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Welcome to the Taxi Driver election Once again, America finds itself adrift

'You talkin' to me?' (Taxi Driver)


July 31, 2024   6 mins

In Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver (1976), Robert De Niro is Travis Bickle (“You talkin’ to me?”), a disturbed cabbie who plans to shoot presidential candidate Charles Palantine before chance intervenes to steer him away from irrevocable catastrophe. The film serves as an instance not just of life imitating art but of art prefiguring life. In a strange twist, John Hinckley Jr., who shot Ronald Reagan in 1981 after seeing the film and developing an obsession with Jodie Foster, tweeted after the Donald Trump shooting, “violence is not the way to go”.

The parallels, however, don’t end there. Trump’s rambling speeches, to which he returned after resuming his campaign, are reminiscent of Bickle’s own paranoid mutterings  while Kamala Harris’s rhetoric sounds every bit like the empty suit Palantine; in fact, her last slogan “Kamala Harris For the People” recalls the equally inane “Palantine — We Are the People.” Real-world politics seemed yet again to be taking its cues from the Taxi Driver script.

Scorsese’s gritty urban epic was born of a decade (comparable to our own) associated with moral decline, traumatic random violence and paralysing elite failure. The anti-hero Bickle, like many then and now, struggled to give meaning to events and circumstances beyond his control. Today, fear and foreboding once again stalk the land. Is there anything Americans can do to avoid being overwhelmed by the senseless and inexplicable character of historical events?

The Seventies may hold clues. Its preceding decade was one of social revolutions, many of which either failed or fell short (not unlike the 2010s); and so, it is remembered as the post-Sixties’ “hangover”. Yet as historian Thomas Borstelmann argued, it was in these years that the changes initiated in the Sixties became mainstream: the shift from industrial liberalism to free markets; the breakdown of traditional authority and the loosening of social mores; the fracturing of modernity into relativism and hyper-individualism. Indeed, the same bleak environment that inspired Taxi Driver, the near-bankrupt New York City of the Seventies, also gave rise to one of 2024’s candidates. Donald Trump was then offering himself as the saviour who could stem the decay, ultimately personifying the bare-knuckle capitalism that prevailed in the next decade.

It was, therefore, a time when old narratives were dying but new ones had yet to take their place: the problem wasn’t so much that terrible things kept occurring on Americans’ television screens, but those watching lacked the ability to integrate them into shared frameworks of meaning. The succeeding narratives, after all, needed time to emerge organically. In hindsight, it is easy to interpret the era’s chaos: gas lines, rising crime, military defeat, and assassination attempts as the trajectory of a society in the midst of a painful but necessary crisis and transition stage while on the way back to renewal. Much harder to do the same when one is living through it, but finding narrative threads to connect events to their potential historical significance may nonetheless prove to be a worthwhile, even necessary, exercise.

Looking at the recent spate of turmoil, one may be tempted, like Bickle, to react with bottomless dread at what seems like a world breaking apart. Or one can, also like Bickle, by the end of the film, find ways of grappling with a grossly imperfect and contingent reality — but with an eye to arriving at larger sources of meaning and moral legitimacy — that is, to do more than just “cope”. It sounds abstract, but it has been done before and can be done again; after all, the malaise of the Seventies didn’t last forever and eventually gave way to “Morning in America” and the optimism of the Nineties. The question is what can fill the present narrative void?

Take the two-week period between the 13 July attempt on Trump’s life and the unification of the Democrats around Harris by 27 July, which will have to go down as one of the most consequential in US politics. Yet much of what happened was largely the product of chance. A lone assassin managed to mount a rifle across from a former president and the target turned his head at just the right time to avoid a headshot. A week later, a frail Joe Biden stepped aside and instantly endorsed his vice president as successor, who had been chosen due to political considerations from the last election year, when fallout from a contingent event, George Floyd’s death, led to “a woman of colour” being in demand. (The distasteful “DEI candidate” accusation should not detract from the connection, freely admitted to by progressives, between the atmosphere of 2020 and Biden’s selection process.)

Both parties made hasty adaptations to the situation by putting the most convenient spin on it. However, these partisan attempts to ascribe meaning to accidents, being much too grounded in the immediacy of the present, suffer from a severe lack of historical perspective. And while these are perhaps understandable as initial reactions, they will not suffice going forward.

In the case of the Republicans, the defects of this approach became clear at their convention, held throughout the week after the attempt: it was naturally suffused with a sense of awe at Trump’s survival. Yet the question of to what end this emotional power and political capital would be expended was buried beneath the exuberance. Consider the contrasting sets of talking points employed by Trump’s vice-presidential pick Ohio Senator J.D. Vance on the one hand; and long-time Congressman Steve Scalise on the other. Embodying his party’s insurgent “New Right” wing, Vance spoke of breaking with ideological dogmas of the Republican past, and of the need for a “leader who fights for the workers in this country”, as opposed to the “Wall Street barons” who “crashed the economy”. Scalise, meanwhile, argued that the Party should look to make the overwhelmingly pro-Wall Street tax cuts they passed in 2017 “permanent”, a view shared by many of his fellow Republican rank-and-file Congress members. Depending on what the policy direction of a second Trump term ends up being, whether it follows Vance’s or Scalise’s divergent wishes, a future historian looking at this convention would probably wonder what the significance of Butler, Pennsylvania might have been.

This historian could ask: Did Trump’s near brush with martyrdom signify a fateful turning in the transformation of the Republican Party — as affirmed by his anointment of Vance days later? Or did the ex-president miraculously cheat death only to return the Right to the nostrums of the Reagan–Bush era, the same elite consensus he sought to overthrow when he first ran in 2016? One need not be looking back in 50 years’ time, however, to be able to retrospectively confer the highest meaning to the incident at Butler. For the ability to deduce and act upon such a logic in real time is the mark of any great statesman.

“The ability to deduce and act upon such a logic in real time is the mark of any great statesman.”

Likewise, on the Democrats’ side, there is widespread relief that their ticket is no longer saddled with a nominee in cognitive decline, so much so that the establishment has willingly overlooked the many known defects of Harris as a politician. Indeed, the Party seems to have become carried away with how their new nominee checks many of the boxes in the progressive identity wish list. There is now a question of whether the Harris campaign will lean more heavily into identity-centred messaging, similar to how Hillary Clinton ran her failed 2016 campaign, or whether it will tap into the class-centred populist themes that sustained Amtrack Joe’s successful 2020 run and, indeed, the Biden administration’s own “Bidenomics” industrial policy programme.

Once again, the future historian may wonder at which direction history had moved and why the Democrats, after having been given a lifeline, went back to the race-conscious but class-agnostic “Rainbow Coalition” strategy of the neoliberal Nineties rather than build on the recent gains they made in the industrial Midwest, where they were once able to reclaim the populist torch from Trump. As with Republicans, the danger is that Democrats go for a feel-good approach that resonates emotionally in the short term but which dispenses with the larger historical perspective that’s guided the Biden team’s thinking on policy, namely that “the free market at home and globalisation’s effects wrought havoc”. This is a clue that the party should focus on this reckoning with structural forces underlying America’s economy, from which a universalist message of material uplift can be drawn on to appeal to voters across racial and gender lines.

It would help to understand the 2020s as a yet another transitional stage, when the revolutions initiated in the 2010s, representing a reverse pendulum effect from the Taxi Driver decade, are starting to take hold: free markets are giving way to the next economic paradigm just as the excesses of postmodern fragmentation have led to a yearning for new narratives of unity and cohesion. And as with the Seventies, the transition will be turbulent.

What is needed is a fresh script or grand narrative to relate chaotic events back to just such a larger horizon of time and meaning, one which can fuse small-h history with big-H History. It is undoubtedly the Republican candidate who began our revolutionary moment eight years ago, but it is arguably the Democrat running against him who summarised this view of history best: “You think you just fell out of a coconut tree? You exist in the context of all in which you live and what came before you.” Indeed, just as the most banal slogans can be entirely accurate, even the most random events can sometimes bear larger truths.


Michael Cuenco is a writer on policy and politics. He is Associate Editor at American Affairs.
1TrueCuencoism

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Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
1 month ago

Not a bad article at all, I rather liked it. A pretty good summation of the current situation. My compliments to the chef, by all means my compliments to the chef!

J Boyd
J Boyd
1 month ago

I’d be more inclined to describe it as the ‘Being There’ election.

But then every US election is a ‘Being There’ election.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
1 month ago

The ‘endless war between Wall Street and Main Street’ continues. The difference now is that fifty years ago Wall Street had some interest in the welfare of ordinary Americans since they were its workforce. Not any more.

Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
1 month ago

We should not be encouraging more violence than already exists around these grand democratic spectacles.
But nor should we sponsoring pointless military violence in a country like the Ukraine where is it obvious (at least to a majority of the world) that the military course of action is failing badly and will always fail.
The two seem to feed off each other in terms of fostering a culture of nihilism around big-stage politics. It is certainly a major weakness in American culture at present.

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
1 month ago
Reply to  Tyler Durden

How is it failing? The Russians are being attrited in as safe a manor as possible.

Michael Cazaly
Michael Cazaly
1 month ago
Reply to  Bret Larson

Any independently verified figures on that one?

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
1 month ago
Reply to  Michael Cazaly

Every story and picture that comes out of the battlefield.

jane baker
jane baker
1 month ago
Reply to  Bret Larson

What stories and pictures? Where,?

Jonathan Gibbs
Jonathan Gibbs
1 month ago
Reply to  Tyler Durden

I’m glad you agree that the Russians are going to lose.
The world isn’t static. If we don’t push back now, it’ll just break out somewhere else until
eventually it’s right on our stoops.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
1 month ago

A lone assassin managed to mount a rifle across from a former president and the target turned his head at just the right time to avoid a headshot.
Who believes that this 20-year-old who was moving about in plain sight before Trump went on stage acted alone? Unlike the FBI, the Secret Service does not yet have a reputation for being a politically corrupted agency but that may be coming.
At best, this was an almost inconceivable failure, a possibility that diminishes with each revelation of how standard procedures were ignored. That leads to the ‘at worst’ option, which after eight years of attacks, impeachments, and lawfare was the only one left to those determined to stop Trump.

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
1 month ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

It seems hard to believe the incompetency involved. But Ive learned to never underestimate the incompetent.

Martin M
Martin M
1 month ago
Reply to  Bret Larson

Almost all actions by government agencies are driven by incompetence. The few that aren’t are driven by cowardice.

Martin Johnson
Martin Johnson
1 month ago

In other words, we are in Neil Howe’s “Fourth Turning.”

Benjamin Greco
Benjamin Greco
1 month ago

I hate to sound cynical, but politicians lie. The Republicans talk about helping workers is just talk, they will go the Steve Scalise route, and the Democrats will go the Clinton route because the only way they can win is to keep their fragile coalition together with the glue of identity politics.
In the end they will do what their biggest donors want which is to continue the neo-liberal economic policies that made them rich.

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

Art thou a Prophet?

Benjamin Greco
Benjamin Greco
1 month ago
Reply to  Samuel Ross

You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind is blowing.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
1 month ago

Superb article Mr. Cuenco, with many fresh insights. I just hope that when the profound cultural revolutions of the day settle in with a new unifying narrative, it won’t involve men insisting that they’re really women, and success or failure depending on which identity boxes one can check.

Bernard Brothman
Bernard Brothman
1 month ago

Kamala Harris went from being one of the least admired Vice Presidents to the leading candidate for election in a matter of three weeks. Not bad for never receiving a primary vote. Since President Biden dropped out of the race following his disastrous debate performance where we could all see his frailties which have been hidden and denied by his staff and the mainstream media, it’s been Kamalamania here in the US.
Perhaps its because people who were anti-Trump and anti-Biden, now have a better choice. Or its DEI – how cool to have a Black woman President. Or its simply not Trump and Kamala can win where Joe could not. Kamala is part of the Administration. If people are unhappy with the direction of the country, why isn’t she being held accountable for her role in it?
We are facing a fiscal cliff in the early 2030s once our Social Security system will not longer be able to pay benefits are the levels promised. The Medicare system for pensioner healthcare could go broke later this decade. $35 trillion in debt and getting bigger all the time. These problems will make climate, race, gender, immigration, education and Palestine seem like small potatoes. Our young people are anxious, fearful, suicidal, lonely and depressed.
I don’t get a warm fuzzy feeling that Kamala and her Administration will be able to address America’s decline.

Martin M
Martin M
1 month ago

Do you get a warm fuzzy feeling that Trump and his Administration will be able to address it?

Carlos Danger
Carlos Danger
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin M

At least Donald Trump will put in the effort to try. He’s not lost in a cloud of abstractions like Kamala Harris, the airheaded Barbie doll of politics.

Martin M
Martin M
1 month ago
Reply to  Carlos Danger

He will put in the effort to fuel is galactic sized ego. Any benefit that accrues to anybody else will be entirely coincidental.

jane baker
jane baker
1 month ago

The 1960s (in the iconic form) reached most people in the provinces in the 1970s.