Title: Week 9: The Downside of Civic Culture
1Week 9 The Downside of Civic Culture
- Readings
- Allen 1-167 and 183-200
- Reader Fiorina
2Guiding Questions
- What motivates political participation?
- Is political participation rational?
- What explains the fall of the Weimar Republic?
- Is civic culture all that it is cracked up to
be?
3Downsides of Civic Culture Fiorina
- Fiorina Putnams view of the civic culture often
accepted without question argues that civic
virtue may not always be a good thing. - It is the quality, not the quantity of civic
culture that matters. - Intermediate levels of civic engagement can
foster suboptimal outcomes.
4Paradox of Openness
- Fiorina looks at public opinion trends suggesting
Americans are increasingly dissatisfied with
their government. - Paradox Americans distrust in government rises
in direct relation to openness of government. - The big question Why?
5Fiorinas Explanation
- Fiorina dismisses current explanations of voter
apathy. - Distrust is due to two factors
- 1) Increased openness and transparency within
government - 2) Increased access has turned citizens off.
6Extremist Influence
- Ideology shapes the participation of those who
frequently participate in politics. - Political consequences of frequent participants
turns off many voters. - When civic engagement is hijacked by extremists
it has a dark side ignored by Putnam
7Why participate? Intrinsic Motivations
- Intrinsic participation can be represented by the
following equation - E(P) p(B) c
- E(P) expected utility (value) of participation.
- p probability your action is decisive for the
final outcome. - B value of proposed alternative.
- c costs of participating.
- You participate if the benefits outweigh the
costs. - Probability of decisiveness is zero, so
participation is always costly.
8Why participate? Expressive Motivations
- But we know people vote for other reasons.
- Participation may be valued for its expressive
functions. - E(P) p(B) c E
- Under these circumstances, those who participate
have a vested interest in the outcome. - The ideologically motivated exert a
disproportionate influence.
9Fiorinas Recommendation
- Make participation easier to dilute extreme
voices. - Miracle of Aggregation Larger group decisions
tend to more rational than smaller group
decisions. - Political participation is unnatural frequent
participants are the people nobody sent
10Examining Fiorina
- Raises important qualifications about the utility
of civic culture. - The type of political culture should be taken
into account when examining democratic stability. - But is mass political opinion inherently more
moderate and more rational? - Can high levels of turnout and associational
interaction mask deeper societal problems?
11Weimar Germany
- Weimar Republic 1919-1933
- In the course of a fifteen year time span,
Germany would go from authoritarianism (Imperial
Germany), to democracy (Weimar Republic), and
totalitarianism (Nazi Germany). - Resurgent economy and a strong political culture.
- What factors explains the fall of the Weimar
republic?
12Institutions Weimar Germany
- Semi-presidential system.
- President and parliament directly elected.
- President head of state.
- Chancellor head of government.
- President selected the cabinet
- Cabinet could be dismissed by either the
president or the Chancellor. - President could rule by decree when Reichstag
could not agree. - Low electoral thresholds favored small parties.
13Demographics Northeim
- Allen examines the decline of Weimar Germany
through the lens of the central German town of
Northeim. - Population 10,000 inhabitants in 1930.
- 25 native born, 26 from the county, 34 from
the remainder of the region, 15 from outside
region and inside Germany. - Strong distinctions between long time residents
and recent residents.
14Class Northeim
- 37 working class, 32 lower middle class, 27
upper middle class, 4 upper class. - Large petite bourgeoisie was ripe for Hitlers
appeals. - Strong class stratification.
- Workers had their own associations (labor
unions/SPD), the middle classes had their own
clubs, etc.
15Political Culture Northeim
- Associational levels and newspaper readership
were high. - Voter turnout in all nine elections from
1930-1932 was above 90 - All are indicative of high levels of trust (i.e.
civic culture). - BUT, associational groups and newspaper
subscriptions reinforced rather than bridged
societal divisions. - Political parties also reinforced class
divisions. - Not a problem while the economic outlook was
strong, but when it dipped
16Great Depression
- 1930 The effects of the Great Depression begin
to be felt. - Unemployment hit the working class the quickest
and the hardest. - BUT fear amongst the middle classes was
especially pronounced.
17Radicalization of the Middle Class
- Nationalism after Versailles treaty existed, but
strong economic times blunted the strength of
nationalist parties. - As taxes rise, credit becomes more difficult to
obtain, and the Left appears firmly rooted in
government. - Middle classes begin to look towards more radical
parties of the right. - The Nazi Party (NSDAP) was insignificant in 1928
(approx. 2 of the vote), but grew in popularity
in response to this economic malaise.
18NSDAP Retools their Message
- Nazis had spent the stable years of the Weimar
Republic retooling their methods and their
message. - Shifted focus towards small business owners,
farmers, and shop clerks on an explicitly anti
Marxist, patriotic platform. - Aimed to address fears caused by a weakening
economy and a rising Communist party on the left.
- Rise of the propaganda wars on behalf of the
Nazis was returned by the SDP. - Sept 1930 elections Nazis get 28 of the vote.
- Turnout 94
19Radicalization of Politics
- Street rallies held by the SPD and the Nazis
erupt in political violence newspapers stoke
ideological differences. - National government too weak to respond
governing coalitions too weak to govern. - SPD was pinched between the Communists on the
Left and the Nazis on the right. - Viewing the Nazis as an anti-system rather than a
political threat, was a miscalculation.
20Radicalization of Politics
- 1931 SPD no longer able to match meeting
schedule of the Nazis. - Nazi petition drive fails to eject the SPD use
of social pressure to gain adherents further
crystallizes class divisions. - Boycotts of businesses that did not showcase
party symbols. - Soup kitchens and civic organizations to aid the
needy develop on the basis of party/class. - Nazis begin to scapegoat Jewish citizens.
21Radicalization of Politics
- 1930 President begins ruling by decree.
- SPD disliked the president, but feared new
elections would favor the Nazis. - New presidential elections set for March 1932.
- Hindenburg (conservative) supported by the SPD
and the center parties Hitler runs for the
Nazis, Communists run their own candidate. - Hindenburg wins but Hitler takes 51 of the vote
Northeim.
22Political Extremism and Impasse
- Nazis use their majority in Northeim to purge SPD
office holders. - Nazis began to break labor to further undercut
the SPD amongst workers. - New Reichstag elections in July 1932 96 turnout
statewide. - Nazis take 62 in Northeim.
- Center parties are decimated.
- Nazis and Communists (KPD) obtain a negative
majority in Berlin political impasses continues.
23Hitler Takes the Chancellorship
- As depression continues, and politics continues
to fray, the Nazi party and the SPD boycott
non-party businesses. - Hitler appointed Chancellor in 1933, promising
national unity, restoration of honor and economic
renewal. - These ends required the creation of a strong
central government however.
24Burning of the Reichstag Building
- Burning of the Reichstag building provides fodder
for Hitler to call for drastic measures. - Communists were outlawed as a revolutionary
force - SPD tracts and meeting banned in Northeim.
25NSDAP Penetrating State
- March 1933 elections give NSDAP 44 of the seats
support for their coalition rises to 52 of the
vote. - Legislature transfers legislative authority to
cabinet. - 1934 Hindenburg dies chancellorship and
presidency fused. - Hitler takes power dissolves all political
parties except the NSDAP. - Fuses the state with the NSDAP.
26NSDAP Penetrating Society
- Door to door searches for weapons assisted by
community cohesion. - Neighbors would advise other neighbors about
flying the party flag. - Society atomizes as the citizenry is to afraid to
express anti-Nazi views. - Public arrests of dissenters reinforced Nazi
hold. - Boycotts and social isolation of dissidents
further strengthened Nazi hold on Northeim.
27NSDAP Penetrating Society
- The gradual expansion of state authority in the
private sphere was met with little resistance. - System of terror was coordinated with elaborate
shows of support propaganda was critical. - Control of media offered little in terms of
alternative viewpoints.
28Decline of Weimar Economic Factors
- Fear of economic decline radicalized the middle
classes. - Blamed Treaty of Versailles and the SPD for
economic malaise. - Unemployment pushed for young men to join the
Nazi party.
29Decline of Weimar Institutional Factors
- Political institutions and polarization made
stable governing coalitions impossible. - Far left and far right parties held a negative
majority. - Presidential-Parliamentarism and low electoral
thresholds further undercut stable coalitions. - Rule by decree also complicated governance.
- Inability to respond to economic crises fostered
greater radicalization.
30Decline of Weimar Cultural Factors
- Associational participation, newspaper
readership, turnout all high. - But this civic culture reinforced rather than
ameliorated divisions contributing to the greater
radicalization of the system (direct challenge to
Putnam). - Citizens not exposed to alternative viewpoints
via organizations, political parties, or
newspapers. - Large turnout represented anger/fear not
community support. - Social identity/cohesion arguably made the
trampling of civil rights after Nazi ascendance
easier.
31Conclusions Democratic Stability
- Economic development did not drive the decline,
but economic stagnation/crisis ignited the spark. - Institutions magnified rather than mitigated
political tensions. - Political culture made it easier for extremists
to control society and more difficult for
opposition to respond. - In short, economics, institutions, and culture
matter
32Next Lecture
- Theme Rationality of Mass Opinion
- Reader Caplan