Cover Image: The Politics Industry

The Politics Industry

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*received for free from netgalley for honest review* Interesting book with a lot of good points, worth the read!! would recommend.

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An interesting book. It contains and interesting description of the US political system as it really is, as opposed to the varnished, made-for-media impression of what it's supposed to be. The authors propose various ways to operate in this system and also how one might improve it. It's an interesting blend of business thinking and politics, but one that is suited to the American system as-is.

Thought-provoking, and sure to stimulate debate.

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An excellent look at politics today. Should be required reading.

Many thanks to NetGalley, the publisher, and the author for my ARC. All opinions are my own.

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THE POLITICS INDUSTRY by Katherine M. Gehl and Michael E. Porter is a melding of business perspective and the history of politics in America. Gehl is former CEO of Gehl Foods and Porter is the Bishop William Lawrence University Professor at Harvard Business School, well-known for his writing (19 books and countless articles) on business theory and strategy. Together, they outline a proposal to combat the current political and legislative situation whereby "if you [elected officials] do your job the way we need you to [compromising and innovating], you're likely to lose your job." Gehl and Porter instead propose "Final Five Voting," non-partisan primaries whereby the top five finishers go to the general election and a winning candidate is selected based on ranked-choice voting (the latter used in Maine since 2018).

The explanations and rationale provided, while "wordy" or repetitive at times, are informative and relatively easy to follow, especially with the use of diagrams like the one illustrating the shifts in political polarization between 1880 and 2019. The authors describe parallels between the Gilded Age and today (business concentrations, rising wages and increased inequality) and note how the subsequent 1920s progressive reforms "ushered in an era of problem solving in our democracy the yielded sustained American progress in spite of two world wars and periodic economic downturns." They see citizens as the key leverage for change fueling political innovation (such as the direct election of Senators at that time).

A second area of focus is ideas for changes in legislating which include applying proven management concepts like zero-based budgeting to rule making and establishing a "Legislative Machinery Innovation Commission." Gehl and Porter acknowledge that "improving a terribly broken system is immensely challenging" and offer specific suggestions as well as successful previous models (like the 1941 APSA's Committee on Congress) and encourage more localized experimentation by the States (although voting by mail is not specifically mentioned). THE POLITICS INDUSTRY concludes with a plea to "invest your personal agency ... to further catalyze a twenty-first-century wave of political innovation to break partisan gridlock and save our democracy." I know that will appeal to our students who are disillusioned and often ask to research topics like gerrymandering, term-limits, and campaign funding; however, it’s very hard to optimistically see a course for action when yesterday's New York Times published an opinion that "America is Too Broken to Fight [Even] the Coronavirus."

Link in live post:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/22/opinion/us-coronavirus-trump.html

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This book offers an in-depth view of what is happening in American politics. It shows how the two major political parties inadvertently created the obstacles towards good governance and hinder the delivery of value to its customers, the American people.

I like that it discusses several structural solutions in electioral sustem both in state and federal level. It also provided some background on why efforts to revamp the status quo failed in the past.

Any changes on the present political set up will not happen unless the citizens will lead the way to reform. Politicians who are deeply involved in the current political structure may not have the incentive to change.

This book provides the perspective based on the Five Forces Framework of Michael Porter. It is great to see how the framework in business industry applies to American government.

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If you weren’t disgusted enough with politics in America, here are Katherine Gehl and Michael Porter to put parameters on exactly how pathetic it all is. In The Politics Industry, they look at parties as if they were a for profit industry, using Porter’s famous and standard Five Forces. They find the industry not just unresponsive, but with the worst customer service anywhere. Think airlines on steroids.

The reason is simple. They’re in it for themselves, for the power and the money. Citizens are merely an inconvenience every couple of years. The rest of the time, it’s all about them. They have a business to run – their own. They have modified the rules of government to suit their needs. They have zero desire to solve problems, because problems allow them to complain about the other party and make themselves indispensable. And just exactly like Trump and his loyalty fetish, total adherence to the party is an unshakeable requirement. Doesn’t matter how bad the bill is, you vote the way you’re told, or they will see to it you never come back. This is American democracy at work.

The authors call the two parties a duopoly, a textbook case from Porter’s experience. In the real world, Porter says, an entrepreneur would see this as a market inefficiency and therefore opportunity and compete the hell out of them. But this is America. Third parties face impossible obstacles. The duopoly always wins, and Americans always lose, the authors say. It is a highly profitable industry. $16 billion poured in for the 2016 election alone. Donald Trump ran the first profitable presidential campaign in history. It is all totally divorced from government of for and by the people.

Competition is forbidden. Independents face much harder requirements to get on ballots than party members. Anyone who loses a primary is forbidden by law from running in the election in most states. (They call it the Sore Loser law.) Even the presidential debates are under their full control. They used to be run as a public service of the League of Women Voters, but the parties took over and regulate every detail from the angle of the desks to the bland and banal questions that don’t get answered anyway. Some 42% of Americans register as independents because parties offer them no quarter and no choice. Party voters check straight ticket without ever even knowing who the candidates are. “American politics is an industrial-strength, nation-crippling perversion of competition,” the authors say.

The political-industrial complex views action as a threat. It wants problems to fester. They keep the donations flowing. The amount of donations raised by electeds determines their personal success, position, and promotion. The party in power spends most of its time gathering power, refusing to allow debates, refusing to allow votes, and ensuring issues do not get resolved on their watch. It’s all about perpetuating power. It’s no different than Russia or China that Americans love to criticize for their singleminded pursuit of control.

The absurd primary system ensures only the most extreme candidates win. Moderates have no place. “Party primaries create an eye-of-the-needle through which no problem-solving politician can pass.” In many states, only those registered to the party can vote in the primary, and that is the real election, because gerrymandering ensures the party will take that district regardless. (In the district next to ours, the Democrats often don’t even bother with a candidate, so if you don’t vote in the primary, you get no vote at all.) Even Harvard Business Alumni think America’s greatest competitive weakness is its political system.

Compromise is vilified. Cooperating across the aisle is treason. Moderates will be primaried out of a job. Electeds are there to do the party’s bidding, no matter how damaging or counter-intuitive, and certainly without regard to constituents’ needs. They too are just cogs in the duopoly machine running amok.

What to do? The authors have two big ideas. First, make elections about the top five votegetters from the primaries. Next, make the election Ranked Choice Voting (RCV). In RCV, if the top votegetter doesn’t have 50% + 1, they eliminate the lowest candidate and reassign his or her votes among the others. Because everyone gets five votes: first, second third fourth and fifth choice among the five candidates. For once, the winner will actually have a majority, every time. Today, 35% can take the prize. It’s called plurality, not majority, and it’s a leftover from the British system that has proven so unfortunate in say, the Brexit vote.

The other idea is what amounts to a constitutional convention on structure – which is not in the US constitution, so rules can be modified, just as the duopoly has been doing all along. They call it the Legislative Machinery Innovation Committee and somehow it will be made up of experts and not special interests. Good luck with that. It will work on the principle of zero-based budgeting, from Porter’s experience in business consulting. Unfortunately, government doesn’t work like business, as Trump is finding out to his huge frustration. Deficit spending is actually impossible to avoid with the dollar as strong as it is, and interest rates as low as they are. Surpluses are damaging to the economy. So that’s not going very far, either, I’m afraid.

The thing that really annoys me about this book is that it has the exact same conclusion as a dozen other books I have reviewed on dysfunctional US government. You, dear reader, are the answer. You have to get involved. You are more powerful than you think. You have your own network, your own locality, your local media, and your own influence. You can volunteer, post online, join a movement, and donate money. It’s all in your own hands. Americans have come to this sad point before, notably in the Gilded Age, when equality and corruption were actually worse. But bottom up, scattered efforts by people just like you pulled the country back from the abyss. So your hard work can save us again, for a while.

The message has become tiresome, but in the specific case of multiple primary winners, there is real movement to report. Several states have begun implementing RCV and/or multiple candidates out of the primaries. The duopoly absolutely hates that. Both Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and Republican leader Kevin McCarthy are on record as hating it. So it must be right. This alone makes it worth pushing for.

On the other hand, why settle for complex voting procedures? The simplest solution is to go back to Ancient Greece where it all started. Political office is an obligation, a service like jury duty. It was not meant to be a lifelong career where electeds get rich. So one term only. No need to raise PAC money. No need to bow to pressure. One term means parties can’t threaten electeds if they don’t vote right, if they don’t raise enough money for the party, or if they co-operate with the other party. Lobbying becomes all but impossible. It means solving problems. All by setting term limits to one. The authors don’t go this far.


At least some states allow citizen initiatives. When the RCV referendum is put to voters, and it wins, the duopoly sues to prevent it becoming law. How sick is this, the authors do not say. But if the court has not been packed by the duopoly, the citizens can win. It is now a well-trodden path, and the playbook works. In other words, it is still possible to have free and fair elections, even in America, if voters are willing to fight against their own elected representatives for it.

The duopoly is the coronavirus. It infects and damages everyone. But it is nonetheless fragile. Gehl and Porter’s proposals are simple handsoap to break the bonds of the coronavirus - the parties that threaten us all.

David Wineberg

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Just Another Dogmatic Diatribe. With a title and premise like this, I truly had high hopes for this book. I should learn to not have such high hopes for such books, given that they almost always are utter disappointments, and this one is no exception to that generality. It raises some good points, particularly as they relate to ballot access and the nature of the duopoly system of government we have in the US. But beyond that this truly is just another dogmatic diatribe, this one from self-professed "moderates" that are actually anything but. It ends with an "altar call" urging *you* to act and donate your money, even as the authors sit back comfortably writing books and being "activists" rather than actually putting their own names on the ballot to try to achieve their stated goals. They want *you* to take the heat in running for office... even as they don't have the guts. So take it from someone who *has* run for office, twice. Read this book, as it genuinely does have a couple of good ideas. But read it with a boulder of salt, because the authors aren't brave enough to get in the fire themselves, and it is only within the fire that you truly see your ideas in action. Recommended.

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