Kevin Price Phillips (born
30 November 1940) is an
American writer and commentator on politics, economics, and history. Formerly a
Republican Party strategist before becoming an
Independent, Phillips became disaffected with the party from the
1990s, and became a scathing critic. He is a regular contributor to the
Los Angeles Times,
Harper's Magazine, and
National Public Radio, and was a political analyst on
PBS'
NOW with Bill Moyers.
Phillips was a strategist on voting patterns for
Richard Nixon's
1968 campaign, which was the basis for a book, The
Emerging Republican Majority, which predicted a conservative realignment in national politics, and is widely regarded as one of the most influential recent works in political science. His predictions regarding shifting voting patterns in presidential elections proved accurate, though they did not extend "down ballot" to
Congress until the
Republican revolution of
1994. Phillips also was partly responsible for the design of the Republican "
Southern strategy" of the
1970s and
1980s.
The author of fourteen books, he lives in
Goshen, Connecticut.
Phillips was educated at the
Bronx High School of Science,
Colgate University, the
University of Edinburgh and
Harvard Law School. After his stint as a senior strategist for the
Nixon presidential campaign, he served a year, starting in
1969, as
Special Assistant to the
U.S. Attorney General, but left after a year to become a columnist. In
1971, he became president of the
American Political
Research Corporation and editor-publisher of the American Political
Report (through
1998).
In
1982, the
Wall Street Journal described him as "the leading conservative electoral analyst -- the man who invented the term "
Sun Belt" [a phrase also attributed to legendary
Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Sam Rayburn], named the
New Right, and prophesied 'The Emerging Republican Majority' in 1969."
Later, he became a critic of
Republicans from the south and west, the area he had identified as the "
Heartland", the future core of Republican votes. He had also identified the "
Yankee Northeast" as the future
Democratic stronghold, foreshadowing the current split between
Red States and Blue States. More than 30 years before the
2004 election, Phillips foresaw such previously Democratic states as
Texas and
West Virginia swinging to the Republicans and
Vermont and
Maine becoming Democratic states.
Phillips uses the term financialization to describe how the
U.S. economy has been radically restructured from a focus on production, manufacturing and wages, to a focus on speculation, debt, and profits. Since the 1980s, Phillips argues in
American Theocracy,
the underlying
Washington strategy
... was less to give ordinary
Americans direct sums than to create a low-interest-rate boom in real estate, thereby raising the percentage of
American home ownership, ballooning the prices of homes, and allowing householders to take out some of that increase through low-cost refinancing. This triple play created new wealth to take the place of that destroyed in the 2000-2002 stock-market crash and simultaneously raised consumer confidence.
Nothing similar had ever been engineered before.
Instead of a recovery orchestrated by Congress and the
White House and aimed at the middle- and bottom-income segments, this one was directed by an appointed central banker, a man whose principal responsibility was to the banking system. His relief, targeted on financial assets and real estate, was principally achieved by monetary stimulus. This in itself confirmed the massive realignment of preferences and priorities within the American system....
Likewise, huge and indisputable but almost never discussed, were the powerful political economics lurking behind the stimulus: the massive rate-cut-driven post-2000 bailout of the
FIRE (finance, insurance, and real estate) sector, with its ever-climbing share of
GDP and proximity to power. No longer would Washington concentrate stimulus on wages or public-works employment.
The Fed's policies, however shrewd, were not rooted in an abstraction of the national interest but in pursuit of its statutory mandate to protect the
U.S. banking and payments system, now inseparable from the broadly defined financial-services sector.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Phillips_(political_commentator)
- published: 02 Mar 2014
- views: 9564