Posted on 02/22/2003 5:08:31 AM PST by Liz
Here we go again: The New Republics railing on the Democratic Party. This time, theyve got a publicist calling up reporters, touting a hot new redesign and bragging that the magazine is getting "daring" and "more conservative."
This happens from time to time. The New Republic has a long tradition of within-the-party tree shaking, including stances against Jimmy Carters foreign policy and to nuclear freezes. It supported the deployment of advance missiles to Germany; it opposed what owner Martin Peretz deemed the "racialization" of the party by men like Jesse Jackson.
During that time, remembered former editor Michael Kinsley, The Wall Street Journals editorial board accused the magazine of "attacking conservatives while stealing their ideas," and staffers joked that TNR should change its name to Even the Liberal New Republic Says , because it was used so many times to support conservative positions.
Now, amid the George W. Bush eraand, it should be noted with Mr. Peretzs guy, Al Gore, out of the 2004 presidential raceTNRs going after its woebegone Democratic flesh and blood with renewed vigor.
"Its back to the future," said TNR editor Peter Beinart.
This time around, TNRs disgusted with a postBill Clinton/Al Gore party it considers weak and wimpish. A recent press release touted "several daring political stances" by the magazine, among them, supporting war in Iraq, rejecting President Bushs tax cut and calling on Democrats to "shun controversial presidential candidate Al Sharpton."
It could be argued that those positionsshunning Al Sharpton!?sound pretty moderate, about as daring as wearing an Abercrombie & Fitch sweatshirt to a Lehman Brothers company picnic. But Mr. Beinhart rejected that suggestion, maintaining that TNR is breaking new ground.
"Moderate suggests splitting the difference between conservative and liberals," Mr. Beinhart said. "Were one of the few [publications that] want to not only reject the Bush tax cut, but also want no tax cut. On war, were arguing that we have to go to war even without the U.N."
Still, TNR alums wonder how much mileage the magazine can continue to gain from such against-the-grain positioning. For starters, they say, the internal Democrat-bashing has lost some of its shock value. Secondly, they argue that such counterintuitive positions make it harder for the magazine to maintain a consistent point of view.
"I read the magazine because its full of trenchant critiques of the Bush domestic policy," said Hendrik Hertzberg, TNRs editor from 1981 to 1985 and 1989 to 1991. "When I see a piece saying Nancy Pelosi is a Stalinist, I just skip it.
"The old Even The New Republic scam was getting a little old in the 1980s," Mr. Hertzberg continued. "Now its a quarter of a century old."
Mr. Kinsley, who also edited the magazine during two stints, from 1979 to 1981 and from 1985 to 1989, said that the taking-on-the-party positioning succeeded in winning attention for the magazine, but proved problematic over the longer haul.
"The New Republic got mileage out of being unpredictable," said Mr. Kinsley, "But in my mind, being unpredictable meant being unreliable and inconsistent and lacking a general plan. I always thought there was virtue in being predictable. But they feel the opposite works.
"Theyre really struggling to try and strike a balance between being critical of the administration and being internally critical of liberals," Mr. Kinsley continued. "They see themselves as being critical from within. But that gets hard to pull off after about 30 years."
Not surprisingly, Mr. Beinart sees things a little differently. As a teenager growing up in Cambridge, Mass., Mr. Beinart, who began reading TNR in high school, admitted he felt the magazine was too conservative. Now, he said, he sees The New Republics stances not as too conservative, but as rooted in the magazines own idea of liberalism, which he believes has been consistent.
Lately, TNRs focus has been on war with Iraq. At every turn, TNR has bashed the wars Democratic detractors, including one Presidential hopeful, Senator John Kerry, and the boy who could do no wrong, Al Gore.
"I think the magazine has a pretty interesting role in the party," Mr. Beinart said. "Right now, the Democratic Party is at sea. We have a definite vision. Not everyone likes it, but practically, if the Democratic Party only pursues military intervention like Kofi Annan wants to, the party will be dead for a generation. Morally, liberals need to recognize that to blindly oppose any American military power is a dangerous illusion. Power is the force that drives the world.
"We think we can argue very well and deeply for the war in our liberalism," Mr. Beinart explained. "Without American power, liberalism doesnt have a shot in the world. Whos going to trust us otherwise? The French?"
The boss agreed. Mr. Peretzwho last year brought financiers Roger Hertog and Michael Steinhardt on board as investors, but remains involved in the magazine on a daily basissaid he felt the Democrats werent "rightly trusted" by the American people because they werent "comfortable dealing with defense, national security and foreign-policy issues. Thats the advantage that the Republicans have.
"The Democrats are also captives of the United Nations," Mr. Peretz continued. "The notion that the United Nations, which has been a failure in every venture its undertaken, would bestow on American policy a unique legitimacyas whats-his-name, Kofi Annan, puts itis preposterous. France, which has a permanent seat on the Security Council and veto power, has that veto power because Charles de Gaulle persuaded Churchill and Roosevelt that France actually fought the Nazis. The United Nations is fast expiring as a real force in the world, and as a positive force it expired long ago."
Current and past TNR employees will tell you that these are the fun times. The Clinton-Gore era was a strange period for the magazine, and now they can go back to being the feisty kid in the corner of the party, as opposed to being the power broker at the center of the room. It can also be good for sales. As Mr. Kinsley noted: "The New Republic did very well, business-wise, being the party in opposition." Currently, the magazine has 70,000 subscribers.
Asked if the magazines fervent war position was a way of selling magazines, and of distancing itself from the liberal competition like The Nation, Mr. Peretz said: "We havent had any trouble differentiating ourselves from them in decades. The Nation is edited for aging ex-communists on the West Side. On the Upper West Side."
Contacted for comment, Nation editor Katrina vanden Heuvel told Off the Record: "I hope Mr. Peretz fact-checks his magazine better than his statements to the media."
Off the Record can be reached by e-mail at spappu@observer.com.
What? Shun Rev Al? Gosh, Al's gonna feel really bad about that. Asking Dummycrats to abandon their eleventh commandement "tolerance and compassion" is a bit much. Whatever happened to political correctness?
Priceless. Al was never more likeable outing the "Stepford Democrats" marching in lockstep. BR>The mind-numbed Dummycrat robots never question, never challenge. Just do as they are
told - pulling the Dumbocrap lever no matter what lowlife is lurking there.
This column is worthy, if only for this sentence near the end.
Peretz, like Beinert, is a product of Cambridge Massachusetts -- that's "the people's republic" of Cambridge.
But I guess there are some naunced differences between Upper West Side Red Diaper babies and Ivory Tower lefties. The Lefties don't like being perceived as predictable -- whereas when Van Houval screws up her mouth and makes that hateful face on Chris Matthews et al before she starts to speak, you don;t even have to listen to the words -- you know EXACTLY what she is going to say.
Leading Dummycrat presidential candidates arrive at the DNC Gong Show.
"I'll show dat suckah Clintun who de first Black president is."
I recognized them immediately. 8-)
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