The people’s agenda is neither the far Left nor the Right

November 13th, 2006 by Joe

The ink is barely dry on the Democratic majority in Congress and already both the far Left and the Right are spinning the numbers, statistics, and what it all means into a dizzying array of contradictory “facts.”

On the Right, you have the so-called “Architect” Karl Rove saying that the election landslide was really just “typical” for an election six years into a President’s term….and that other than a few relatively “minor” factors like Iraq the conservative movement remains on track to cementing a permanent majority. After all, he says, if just a few thousand votes had gone the other way the Republicans would still be in control. He foresees the resumption of Republican dominance in two years.

On the Left, you have folks like Atrios trying to claim that there is no “Center” in politics, and that what people have been hoodwinked into calling “the Center” is in fact the Left. He can’t think of anything that belongs to a “radical left” agenda that isn’t considered “centrist” by the pundits who say that centrism ruled the day in the election.

What a bunch of spin.

To Karl Rove: you can twist and massage numbers all you like. Don’t forget that the backbone of your “Republican hegemony,” Bush himself, was elected by a mere 300 or so votes in Florida. The fact is that this country is not interested in your twisted, bigoted brand of conservatism–and the last six years have demonstrated the Republican party’s incompetence in adhering to its own ideals of limited government, balanced budgets, and a strong and sensible national defense.

To Atrios and the Kos folks claiming a Left-driven mandate in Tuesday’s election: I can think of PLENTY of liberal ideas that if done by this Congress would cause voters from all those conservative and moderate districts we won to send their freshmen Democratic congressmen packing in two years:

  • Tax increases on anyone except the most wealthy, especially if coupled with any spending increases.
  • Over-regulation of business on issues that don’t affect the life and health of consumers.
  • Unconditional granting of citizenship to illegal immigrants.
  • Codifying gay marriage into law or re-opening the gays in the military debate.
  • Immediate full withdrawal of troops from Iraq, as some liberals are demanding.
  • Messing with the death penalty.
  • A complete gutting of the Patriot Act instead of balancing the liberty compromised in each provision of the Act with the security benefit obtained (a balancing exercise never contemplated in the current version that consists merely of rights-limiting mandates.)
  • Nationalization of health care with an accompanying tax increase (at least without a very clear explanation of how people would actually pay less than they do under the current system.)
  • Outlawing the Pledge of Allegiance (or striking its references to God) in schools or any other such nonsense, as advocated by some liberals.
  • Making abortion substantially easier to get than it already is.
  • Radical environmental reforms (at least without a strong justification of how it relates to global warming, a fact which I think people of all political persuasions are beginning to accept.)

Now folks like Atrios and my friend Boztopia can claim that the Center is gone if they like, and that it’s really just part of a “sea of blue” that was theirs all along. Or they can claim that the Center simply moved Left. More likely, it’s the Left realizing the futility of some of its more radical ideas and understanding that in order to govern in this country they’re going to have to lurch somewhat to the Right whether they like it or not. The Center hasn’t gone anywhere–the Left has.

Look at other topics that were once considered conservative or centrist and are now all the rage among the Left: a strong national defense, a phased solution in Iraq, a balanced budget, cutting taxes such as the Alternative Minimum Tax, cracking down on employers who hire illegal aliens.

Folks, you can claim these were your ideas all along if you like, if they will help the new Congress govern from the “sensible middle.” (I personally don’t believe that’s the case, although I’m delighted that the Left finally got serious about the realities of what it takes to become a majority.) But it would be a sad and highly incorrect conclusion to assume that because people chose the ideas espoused by this “new Left,” if you will…that they by transitive property also signed on to all of the radical, batty, or even idealistic but unrealistic ideas that come from the far Left. It just isn’t so.

The Left can govern on a platform of sensible ideas that span the political Center, or they can go back to being an impotent minority. They can’t have both in a country that leaned Right after 9/11 without a lot of gentle nudging back to the Left that will take place only in small steps over time. Push too hard and too fast, and all those new Democratic districts will go right back to being Red in two years.

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One Response

  1. David Deyo

    As a passionate progressive who tries to be intellectually honest, I doubt we can say the meaning of last week’s election is that the nation is seated in the left of the political spectrum. At the same time, there’s no doubt that we’ve moved politically toward the left from where we’ve been, having gone too far to the right. I’m not going to quibble about how close to the center that puts us now, but the leftward movement is unmistakable.

    I don’t think the Left has become “serious about the realities of what it takes to become a majority.” The Left hasn’t sold its soul for the sake of victory. But the Left is willing to join with reasonable people in the center in coalition to pull the country back from the extreme right. It’s an uneasy coalition.

    What troubles me is that there are many centrists who think that because they were a vital part of making victory possible that they and they alone are deserving to call the shots for the coalition now. With all due respect, those of us on the Left have known all along that BushCo was a disaster waiting to explode. We’ve been fighting the fight against the hard right all along. I’m glad the centrists have joined the fight, but the center alone is no more capable of this victory than the Left was. Centrists may have been offered up as salable candidates and elected as such. But it was the hard work on the Left, including Kos and others who have laid the ground work and done a lot of the grunt work that put those moderates into office. Nobody should kid themselves about that or forget that.

    I don’t expect the full slate of my progressive hopes to be enacted. But neither should I expect to just go to sit meekly at the side of the master’s table and wait for any scraps the center feels like dropping my way. The Left was good enough to help elect these centrists and they would do well to remember that. The coalition should offer something that the Left can feel good about, even if it’s not the whole ball of wax.

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