Monday, December 28, 2015

2015: The Year in Moynihan

The holidays are a time to reflect on the year past and to hope for peace and happiness in the year ahead. Christmas, as an official holiday, came late to the United States…
The first Christmas tree in the White House was the inspiration of one of those Presidents of the 1880s whose sequence I can never keep straight. This was imported behavior, Prince Albert having introduced the custom to Buckingham Palace a generation earlier. But it was not until 1894 that Grover Cleveland, perhaps responding to his political experiences among the German folk of Buffalo, gave the civil service the day off. The occasion has been, in that sense, sacred ever since. The Capitol shuts down, and becomes rather a private place. For once, all is calm. It is possible to think.
Daniel P. Moynihan, Newsletter to constituents, December 26, 1981[1]

Pat Moynihan enjoyed something of a renaissance over the past year. Partly this was due to the fact that 2015 was the fiftieth anniversary of the Moynihan Report, an occasion which led to a modest flurry of controversy over its legacy and that of its author. That report, and its impact, was the focus of Daniel Geary’s acclaimed Beyond Civil Rights: The Moynihan Report and Its Legacy.[2] Moynihan himself was the subject of an intellectual biography, Greg Weiner’s American Burke: The Uncommon Liberalism of Pat Moynihan.[3] These follow on the heels of Stephen Hess’s The Professor and the President: Daniel Patrick Moynihan in the Nixon White House, published last year. He also featured as an off-screen character in The Wire creator David Simon’s HBO miniseries, Show Me A Hero (making, it should be acknowledged, a less than heroic contribution to the plot). As the lad himself notes above, these twilight days of the year are an opportunity for reflection, a time when reviews and round-ups proliferate, and so we thought that we would offer our own review of the year in Moynihan.

[DISCLAIMER: Your convenors entirely reject the notion that we are bandwagon-hoppers. However, we are delighted to find the bandwagon we have been riding for some time so crowded, and pleased to have this opportunity to introduce you to some of our fellow passengers.]

Moynihan c. 1976, in a typically conciliatory mood

The Moynihan Report – or to give it is proper title, The Negro Family: The Case for National Action – was an internal memorandum prepared in 1965 by Moynihan, then an assistant secretary in the Department of Labor in the administration of President Lyndon Johnson and responsible formulating policy for the War on Poverty. The report argued that the legacy of slavery and centuries of white prejudice and discrimination had warped the structure of black families. A ‘tangle of pathology’ (unemployment, crime, educational failure) perpetuated a black underclass and only forceful government intervention could break that cycle. Moynihan was a co-author of Johnson’s commencement address at Howard University that same year, “To Fulfil These Rights,” in which the president declared that ‘freedom is not enough’ and committed America ‘not just [to] equality as a right and a theory but equality as a fact and equality as a result.’ By this point, however, the internal report had begun to leak piecemeal and met with a ferocious response. Some of the criticism was legitimate and some based on garbled misunderstandings of Moynihan’s argument. ‘[W]e are sick unto death of being analyzed, mesmerized, bought, sold, and slobbered over while the same evils that are the ingredients of our oppression go unattended,’ was the response of James Farmer, national director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). Psychologist William Ryan coined the phrase ‘blaming the victim’ for a 1971 book he wrote explicitly to refute Moynihan’s conclusions in his report. Moynihan left the Johnson administration in 1965 to run for the presidency of the New York City Council. After a dismal campaign, which ended with him as the only member of the Democratic ticket not elected that year, a wounded Moynihan retreated to a professorship at Harvard.

Moynihan and his report were major features in Ta-Nehisi Coates’ astonishing and vital cover story in the October issue of The Atlantic, “The Black Family in the Age of Mass Incarceration” (http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/10/the-black-family-in-the-age-of-mass-incarceration/403246/). Coates characterized Moynihan as a ‘conservative radical’ whose privileging of the male-headed black family as the proper focus for federal anti-poverty efforts, ‘bombastic’ language, and lack of concrete policy recommendations in the report was at least indirectly and partially responsible for the rise of the carceral state in the latter half of the twentieth century, which has become, argues Coates, the principal ‘social-service program’ for black Americans. To accompany Coates’s story, The Atlantic had produced an annotated edition of the Moynihan Report, written by Geary (http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/09/the-moynihan-report-an-annotated-edition/404632/). 

As with his earlier cover-story on reparations, Coates’s deeply-researched and provocative article provoked a lively debate. His use of the Moynihan Report to frame his argument drew responses from those who felt his treatment of Moynihan had been unfair. Greg Weiner offered a spirited rebuttal in the Huffington Post, suggesting that Coates’s use of Moynihan as an ‘interesting literary foil’ had been ‘a case of putting two unrelated topics next to each other and inviting the reader, by implications, to associate them’ (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/greg-weiner/in-defense-of-daniel-patr_b_8158876.html). Gil Troy – author of Moynihan’s Moment: America’s Fight Against Zionism As Racism (2012) – accused Coates of misunderstanding Moynihan, dismissing the ‘Great American Crime Wave’ of the 1960s-1990s, and offering a ‘[m]onocausal denunciation[…]’ of American racism (http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/09/20/ta-nehisi-coates-gets-daniel-patrick-moynihan-all-wrong.html).

Not all responses were hostile. Susan Greenbaum, writing for Al Jazeera, argued that Coates did not go far enough in anatomising the pernicious consequences of the Moynihan Report, suggesting that it played a key role in creating the stereotype of the ‘welfare queen’ and fed ‘the narrative that poor people cause their own problems’ (http://america.aljazeera.com/opinions/2015/10/wheres-the-obituary-for-the-moynihan-report.html). Writing in the Boston Review in June, Stephen Steinberg had been similarly critical of the Moynihan Report, arguing that its author was ‘ardently colorblind long before that idea had become a mantra on the Supreme Court and the right’ (http://bostonreview.net/us/stephen-steinberg-moynihan-report-black-families-nathan-glazer).

Such debates prompted an upturn in reconsiderations and reaffirmations of Moynihan’s relevance to contemporary debates. In a lengthy and wide-ranging essay in the September issue of Prospect (which is also a good, brief introduction to Moynihan’s life and career for the neophyte), Sam Tanenhaus wrote that ‘Moynihan towers before us a vanished, much-missed type, the reform-minded traditionalist’ (http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/features/daniel-patrick-moynihans-tough-lessons-for-liberals). In another contribution to the Huffington Post, Greg Weiner asked ‘Where are today’s Moynihans …?’ and concluded that it is the wrong question to ask. This post is also a handy primer on Weiner’s idea of ‘Burkean liberalism’ which he uses to characterise Moynihan’s political identity in his recently published book (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/greg-weiner/daniel-patrick-moynihan_b_6651868.html).

Drawing on Weiner’s work, E.J. Dionne wrote that Washington today needs more ‘Burkean liberals and Burkean conservatives’ like Moynihan as ‘an antidote’ to polarisation (https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/why-we-miss-the-unpolarizing-pat-moynihan/2015/04/08/b264dc4e-ddf9-11e4-be40-566e2653afe5_story.html). Moynihan’s coinage of ‘defining deviancy down’ was recently pressed into service to argue that Donald Trump’s presidential campaign is having a coarsening effect on American political culture (https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2015/11/23/how-trump-is-defining-deviancy-down-in-presidential-politics/). And earlier this month, Peter-Christian Aigner made the case for resurrecting the family allowance (i.e. a guaranteed income), the defining policy concern of Moynihan’s time in the Nixon White House (http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/12/americas-need-for-a-family-allowance/420123/).[4] Aigner is currently writing a biography of Moynihan for Simon and Schuster which should be published in 2017. The bandwagon rolls on!

Happy reading and happy New Year.



[1] Steven R. Weisman (ed.), Daniel Patrick Moynihan: A Portrait in Letters of an American Visionary (New York, 2010), 440.
[2] Among other public lectures, Geary spoke on his book at UCL’s Institute of the Americas in November. A podcast of the lecture is available here: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/americas/ia-events/archive/beyond_civil_rights
[3] For a review of Weiner’s book, see Roger Lowenstein, “The Sometime Liberal,” The American Prospect, August 20, 2015: http://prospect.org/article/sometime-liberal
[4] In another Atlantic article in April 2014, Aigner pre-empted this year’s debates over the Moynihan report, arguing that the modern American left and right have both misunderstood and distorted its conclusions: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/04/what-the-left-and-right-both-get-wrong-about-the-moynihan-report/360701/

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