Civic Populism: The People's Politics of Geno Baroni

Page 1

Boyte, H.C. (2015). Civic Populism: The People’s Politics of Geno Baroni. Solutions 6(1): 11-16. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/civic-populism-the-peoples-politics-of-geno-baroni/

Envisioning

Civic Populism: The People’s Politics of Geno Baroni by Harry C. Boyte

This article is part of a regular section in Solutions in which the author is challenged to envision a future society in which all the right changes have been made.

I

am honored today, October 24, 2030, to be chosen as storyteller by the Smithsonian Institution’s Council of American Peoples at the opening of the Geno Baroni Center for Democracy, a satellite institution of the Smithsonian in Acosta, Pennsylvania. Geno Baroni was born here 100 years ago, on October 24, 1930, as the son of Italian immigrants. Guido, his father, worked in the Somerset coal mine here in Acosta. Josephine, his mother, survived Geno’s early death at the age of 53 in 1984. Geno Baroni battled the cancer mesothelioma. In his last years, Monsignor Baroni organized cancer patients as he had organized others for more than two decades. “People who are organized,” he said, “will be able to move from powerlessness to power because power is the ability to act.” The Baroni Center has been established by the Smithsonian’s Council of American Peoples to recognize his commitment to “people’s politics,” what can be called civic populism. Baroni’s brand of politics honored the diversity of peoples and cultures on this continent and what they contribute to the work of a more democratic, inclusive, and just society. In the vein of his funeral, which drew political and civic leaders from across the political spectrum, many candidates from various parties are citing the legacy of

Monsignor Baroni in their campaigns this fall. Indeed, we are witnessing a rebirth of people’s politics. We are now in the midst of a large process of building and rebuilding a democratic society through such politics. We don’t know where it will lead—as the first African American federal judge William Hastie was fond of saying, “Democracy is a journey, not a destination.” But we do know that people’s politics has generated substantial changes in the tone and direction of politics in the past 15 years. People’s politics, understood as a civic populist politics, has created a much more egalitarian and inclusive ethos in our nation’s public life than once seemed imaginable. Sometimes also called “recommunalizing the world,” civic populist politics has brought images and stories, memories and markers, in a word, culture, back into public spaces of all kinds: from schools to government agencies and businesses—spaces once stripped of distinguishing characteristics that anchored them in particular locations. It has begun to reground professional identities and practices— and educational processes that shape them—in the civic fiber of places. It has created democratizing alliances, institutional transformations, and innovations in myriad settings, none more important than the wide adoption of civic environmental approaches to address climate change and mitigate its effects. In the process, civic populist politics has been a school for democracy, teaching, and cultivating capacities for productive citizenship to millions of people. Civic populist politics is helping to reverse what the sociologist

Max Weber saw as the irreversible disenchantment of the world through the spread of instrumental rationality. Weber also called the process the “polar night of icy darkness.” A mere 15 years ago, in 2015, politics seemed most certainly headed toward that polar night, full of bitter polarizations and poisonous recriminations based on monocultures of epistemic enclosure and purification. The ever-worsening polarizing politics of the early 21st century led Americans on all sides of the political spectrum to deny, suppress, and forget that those different from themselves were also human beings of immense complexity, with potential for democratic and generous action as well as mean-spirited and antidemocratic action. So, too, whole swaths of the social landscape were portrayed in monochromatic terms as good or evil—conservative Christians, liberals, Muslims, government bureaucrats, white working class, black teenagers…the list is endless. Most people despaired of ever seeing the society change, convinced that its institutions and structures had an insidious life of their own, beyond reform. In those years, political leaders and trendsetters alike scorned places like Acosta and figures like Monsignor Baroni as hopelessly out of date, relics of a past best forgotten. Ironically, the effort to purify political positions and polarize the society was widespread among environmentalists who championed ecological diversity. In the 1970s, environmental groups pioneered in a new technology of polarization called “the canvass,” in which activists went door to door to raise money and solicit support for

www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  January-February 2015  |  Solutions  |  11


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.