatives. The only reason
that I really found this article informative is because if this is what lots of
people are reading, there is a much heavier swing towards your opinion and view
of society instead of more solid evidence and events of what is going on in
society today, otherwise I did not really see this article going anywhere.
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