Focusing on Re-Making American Political System

Former State Rep., Professor, various Illinois department Director Jim Nowlan writes and we re-publish with his permission his column on changing the future of the country:

This column proposes a powerful, practical, if highly unconventional, way to start a national conversation, even a movement, that could possibly help restore a healthy American democracy and solid economic future, and maybe even replace one of our two bankrupt political parties.

Politics and policy are today focused on supporting old coots like me (I’m 78), and the boomers who followed, through oppressive government debt, mountainous student loan burdens, inadequate investment in research and higher education, and generally listless K-12 education. The consequences of our selfish, debt-fueled pandering to my generation will be paid by those who are in college today. Embarrassing.

In the present era, national politics are shaped by winning intra-party primary elections, which are largely captured by activists at polar extremes. The great swath of us in the middle are marginalized, having little impact on who become candidates.

I propose a nationwide competition — with big prizes — among teams at our business school MBA programs, to develop the best “business plan” for creation and implementation of a new, competitive political party. Why start a business, I say to the MBA students, when you can start a movement?

A new political party is really just a start-up, nonprofit enterprise. I used to run US Senate and other major political campaigns. For each, we developed a campaign plan to operate the equivalent of a lively business for one year. Without a good plan, no success. A new party would need a terrific plan.

Why focus largely on the business schools? (I would indeed open the competition to teams from elsewhere.) Because many of the brightest and most successful of the coming generation are enrolled there. They need to appreciate they have a huge stake in the future, and my generation is strewing shards of glass in their path.

We should also disabuse business school deans who might think the business of America is solely about business. Wrong. A stable, far-sighted political system is an absolute precondition to a flourishing, sustainable economy.

For example, after World War II, observers identified Argentina as the nation that had all the ingredients to be the next economic powerhouse — a well-educated, hard-working populace with substantial natural resources, unscathed by the war. Yet dysfunctional, populist Peronist and later governments crushed the dreams of a global powerhouse in Argentina.

My proposal is that MBA students, plus teams from elsewhere, be assigned the task of developing a plan for a new, national third party.

After all, the Republican Party began as a third party, founded in 1854 in the midst of the implosion of the Whig Party. Just six years later, Republicans captured the White House with 39 percent of the popular vote in a four-party contest, and saved the Union.

There would obviously be daunting challenges to creation of a successful competitive new party for the political contests after 2020.

For example, students of political parties will point out the original GOP rode the coattails of a searing matter in the North — extension of slavery — and that a new political party begun in 2020 would lack such a riveting issue.

Second, a new party would probably have to appeal to those of us located somewhere along the middle of the political spectrum; unfortunately, moderation famously lacks that emotional appeal necessary to drive voters to the polls.

Third, at least as I see it, a new, future-oriented party would have to promote some jarring, even painful policies; for example, reduce benefits a bit now to extend Social Security and Medicare programs into the future, increase revenues for long-term research investments, and curb health care expenditures.

To counter these challenges, a successful plan would have to arouse constructive fear — the great motivator — that our student generation will otherwise inherit a society bereft of the resources necessary to fuel a prosperous society for themselves and their children.

A new political party can also benefit from the immediacy and ubiquity of social media, for marketing, recruiting, fundraising.

I am thinking prizes of $1 million for the winning team, half that for second, less for runners-up. I see half of each prize going to the team members, the other half to be applied as seed-money to start implementation. I am right now casting about among my few, really deep-pocketed friends and acquaintances to recruit interest in funding the idea.

Sure, the idea is eccentric. But I’ll bet that in 1854 unimaginative folks in central Illinois thought the awkward, unschooled young lawyer from New Salem and his political buddies were also off on a fool’s errand.

I think such a competition could fascinate America. The public might even be involved in the voting among competing finalist plans.

What might the bright young leaders of tomorrow come up with? Are they up to the challenge? Are we?

For many years, Jim Nowlan was a senior fellow and political science professor at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign. He has worked for three unindicted governors and published a weekly newspaper in central Illinois.


Comments

Focusing on Re-Making American Political System — 11 Comments

  1. Try this on Mr. Lifetime Bureaucrat.

    Your Interactive Hands-On Children’s MBA Fun Space, will never be as educational as an asphalt-paved playground with equipment made out of galvanized steel pipe.

    Understand faux professor?

  2. Nowlan knows very, very little about Argentina.

    That country has been bedeviled by US Deep State interference and International Bankers’ dirty little tricks and dominanace since Peron was exiled to Spain. [Everybody knows about the CIA and what happened to Señor Arbenz in Guatemala in 1954 for example, but the Argentine military coup orchestrated against the conservative government of Castillo by ‘American’ and Banker interests in 1943, in which, BTW, Peron was a willing participant at the urging of and bankrolling of the US Ambassador — Peron was the leader of the GOU, United Officers’ Group, a secret society founded in NYC]

    Gen. Videla and other Argentine patriots exposed all this if Nowlan would bother to read, even what’s translated into English.

    Nowlan should stick to things he actually knows something about.

    Does Nowlan know that strange elements in CIA put terrific pressure on Argentina to sell wheat to (and bail out) the USSR, before the US could were able to send it (tying Jewish emigration to US wheat and corn sales under the Jackson-Vanick Amendment?

    He’s right, of course, about the complicit GOP of the Bushies, Flakes, McCains, Romneys, Rauners and Bloombergs crashing, and how the nation was sick of it all and wanted an outsider, which the corrupt system has been trying to wreck since even before Trump assumed office.

    But Nowlan won’t dare say why the politics of the past won’t do anymore from a demographic reality.

    -Here’s a little video that explains much, but WARNING, Angel and “Heinrich” won’t like it!
    https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=Vertigo+Politix+&&view=detail&mid=5D8D5D00095B5C7D457D5D8D5D00095B5C7D457D&&FORM=VRDGAR

  3. Yes, Peron turned on the Yankees, but so did Castro, Noriega, Saddam, Sadat, Diem, etc., etc.

    They were all installed in the first place.

    What happened?

    Nowlans of the world never ask unsafe questions.

    Academics are weak-minded and want their gravy and young teaching assistants as sex toys

    They are guardians of many lies.

  4. It strikes me that Nowlan’s scheme is just a new way to pull the wool over people’s eyes.

    Make them think they are actually participating in the decision making process.

    What rubbish.

    Yeah, let a bunch of MBA student’s and TV coach taters determine everything.

    Makes a lot of sense.

    Dancing with the ‘Tards gone political.

  5. The average MBA student would be smart enough to know Nowlan’s “plan” is a waste of time.

  6. If the students are in their 20’s, they are wet behind the ears and have not accomplished anything in real life. Better yet would be to have successful small business owners and leaders remake the political system. Contrary to what Barak Hussein Obama and Cherokee Liz have said about these people in the past, THEY DID start/build their businesses through perseverance and in spite of many obstacles and government red tape.

  7. “If the students are in their 20’s, they are wet behind the ears and have not accomplished anything in real life. Better yet would be to have successful small business owners and leaders remake the political system.” Dear Catalina, please pay no attention to my Political Science and Sociology professor. He has a mental business problem. Stay tuned…tic, tock, tic, tock, tic, tock, meeeeeeeeoooooooooowwwwwwwwwwwwww…

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