A year from now, Americans will make history. The electorate is facing the most tumultuous time in American politics in at least 50 years — arguably a century — and their ultimate choice for president is almost certain to be a candidate who reflects the churning and tumult of a changing United States.
Democrats are poised to nominate either the first woman or the first socialist as their offering for the job. Republicans could choose the party’s first Hispanic, first African-American or first woman candidate — or a man whose family’s political dynasty could log the most wins in American history.
The turbulence in the political system isn’t just about demographics. We are transitioning from an industrial to a service economy, from a bipolar to a multipolar world, in ways that limit America’s influence whether we realize it or not. And we are culturally transitioning in fast motion, thanks to a new, large and influential millennial generation powered by technologies that would have seemed fictional two generations ago.
Current trends show that Americans are poised for a major reset, favoring candidates who buck historical trends and demanding a reshuffling of the way politics is typically practiced. It may not be resolved in 2016 altogether but it’s coming, and the stakes are incredibly high.
Throughout the first part of this cycle, the reality-show style of campaign coverage has sometimes obscured the enormity of the this election and the task facing the next Commander-in-Chief.
The country is facing at least three huge challenges in the years and decades to come:
1. The stagnant middle class: There is a collective anxiety about where the next batch of jobs will come from, and what will enable regular Americans to believe they can climb the socio-economic ladder. Even for those who believe the economy is better for them today than it was eight years ago, there is a sense of deep uncertainty about how our children can achieve more than today’s status quo.
2. Uncertainty over HOW America should and could use its superpower status around the world: This president is going to leave his successor as messy of a Middle East as he inherited, which will surely be dubbed Barack Obama’s biggest broken promise as a candidate. Then again, some argue that too many of the president’s decisions are driven by his initial promises and that he has been too slow to react because of concerns about his legacy.
Whether you believe the problems in the Middle East are solely George W. Bush’s fault, solely Obama’s fault, or some combination of bad decisions over the last 15 years, it is an indisputable fact that the next president has a Middle East mess on their hands.
3. A broken political infrastructure: From how we conduct elections (funding, gerrymandering and candidate recruiting) to how we cover and debate ideas, the machinery by which American politics functions have become unrecognizable. Cynical political strategists and elected leaders as well as a partisan and fractured media whose complaints about bias only serve to undermine the credibility of the entire system have destroyed the marketplace for political debate.
Interestingly, the fight over immigration is emblematic of the tumultuous times, both with the broken political system and the economic anxiety of the nation. Solving the immigration problem to the satisfaction of the majority of Americans may provide evidence that we are turning a corner on a broken political system and faith in an economic future.
But currently, most of the presidential candidates are trying to address the first two challenges while only talking about the third in ways designed to appease their political base. That’s too bad.
Arguably, until the third challenge is tackled and we refresh the political marketplace for ideas so that it works, we probably won’t be able to adequately address the rest of the enormous problems we face.
That’s why getting the political system back into a place that is at least skeptically trusted by the electorate must be a priority for whoever wins the presidency if they have any hope of making meaningful progress on the other big tasks at hand.
The march of the outsiders
Given this backdrop, perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised that the country has been toying with conservative outsiders and progressive socialists.
We are now in our 12th straight year in which a large majority of voters believes the country is headed on the wrong track. The nation has been mired in constant pessimism since 2004. The sour mood began with the Iraq war, continued because of the flagging economy and now is now sustained by the loss of faith in our political system. We’ve gone from a country struggling to get through the Great Recession to a country now struggling through our most significant political recession since Vietnam and Watergate.
That’s an important comparison. The last time both parties experienced internal tumult akin to what we are seeing now, it was between 1964 and 1980. From the nominations of Barry Goldwater and George McGovern to the chasing of three presidents from office in 12 years (Johnson, Nixon and Carter), American politics were a mess, with both parties dealing with internal ideological struggles. The American media was going through its first transformation. And the country’s cultural norms at the time were being changed, sometimes disruptively.
Then the storm passed.
By the early 1980s, both parties had responded to that angry electorate and found a new equilibrium.
The result was two decades of relative peace and prosperity.
That brings us to our current situation. Once again, the two parties’ voters want to go through a reset.
The rises of Trump, Carson and Sanders make it clear that there is a yearning for some disruption on both sides of the aisle, although Democrats seem a little more likely to compromise (i.e. flirt with Sanders but eventually settle with Clinton) than the GOP does right now.
The conservative base is as tired of losing the White House as the establishment is. But there is a big disagreement between the two factions as to WHY this has been happening.
Conservatives simply don’t buy the establishment argument that if the party would just settle for the most electable candidate, they’d win. Here’s how their argument goes: The party’s fired-up conservative base has settled for a “palatable” candidate in nearly every nomination fight since 1988, and it has not worked out well for them. For one thing, there never was a President Dole (’96) or McCain (’08) or Romney (’12). And, they argue, the two Bushes who did win damaged the conservative movement either because of tax hikes (George H.W. Bush) or expansive government programs (George W. Bush).
It’s all become a recipe for the most unpredictable nomination fight the GOP has had perhaps since the 19th century. Anyone that claims to know who has the inside track on who will be the last man standing is whistling past the grievance graveyard within the GOP.
And it’s far from over. There are more twists and turns coming.









