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Democrats, Forever Changed [With ObamaCare, the McGovernites trump the DLC]
The Daily Beast ^ | March 15, 2010 | Peter Beinart

Posted on 03/16/2010 11:51:34 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

By pressing ahead on health care, President Obama is ending a decades-long internal debate within his party—and the Democratic Party will never be the same.

This week’s last-ditch health care push may or may not prove the defining battle of Barack Obama’s presidency. It may or may not prove a defining moment in the history of the American welfare state. But here’s a good bet: The Democratic Party will never be the same.

For close to a decade now, Democrats have been arguing with each other about what kind of country this is, and what kind of party they should be. On one side stands a group of politicians, consultants and wonks who believe that America is, at its core, a pretty conservative place. These Democrats form something of a political generation. In their youth, they saw their party move left during Vietnam and get booted from power in 1968. Then they saw George McGovern, the most left-wing major party presidential candidate of the twentieth century, lose 49 states. Then they saw Jimmy Carter’s presidency destroyed in part because he looked weak during the Iran hostage crisis. Then they saw Ronald Reagan, once considered as an unelectable right-wing nut, become the most popular president of their adult lives.

In the late 1980s, they responded to these disasters by creating the Democratic Leadership Council, which pushed the party to the right on welfare, taxes, trade, crime and defense. They claimed vindication when a president of the DLC, Bill Clinton, became president, and claimed double vindication when, after Clinton pushed for universal health care and got creamed in 1994, he won reelection two years later by triangulating against the liberals in his own party.

For this generation of Democrats, which includes Al From, Mark Penn, Joe Lieberman, William Galston, Elaine Kamarck, Dick Morris, Ed Koch, Jane Harman, Evan Bayh, and to some extent Bill and Hillary Clinton, being a liberal is like walking past a bear. Move cautiously and reassuringly and the bear will purr contentedly. But make any sudden or threatening gestures, and you’ll be mauled because, fundamentally, the bear distrusts liberals. As Galston and Kamarck wrote in their famed 1989 essay “The Politics of Evasion”—a document that helped define the “don’t scare the bear” wing of the party—Democrats can pass liberal programs “but these programs must be shaped and defended within an inhospitable ideological climate.” To pretend that the American people are liberal at heart is to evade political reality, with devastating results.

By the late 1990s, “don’t scare the bear” Democrats pretty much dominated Washington. But in the Bush years, a new faction began to emerge. These Democrats were mostly newer to politics. They had never seen a McGovern or Mondale mauled for being too far to the left. What they had seen was the post-1994 Bill Clinton, who shied away from ambitious liberal reform. And they had seen the Iraq War, which DLC types largely supported, partly out of fear that opposing it would allow Republicans to paint Democrats as soft on defense.

By 2003, this new group of Democrats was angry as hell. The Iraq War, which party elders had mostly backed, was proving a disaster, and to make matters worse, Republicans were clobbering Democrats as weak anyway. So these Democrats began fashioning a different theory: Perhaps the problem wasn’t that Democrats looked weak because they were too liberal, perhaps the problem was that Democrats looked weak because they didn’t stand up for what they really believed. In 2005, the historian Rick Perlstein—who became something of a hero to these folks—published a book entitled The Stock Ticker and the Super Jumbo. Republicans, he argued, were like Boeing: a company that persevered in building a super jumbo airplane even when the market was bad, and thus built a dominant brand. Democrats were like the stock ticker, constantly shifting with the public mood and thus winning momentary victories but failing to build a brand people could identify with.

To change, Perlstein argued, “Democrats need to make commitments, or a network of commitments, that do not waver from election to election.” They must stick with them “even if they don’t succeed” at any given moment because doing unpopular things because you believe in them convinces Americans that you have core beliefs, which in the long term strengthens your brand.

In 2004, Howard Dean ran as the suberjumbo candidate for president, insisting that his opponents for the Democratic nomination, most of whom had supported the Iraq War, needed a “backbone transplant.” Dean lost, but his message won. His campaign helped to catalyze the “netroots”—blogs like Daily Kos and organizations like MoveOn—which told the story of the bear a very different way. In their version, Democrats didn’t get mauled because they made sudden, aggressive moves. After all, the Clinton and Bush-era Democrats hadn’t been aggressive at all. They had been mauled for precisely the opposite reason: because they didn’t fight back. Show the bear that you’re not afraid, they argued—look tough and defiant rather than timid and craven—and you’ll gain respect. In 2006, two liberal social scientists, John Halpin and Ruy Teixeira, answered Galston and Kamarck’s 1989 essay in a paper entitled, “The Politics of Definition.” The ideological climate, they argued, wasn’t inhospitable to liberals. It was inhospitable to weathervanes. If Democrats defined themselves—if they stood up for their beliefs in the face of political threats—they would win in the end.

In Bush’s second term, the Halpin and Teixeira faction grew stronger. Congressional Democrats held firm against Bush’s effort to partially privatize Social Security, and forced him to back down. The netroots were further buoyed by the 2006 midterms, when Democrats ran against the Iraq War, and won control of Congress. Perhaps the Democrats were building their superjumbo after all.

During the 2008 presidential primaries, each of the Democratic Party’s factions had a candidate. The DLC types—led by Mark Penn—mostly backed Hillary Clinton, who refused to repudiate her vote for the Iraq War, took a hawkish line on Iran and defended her husband’s centrist record. Many in the superjumbo faction, by contrast, signed on with John Edwards, who embraced the netroots’ argument that in an era of partisan polarization, Democrats had to stop searching for the political center and beat Karl Rove at his own game.

The mystery candidate was Barack Obama. On the one hand, he attacked Hillary Clinton—and by extension the DLC Democrats more generally—for living in fear of the bear. “Triangulating and poll-driven positions because we’re worried about what Mitt [Romney] or Rudy [Giuliani] might say about us just won’t do,” he declared. “If we are really serious about winning this election Democrats, we can’t live in fear of losing it.”

With rhetoric like this, and his opposition to the Iraq War, Obama attracted his share of superjumbo Democrats. But other netroots activists harbored suspicions. For while Obama was telling Democrats to hold fast to their core beliefs, he was also depicting himself as the candidate who could transcend the red-blue divide. If Obama struck some in the netroots as a more polished Howard Dean, a guy who wanted to dream big and fight hard, he struck others as a more polished Joe Lieberman, a guy who wanted to be loved on the other side of the aisle.

Nothing in Obama’s first year resolved that ambiguity. He passed a stimulus bill that Republicans called too big but many liberals called too small. He altered some of Bush’s policies on civil liberties, but kept others. He sent more troops to Afghanistan, but set a deadline for their withdrawal. He pushed a big health care reform, but didn’t fight for a public option. A year into Obama’s presidency, the Democratic Party’s two factions could each still credibly claim him as its own, which is to say, the decade-old argument lingered on.

Now it is over. When Scott Brown won his Senate seat, he made Obama choose. On the one hand, he handed the White House an excuse to abandon comprehensive reform and return to the incremental, small-bore approach that Clinton pursued after 1994. The Brown victory, in fact, seemed to illustrate the “don’t scare the bear” theory perfectly. Obama had passed the stimulus and bailed out the banks and taken over part of the auto industry and for the American people, it was too much liberal activism too fast. Polls not only showed Americans turning against Obama’s health care bill, they showed them turning against big government more generally. Continuing to pursue comprehensive reform in this inhospitable environment, warned former Carter pollster Patrick Caddell and former Clinton pollster Douglas Schoen, in language that echoed “the Politics of Evasion,” would bring political calamity. “Wishing, praying or pretending” that the American people support health care reform more than they do, they insisted, “will not change these outcomes.”

Superjumbo Democrats, by contrast, argued that the public wasn’t so much anti-reform as they were anti-the legislative process that had produced reform. But more fundamentally, they argued that the American people would respect Democrats for not backing down in the face of adversity. The party might still lose seats this fall, but over time health care reform would prove popular, and the party’s willingness to fight for it would strengthen the Democratic brand.

Why exactly Obama—advised by David Axelrod, Rahm Emmanuel and Valerie Jarrett—decided to double down on health care remains unclear. But it’s a good bet that President Hillary Clinton—advised by Mark Penn—would have acted differently. And in acting the way he did, Obama has turned himself into a superjumbo Democrat. For the foreseeable future, he has forfeited any chance of bridging the red-blue divide. Prominent Republicans have already announced that if Democrats try to pass health care via reconciliation, they will not work across the aisle to pass anything major this year. Conversely, Obama has cemented his bond with the netroots. It doesn’t really matter that the health care reform bill he is fighting for isn’t particularly left-wing. For the netroots, a politicians’ ideological purity has always been less important than his willingness to resist pressure from the other side, which is exactly what Obama has just done.

Whether health care reform passes or not, Obama has embraced polarization over triangulation. He has chosen Karl Rove’s politics of base mobilization over Dick Morris’s politics of crossover appeal, with consequences not merely for how he campaigns for Democrats in 2010, but for he campaigns for himself in 2012. And that’s a disaster for “don’t scare the bear” Democrats whether Obamacare passes or not. The reason is that the DLC wing of the party is much more top-down than the MoveOn wing. It has always wielded influence primarily through elected leaders rather than grassroots activists. But today, Obama is the only leader in the Democratic Party who really matters. As the retirement of Evan Bayh illustrates, there are few nationally prominent DLC-aligned politicians left. (The one person who could have rallied that faction of the party against Obama is now his secretary of state). The DLC wing’s best hope for relevance, therefore, was that Obama himself would restrain the party’s base, that his White House would nurture a new generation of centrist candidates.

That hope is now gone. From top to bottom, Democrats have decided to bet the party’s future on the belief that Americans prefer bold liberals to cautious ones. Now it’s up to the bear.

*******

Peter Beinart, senior political writer for The Daily Beast, is associate professor of journalism and political science at City University of New York and a senior fellow at the New America Foundation. His new book, The Icarus Syndrome: A History of American Hubris, will be published by HarperCollins in June. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bho44; congress; democrats; healthcare; hillary; obama; obamacare; socialisthealthcare
Hopefully, there won't be a Democrat left above the dog-catcher level in politics by 2012.
1 posted on 03/16/2010 11:51:34 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

They are forever the Socialist Party.....


2 posted on 03/16/2010 11:55:57 AM PDT by AngelesCrestHighway
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

And hopefully that dog-catcher level is actually dog-$hit- catcher under the direction of a conservative watch group.


3 posted on 03/16/2010 11:56:44 AM PDT by maddog55 (OBAMA, Why stupid people shouldn't vote.)
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To: maddog55

You mean those guys we have down here on the side of the road in Mississippi wearing the green and white striped outfits and being guarded by deputies? LOL


4 posted on 03/16/2010 11:59:38 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (If we're an Empire, why are Cuba, Iraq, the Philippines, Japan & Germany independent?)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Well, that sounds like real good news for the conservatives, that the Democrats and Obama are pushing so hard for Obamacare.... keep it up guys... you lose in the long run... LOL ...


5 posted on 03/16/2010 12:10:16 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The loose coalition that makes up the Democrat party is swiftly spinning apart, and sheer centrifugal force may cause a spluttering split into several competing parties.

Not that the probable situation would be any less dangerous to a representative republic than what we are already facing, but we would have at a little respite from this constant bombardment of just about every institution and distinctively American flavor of the civilization we have built up.

The “striking off of chains” is of no benefit if it only means a new set of chains is being rapidly forged. And being attached with an even more cruel fit.

Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without.

There is going to be a lot of “doing without” if this crazed push for “policy changes” is not soon reversed.

Not just as a moratorium, but in a substantial repeal of most or all of this social experiment. It does not work, it has never worked anywhere, and no degree of tinkering will ever find the magical combination that will allow it to work here or anywhere.

Interesting that most capitalistic country on earth right now is probably the Peoples’ Republic of China.


6 posted on 03/16/2010 12:11:00 PM PDT by alloysteel (....the Kennedys can be regarded as dysfunctional. Even in death.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Good article - thanks for posting this.


7 posted on 03/16/2010 12:14:06 PM PDT by dagogo redux (A whiff of primitive spirits in the air, harbingers of an impending descent into the feral.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
This is a pretty damned good article.

It does leave out the fascism and totalitarianism, but other than that, bravo!

8 posted on 03/16/2010 12:15:38 PM PDT by Lazamataz
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To: AngelesCrestHighway

They have shown their true colors to the American people. They are Commies to the core and do not like freedom without them giving it. They are Anti-American in every aspect. They believe the country is ready for their brand of Communism. It is now or never for them. Let us pray it is never.


9 posted on 03/16/2010 12:16:30 PM PDT by Semperfiwife (My doctor is NOT a congressman. They have not healed anyone, but hurt plenty!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Hard-Left Socialists set their sights on taking over the Democrat Party in the 1970’s, and have waged a sustained effort ever since. Proves you cannot fight them by being “moderate”.


10 posted on 03/16/2010 12:18:17 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

And not so long ago some leftist prognosticators were predicting that the GOP would split between moderates and extreme right wingers.


11 posted on 03/16/2010 12:18:34 PM PDT by Sans-Culotte ( Pray for Obama- Psalm 109:8)
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To: Sans-Culotte

the big crack-up for the Democrats will come when Gays, Blacks and Hispanics decide to engage in a Holy War for the title of “Most Favored Disadvantaged Victim Group”


12 posted on 03/16/2010 12:21:05 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: AngelesCrestHighway
They are forever the Socialist Party.....

The writer doesn't get it. He doesn't see Obama as having always but always been a Mau-Mau, a Communist, and so he doesn't understand that Obama has maneuvered his way past all the DLC types, captured their queen and pent her up in a czar-bound cage at State, and is now effectively changing the Democratic Party's course.

He's doing a policy purge. He's taking them Left, Big Left, as he always intended to do. Up next: doing it to the entire country.

The writer also fails to account for Pelosi's rise -- she's as hardline as Obama is. So how'd she get to be Speaker in a House dominated by Blue Dogs and Republicrats?

13 posted on 03/16/2010 12:46:55 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Best article of the day. Everyone else is shrieking, but this guy nails it.

0bummer = McGovern.

Let’s roast ‘em!


14 posted on 03/16/2010 12:52:38 PM PDT by Uncle Miltie (Democrats prioritize Death over Enslavement!)
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To: Buckeye McFrog
Proves you cannot fight them by being “moderate”.

Well, they certainly didn't go away.

But I think people who see big policy differences between the Klintonx and Magic are deluded. Hillary's as big an Alinskyite as Magic is -- the differences are differences of political style, of the approach to the People.

Notice in the article,

As Galston and Kamarck wrote in their famed 1989 essay “The Politics of Evasion”—a document that helped define the “don’t scare the bear” wing of the party—Democrats can pass liberal programs “but these programs must be shaped and defended within an inhospitable ideological climate.”,

It was always, but always, about carrying Socialism into effect and corrupting the People with Eurosocialist nostrums. The differences the author is discussing among Democrats are mostly stylistic, not substantive.

15 posted on 03/16/2010 12:53:46 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Obama exposed the the entire Democrat Party for who they really are-Marxist wannabees.


16 posted on 03/16/2010 1:12:57 PM PDT by TennTuxedo
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To: lentulusgracchus

Obama is thinking long term. He doesn’t give a fig about 2010, or even 2012 I believe. He knows that if this passes, it’s here to stay. For good. Once that happens he knows we’re committed to a permanent socialist trend. It’s like the tide. Sometimes it rolls in faster, sometimes slower. But it will always roll in. It will always erode the beach.

Look at the UK. Even as strong a conservative as Thatcher didn’t roll back the NHS. Same with Canada. Same anywhere. Once instituted, state health care has never been repealed. And it won’t be here. This notion of repeal is a pipedream.

The logistics explain it easily. We’d need a veto-proof majority with a dem president. Not likely at all. Even in 1994, we only end up with about 230 seats. You need 290 or so to break a veto. There will never be 290 Republicans in the House. Nor will there be 290 Reps+Dems willing to break it.

Even if Chris Matthews cries his eyes red at 9PM on Nov 6, 2012 as NBC News declares that the Sarah Palin will be the next President, it’ll still remain. We’d need 60 GOP Senators to break a filibuster(or a combo of dems that adds up to 60), again highly unlikely.

And by that time 30,000,000+ will already depend on the govt and will be 100% in hock to the Democratic Party forever.

2010 and 2012 don’t matter. Something much bigger is at stake.


17 posted on 03/16/2010 4:08:31 PM PDT by jeltz25
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To: jeltz25
Parsed exactly, and yes, both Clinton and Obama were about working corruption in the People. Clinton tried to do it in secret. Obama and Emanuel and Pelosi "snuck up" on the Republicans and now are ready to do it by blitz.

Damn them all to hell forever -- fail or succeed, they all deserve to burn in hell, right next to FDR and LBJ.

18 posted on 03/16/2010 8:18:58 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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