What the hell ever happened to progressive politics
and liberalism in the Democratic Party?
When
I first moved out here DFLers bowed to the memory of Humphrey, McCarthy, Freeman,
and Mondale. Later they added to that
Wellstone. But such homage is living in
past, shallow in the sense that the DFL today lacks the courage of the
convictions it once had. The same is
true for Democrats at the national level.
At the
national level Barack Obama is pushing a free trade agreement that only Republicans
and Wall Street can love and he now wants to ramp up troop commitment and base
building in Iraq, essentially continuing Bush's war and undoing the original
rationale of his presidency. Hillary
Clinton's liberalism is hardly that; her
speech on voting rights called for tepid reform at best, ignoring the
socio-economic forces for why many do not vote, and her call for economic justice looks hollow next to
support for Wall Street.
In
Minnesota a governor who just a few months was heralded in the national media
as the most liberal one in America who got the job done, just folded to the
Republicans on almost any measure. The
give-aways on the environment, gun silencers, gutting the State Auditor's
office, and retreating on universal
pre-K send signals that Republicans can win if they hold long enough. And then there is Senate majority Leader Tom
Bakk- why he is a Democrat is anyone's guess.
His leadership was deplorable, his messaging horrific, and his
negotiating skills next to none. If he
thinks that his capitulation will defend and protect Senate seats in 2016 he is
simply wrong. His gaffes and missteps only make suburban DFLers more vulnerable
and he has done nothing to convince rural voters to support Democrats. He made the classic mistake Democrats have
made for so long, believing that by acting like Republicans they are more
electable. The reality is that the more
the Democrat brand is muddled and undistinguished the harder it is to win an
election.
The politics
that looks dead is good old-fashioned economic liberalism. The progressive politics that appears dead is
that of Lyndon Johnson, John Kennedy, Franklin Roosevelt, and even Teddy
Roosevelt. It is about the Great Society and the New Deal. It is about redistributive politics that
sought to raise those at the economic bottom, narrow the gap between the rich
and poor, and wrestle control of political power in the United States from
corporations and plutocrats. It was a
commitment to believing that the government had an important role in make sure
we had a nation that was not one-third ill-fed, ill-clothed, and ill-housed,
that kids should not go off to school hungry, and that corporations should not
have the same rights as people.
But
if Bill Clinton’s presidency did not kill off this type of progressive
politics, surely Barack Obama has. If
Obama did not do it directly, he did so indirectly with the 2010 and 2014
backlashes against him that has done more to kill progressive politics than can
be imagined. With less than two years to
go Obama is liberated and you would think he would be more bold, but he is
not. Why? He never was the liberal folks wanted to believe. In 2008 his liberalism was far distant to the
right compared to Dennis Kucinich and even John Edwards.
Mark
Dayton gets nothing his first year in office then supports corporate welfare
for the billionaire Vikings owner. Now
again in 2014 he gives in and Tom Bakk is complicit. Progressives are on the run everywhere. It is not just on matters of public policy
such as with taxes, government regulation, and health care, but also in the
rhetorical battle for the hearts and minds of the people. You can’t even call
yourself a liberal anymore without being red baited. Thus the reason for
switching to the term progressive. Conservatives have successfully labeled as
left or socialist anyone who does not agree with them.
Watch
cable news (not just FOX) or surf the web, crackpop conservative ideas
dominate. In 2008 Ron Paul pleaded for a
return to the gold standard, Michelle Bachmann blamed Obamacare and Wall street
reforms for the crash in the economy (even though neither have really taken
effect for the most part). The recession
of 2008 is the fault of the government and not greedy bankers and speculators,
Keynesian economics to stimulate the economy is wasteful, consumer protection
is bad for business, and the Supreme Court’s Citizens United expanding
corporate free speech rights to dump unlimited money into the buying of
elections is good. Oh, and vaccines
cause mental retardation and global warming does not exist and Obama is blamed
for the screw ups with FEMA and
hurricane Katrina! Main stream media seems afraid to put real progressives on
the air and what passes as progressive on MSNBC is watered-down, snobbish, and
defensive.
How
did it happen? There is no one cause but
there are several reasons. First, what
Obama and progressives have failed to do is craft a narrative supporting their
views. Conservatives have the narrative
of individual freedom–markets are good and government is bad. Government suppresses personal freedom and
markets promote it. Never mind that corporations
tell more people what to do with more of their life at work than the government
ever does or could. That’s corporate
freedom. Conservatives have made free
choice their buzz word and equality a dirty one. Progressives have no overarching rhetoric and
narrative to support their world view.
Progressives need a winning narrative that appeals to Americans and
which dictates a governing philosophy.
Second,
Obama was not really a liberal but his rhetoric looked it. He ran promising change. The reason why so many are disappointed in
him is not that he was too far left but that instead he failed to deliver on
his lofty promises. At inauguration
Obama had a window to change America but he flinched. Carpe diem was not his motto.
Third,
progressives lack guts to fight. Obama
repeatedly caves, and now Dayton has done it twice. Why? Democrats (and one should not confuse the
party with progressivism) believe that they are the caretakers for government. They believe that they need to be responsible
and not run the risk of shutting the government down for fear of how it would
ruin the economy or hurt people. But
conservatives know this and take advantage of the Democrats willingness to
blink. But by blinking the Democrats are
screwing over poor people and the economy slowly by giving ground one inch at a
time and they seem unable to recapture it. Until Democrats fight and show
conservatives they are willing to shut the government down and hold conservatives
responsible they will never win. Missing
is the courage of their convictions.
Fourth,
conservatives understand how to make structural reforms and policy changes that
both benefit their supporters and enhance their power. Tax cuts and cuts in regulation are simple
ways to benefit supporters, but there is more.
Voter ID disempowers their opposition, attacking union rights undercuts
labor support for Democrats and opposition to business in the workplace, and
gutting regulations on money in politics strengthens corporations and rich
individuals. Obama’s biggest mistake in
his first two years was his failure to act accordingly. Instead of health care reform he should have
used his sizable majorities in Congress to support the Employee Free Choice Act
to strengthen unions, adopt national legislation banning voter ID and
permitting day of election registration in federal elections, and adopting real
Wall Street and bank reforms that would have limited their power, including
reauthorizing Glass-Steagall.
Moreover,
Obama should have first done something to help homeowners and workers get their
houses and jobs back. Reward supporters
up front and they are with you for life.
Furthermore, when the Supreme
Court issued Citizens United Obama could have issued an executive
order barring corporations from bidding on federal contracts if they make
political expenditures. Or he could
have ordered the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue rules requiring
shareholder assent before companies make political expenditures. Finally, to break the back of conservative
news he could have embraced a reinstitution of the Fairness Doctrine to require
the media to offer diverse view points.
But he did not do any of this.
In
Minnesota Dayton signed the death knell for campaign finance reform. His negotiations with the legislature were a
contempt for open and accountable government.
He and the DFL leadership have never supported lobbyist, campaign finance,
or real structural reform of the government.
Instead, if anything, what has emerged is a CEO-corporate style of
management for government-a repudiation of liberal reforms of the last 40 years
and an embracing of a Republican style of politics.
This
is the last problem. Democrats now feed
at the same trough as Republicans. Obama,
Clinton, and Democrats across the
country and Minnesota are equally as dependent on big money and the kindness of
millionaire friends as are Republicans.
Progressive
politics is dead so long as it is married to the current Democrat Party. They need a party that is not willing to play
it safe and worry that if a few Democrats lose
that means the Republicans win. It means a willingness to fight for what
you believe in. This is what progressive
politics needs to be in the age of conservatism. The dead don’t fight or win.
Right on Mr. Schultz! It is time for Democrats to stand up and be counted for liberal policies and bills. The present group of DFLers in the Senate have no legs!
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ReplyDeleteThe world has changed, the US has changed. The loss of middle-skill blue and white collar middle income jobs is a technological change, not a political one. The rise of China, India, Mexico, and Eastern Europe as players in the capitalist economy is in large part because we won the Cold War and they embraced the American way. Sorry, but we can’t persuade them to take up self-destructive economic policies once again, and refusing to trade openly won't turn any economic tides. Simply turning back the clock legislatively will not bring back middle class jobs for those with a high school education.
ReplyDeleteHow about something forward looking? How about separating health care from employment? How about an unemployment system that can help people with part time jobs, multiple jobs, contract jobs? How about switching taxation from employment to consumption, and replacing tax deductions with tax credits? How about facing down teachers' unions and embracing education reform? How about demanding that state-supported colleges focus on reducing the cost of education, rather than trying to become 3rd class versions of Harvard? I'd like to see something progressive from the Progressives. What I'm hearing is entirely regressive.