亚洲аv天堂无码,久久aⅴ无码一区二区三区,96免费精品视频在线观看,国产2021精品视频免费播放,国产喷水在线观看,奇米影视久久777中文字幕 ,日韩在线免费,91spa国产无码
       
      Analysis: Gov't shutdown fight exposes deep fractures in American politics
                       Source: Xinhua | 2018-01-24 08:22:21 | Editor: huaxia

      A sign announcing the closure of the Statue of Liberty, due to the U.S.government shutdown, sits near the ferry dock to the Statue of Liberty at Battery Park in Manhattan, New York, U.S., January 20, 2018. (Xinhua/REUTERS)

      By Xinhua writer Yang Shilong

      NEW YORK, Jan. 23 (Xinhua) -- In agreeing on Monday to end a three-day U.S. government shutdown, the fourth in the past 25 years, Republicans and Democrats made some compromise to bridge the partisan divide.

      However, polarization and deep fractures in American politics exposed in the display of partisan dysfunction will only get deeper as fundamentals of the bipartisan bickering have not changed at all, U.S. experts said.

      Participants, one with a U.S. President Donald Trump figure, stand strong and applaud with their signs during the Women's March Anniversary "Power To The Polls" event, January 21, 2018 at Sam Boyd Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada. The rally is aimed at starting a national campaign to register voters, increase support for women and secure progressive seats in the upcoming midterm elections. (Xinhua/ AFP PHOTO)

      "TWO ONE-PARTY NATIONS"?

      U.S. President Donald Trump signed a bill Monday night to keep the government open until Feb. 8. The stopgap legislation was approved by the Congress earlier in the day after Republicans and Democrats capped off a nearly three-day deadlock over bitter dispute over immigration and border security.

      "It is not anything important, just posturing," said Michael C. Munger, professor of political science at Duke University, referring to this round of Republican-Democratic standoff.

      "Both sides are using it to make their 'base' feel good. It's expensive, but it's only taxpayer money, so they don't care," he told Xinhua in a written interview on Tuesday.

      "It would be embarrassing, but neither party feels any responsibility for 'saving face' for the government," Munger said. "I think THAT is the reason for the polarization: the parties are detached from any sense of responsibility for governing. THAT is a real problem."

      "Of course, now it turned out the 'shutdown' was very brief, really just a clown act at the political circus," he said. "I think the real problem is this: Both parties say the other party is incompetent, or evil. Voters may come to believe they are both right... I'm worried that the current system cannot survive."

      "In most places, meaningful two-party electoral competition is nonexistent. Rather than being one two-party nation, we are becoming two one-party nations," wrote Lee Drutman, senior fellow in the political reform program at the Washington-based think tank New America, in his article titled The Divided States of America.

      Most large cities, college towns, the Northeast and the West Coast are deep-blue Democratic, he elaborated. Ruby-red Republican strongholds take up most of the South, the Great Plains, the Mountain States and the suburban and rural areas in between.

      Rather than compete directly against each other, both parties increasingly occupy their separate territories, with diminishing overlap and disappearing common accountability, Drutman said.

      "They hear from very different constituents, with very different priorities. The minimal electoral incentives they do face all push toward nurturing, rather than bridging, those increasingly wide divisions."

      A protester wearing a Donald Trump mask demonstrates during a "Queer Rage" dance party outside the location of the 2017 "Congressof Tomorrow" Joint Republican Issues Conference in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. January 25, 2017. (Xinhua/REUTERS)

      DOOM-LOOP PARTISANSHIP?

      Although much of the focus on polarization has focused on Congress, state legislatures have become more divided as well, noted Jason Altmire, who served three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives from 2007 to 2013, in his book Dead Center: How Political Polarization Divided America And What We Can Do About It.

      Approximately half the states have levels of polarization greater even than those found in Congress, Altmire wrote, citing research done by political scientist Boris Shor, "the problem has left many Americans feeling that they are not being represented."

      The government shutdown is "emblematic" of both the "fractured state of American politics" and "the paranoid style of American politics," Sourabh Gupta, resident senior fellow at the Institute for China-America Studies, told Xinhua on Monday.

      "That low and unbalanced growth, as has been the case since 2001, will lead to further wage stagnation, deepen the existing inequalities, and polarize and fracture American politics even more. As has been the case over the past 15 years ... and will worsen over the next 15," he said.

      "Consensus on the role and direction of government is nowhere in sight," he said. "And the paranoid style of politicking will make consensus-building even harder."

      During periods of prosperity and optimism, which is what the American republic has more-or-less enjoyed since its inception, Gupta said, "confidence in the future allowed the clamor of minority voices on both sides of the political spectrum to be absorbed and mainstreamed within the body politic, thereby strengthening the political system."

      As stagnation leads to insecurity and gloom, "those very same minority voices and their overheated rhetoric, which has already seeped into the political center, will end up tearing down a good chunk of that very body politic," he added.

      "American politics has been transitioning from interest-group politics to doom-loop politics for decades, and we are now deep into a crisis," wrote Drutman in his article "We need political parties. But their rabid partisanship could destroy American democracy."

      "Here's the paradox: We can't have democracy without partisanship. But when partisanship overwhelms everything, it becomes increasingly difficult for democracy to function," he said.

      "We need partisan conflict to organize politics. Without political parties, there is no meaningful democracy. But we are deep into a self-reinforcing cycle of doom-loop partisanship. We need to think hard about how to escape this trap, before it is too late," Drutman said.

      Back to Top Close
      Xinhuanet

      Analysis: Gov't shutdown fight exposes deep fractures in American politics

      Source: Xinhua 2018-01-24 08:22:21

      A sign announcing the closure of the Statue of Liberty, due to the U.S.government shutdown, sits near the ferry dock to the Statue of Liberty at Battery Park in Manhattan, New York, U.S., January 20, 2018. (Xinhua/REUTERS)

      By Xinhua writer Yang Shilong

      NEW YORK, Jan. 23 (Xinhua) -- In agreeing on Monday to end a three-day U.S. government shutdown, the fourth in the past 25 years, Republicans and Democrats made some compromise to bridge the partisan divide.

      However, polarization and deep fractures in American politics exposed in the display of partisan dysfunction will only get deeper as fundamentals of the bipartisan bickering have not changed at all, U.S. experts said.

      Participants, one with a U.S. President Donald Trump figure, stand strong and applaud with their signs during the Women's March Anniversary "Power To The Polls" event, January 21, 2018 at Sam Boyd Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada. The rally is aimed at starting a national campaign to register voters, increase support for women and secure progressive seats in the upcoming midterm elections. (Xinhua/ AFP PHOTO)

      "TWO ONE-PARTY NATIONS"?

      U.S. President Donald Trump signed a bill Monday night to keep the government open until Feb. 8. The stopgap legislation was approved by the Congress earlier in the day after Republicans and Democrats capped off a nearly three-day deadlock over bitter dispute over immigration and border security.

      "It is not anything important, just posturing," said Michael C. Munger, professor of political science at Duke University, referring to this round of Republican-Democratic standoff.

      "Both sides are using it to make their 'base' feel good. It's expensive, but it's only taxpayer money, so they don't care," he told Xinhua in a written interview on Tuesday.

      "It would be embarrassing, but neither party feels any responsibility for 'saving face' for the government," Munger said. "I think THAT is the reason for the polarization: the parties are detached from any sense of responsibility for governing. THAT is a real problem."

      "Of course, now it turned out the 'shutdown' was very brief, really just a clown act at the political circus," he said. "I think the real problem is this: Both parties say the other party is incompetent, or evil. Voters may come to believe they are both right... I'm worried that the current system cannot survive."

      "In most places, meaningful two-party electoral competition is nonexistent. Rather than being one two-party nation, we are becoming two one-party nations," wrote Lee Drutman, senior fellow in the political reform program at the Washington-based think tank New America, in his article titled The Divided States of America.

      Most large cities, college towns, the Northeast and the West Coast are deep-blue Democratic, he elaborated. Ruby-red Republican strongholds take up most of the South, the Great Plains, the Mountain States and the suburban and rural areas in between.

      Rather than compete directly against each other, both parties increasingly occupy their separate territories, with diminishing overlap and disappearing common accountability, Drutman said.

      "They hear from very different constituents, with very different priorities. The minimal electoral incentives they do face all push toward nurturing, rather than bridging, those increasingly wide divisions."

      A protester wearing a Donald Trump mask demonstrates during a "Queer Rage" dance party outside the location of the 2017 "Congressof Tomorrow" Joint Republican Issues Conference in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. January 25, 2017. (Xinhua/REUTERS)

      DOOM-LOOP PARTISANSHIP?

      Although much of the focus on polarization has focused on Congress, state legislatures have become more divided as well, noted Jason Altmire, who served three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives from 2007 to 2013, in his book Dead Center: How Political Polarization Divided America And What We Can Do About It.

      Approximately half the states have levels of polarization greater even than those found in Congress, Altmire wrote, citing research done by political scientist Boris Shor, "the problem has left many Americans feeling that they are not being represented."

      The government shutdown is "emblematic" of both the "fractured state of American politics" and "the paranoid style of American politics," Sourabh Gupta, resident senior fellow at the Institute for China-America Studies, told Xinhua on Monday.

      "That low and unbalanced growth, as has been the case since 2001, will lead to further wage stagnation, deepen the existing inequalities, and polarize and fracture American politics even more. As has been the case over the past 15 years ... and will worsen over the next 15," he said.

      "Consensus on the role and direction of government is nowhere in sight," he said. "And the paranoid style of politicking will make consensus-building even harder."

      During periods of prosperity and optimism, which is what the American republic has more-or-less enjoyed since its inception, Gupta said, "confidence in the future allowed the clamor of minority voices on both sides of the political spectrum to be absorbed and mainstreamed within the body politic, thereby strengthening the political system."

      As stagnation leads to insecurity and gloom, "those very same minority voices and their overheated rhetoric, which has already seeped into the political center, will end up tearing down a good chunk of that very body politic," he added.

      "American politics has been transitioning from interest-group politics to doom-loop politics for decades, and we are now deep into a crisis," wrote Drutman in his article "We need political parties. But their rabid partisanship could destroy American democracy."

      "Here's the paradox: We can't have democracy without partisanship. But when partisanship overwhelms everything, it becomes increasingly difficult for democracy to function," he said.

      "We need partisan conflict to organize politics. Without political parties, there is no meaningful democracy. But we are deep into a self-reinforcing cycle of doom-loop partisanship. We need to think hard about how to escape this trap, before it is too late," Drutman said.

      010020070750000000000000011100001369198051
      主站蜘蛛池模板: 中文字幕avdvd| 国产一区二区三区最新视频 | 手机看片1024国产基地| 欧美日韩国产在线成人网| 亚洲国产成人精品久久精品| 国产一区二区在线观看视频免费 | 日本不卡一区二区高清中文| 亚洲成av人无码免费观看| 97人妻碰免费视频| 九九热在线免费视频播放| 亚洲 卡通 欧美 制服 中文| 久久亚洲国产精品五月天婷| 欧亚精品无码永久免费视频| 国产爆乳无码一区二区在线 | 久久精品这里热有精品| 欧美日韩综合在线视频免费看| 国产日韩A∨无码免费播放| 91精品最新国内在线播放| 欧美精品一区二区精品久久| 人与禽交av在线播放| 1000部拍拍拍18勿入免费视频| 亚洲日本VA午夜在线电影| 亚洲第一狼人区在线观看| 人妻少妇看A偷人无码电影| 久久夜色撩人精品国产 | 色综合久久婷婷五月| 国产伦精品一区二区三区四区| 精品视频在线观看一区二区三区| 人妻少妇综合一区二区 | 伊吾县| 成人无码视频在线观看网站| 亚洲精品成人片在线播放| 亚洲欧洲国产色| 一本大道在线一久道一区二区| 人妻无码一区二区在线影院| 久久精品国产色蜜蜜麻豆| 亚洲欧美日韩久久一区二区三区| 久久久久亚洲AV无码去区首| 免费jjzz在线播放国产| 日本在线a一区视频高清视频| 中文字幕无线乱码人妻|