Bill Moyers returned to television last weekend with a new series, Moyers & Company. (Check your local listings.) The first few installments focus on theĀ politics of economic inequality, drawing heavily on a multi-hour interview with political scientists Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson about their much-praised 2010 book, Winner-Take-All Politics. Someone must be watching, since Winner-Take-All Politics wasĀ in single digits on the Amazon best-seller list earlier this week, and is currently #22. (Thatās not #22 in some sub-sub-category, or 22 withĀ three orĀ four zeros after it, but #22 in Books.)
As part of the festivitiesāandĀ being much less telegenic than Hacker and PiersonāIĀ was invited to write aĀ piece for the Moyers website assessing the political impact of the Occupy Wall Street movement. What I found, using YouGov survey data from mid-December, wasĀ not much:
There is remarkably little evidence here that the public as a whole has moved to the left on the most significant policy question currently bearing on the issue of economic inequalityāor even that the public has become increasingly engaged in that debate over the past year. . . . So far, at least, neither the president nor the Occupy Wall Street movement has succeeded in transforming general public support for the principle of progressive taxation into effective support where it countsāat the pollsāfor the specific policies that are most likely to matter.
It is a testament to the open-mindedness of Moyers and his colleagues that they’ve posted this downer in the midst ofĀ theirĀ own enthusiastic celebrations ofĀ political progress on the issue of inequality:Ā āAmerica Wakes Up to the Reality: Inequality Mattersā;Ā āCapitalism Debate Hits the Mainstreamā; āFinancial Crisis Tests Tolerance of Inequalityā.
And who knows? Perhaps their efforts will contribute to making my analysis obsolete.

