Booman Tribune

Brooks Declares Neoliberalism Dead

by BooMan
Sun Mar 11th, 2007 at 02:28:28 PM EST

David Brooks, writing behind the Times Select firewall, has declared the era of neoliberalism officially over. And guess what? We killed it.

On July 25, 1981, Michael Kinsley published an essay in The New Republic called “The Shame of the Democrats.” The Democratic Party, the young Kinsley wrote, is viewed “with growing indifference.” It is run “by lawyer-operators with no commitment to any particular political values.” It is filled “with politicians who will do or say anything for a word or a dollar of support.” It represents “a dwindling collection of special interest groups whose interests are less and less those of either the general populus or the tired and poor.” In short, Kinsley wrote, “the Democratic Party has collapsed not just politically but morally.”

And so began the era of neoliberalism, a movement which, at least temporarily, remade the Democratic Party, redefined American journalism and didn’t really die until now.

Following Marty Peretz as editor of TNR, Kinsley served in that position from (1979-1981 and 1985-1989). He then went on CNN's Crossfire to represent the left to Pat Buchanan's right. After Hendrik Hertzberg made a brief comeback as editor of TNR, they brought in Andrew Sullivan (1991-1996) to represent 'neoliberalism. When he moved on, they replaced him with neoconservative Michael Kelly, who famously died in Iraq when his vehicle, under fire, swerved into a canal. Charles Lane served as Kelly's replacement 1997-1999) until the arrival of Peter Beinart. David Brooks explains this remarkable example of non-liberals running an ostensibly liberal magazine, and its effect on the media over time.

In the early days, the neoliberals coalesced around two small magazines, The New Republic and The Washington Monthly. They represented, first of all, a change in intellectual tone...

On policy matters, the neoliberals were liberal but not too liberal. They rejected interest-group politics and were suspicious of brain-dead unions. They tended to be hawkish on foreign policy, positive about capitalism, reformist when it came to the welfare state, and urbane but not militant on feminism and other social issues.

The neoliberal movement begat politicians like Paul Tsongas, Al Gore (the 1980s and ’90s version) and Bill Clinton. It also set the tone for mainstream American journalism. Today, you can’t swing an ax in a major American newsroom without hitting six people who used to work at The New Republic or The Washington Monthly. Influenced by their sensibility, many major news organizations became neoliberal institutions, whether they knew it or not.

Exactly. Exacta-fucking-mundo.

The question that needs asking is: how in the hell did people like Michael Kinsley, Andrew Sullivan, Marty Peretz, Michael Kelly, and Peter Beinart come to define the left, and how the hell can we get them to go away and never presume to speak for us again?

If you surf the Web these days, for example, you find that a horde of thousands have declared war on the Time magazine columnist Joe Klein.

Well...that's one way. But, until we uncover the rock and see who has been funding the neoliberals from the beginning, we won't really have a sense for how all this happened. But here is the really important thing...

Those neoliberals had an enormous influence on both foreign and domestic policy throughout the Clinton administration, and over Gore and Kerry's campaigns. If they are truly facing extinction, to be replaced by a citizen's army of genuine leftists, then we can expect, and even demand, a corresponding influence over foreign and domestic policy in the near future. And that is frightening not only to Republicans, and not only to neoliberals, but to the people that funded the neoliberals in the first place. We're trying to get our country back. And if David Brooks is to be believed, we're on the right track. They are hearing our footsteps.

Over all, what’s happening is this: The left, which has the momentum, is growing more uniform and coming to look more like its old, pre-neoliberal self. The right is growing more fractious...

Neoliberalism had a good, interesting run — while it lasted.

Brooks' eulogy is premature. Neoliberalism is far from dead. When we see Hillary Clinton fail to capture the Democratic nomination, we'll know that Brooks is right. Until then...keep fighting.



Display:
by BooMan on Sun Mar 11th, 2007 at 02:31:32 PM EST
I don't usually read Brooks, but today's column was pretty interesting.

BTW, I noticed that you didn't mention the fact that Brooks takes as his prototypical blogger that well-known angry bomb thrower, Kevin Drum.  So angry, that Kevin, I wish he would just calm down.

by rae on Sun Mar 11th, 2007 at 02:53:15 PM EST
he talked to Drum because he blogs for the Washington Monthly.
by BooMan on Sun Mar 11th, 2007 at 03:29:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]
to BT readers along with the following excerpts and links:

Gore's speech against the war, 9/23/2002
         Former Vice President Al Gore
          Iraq and the War on Terrorism
          September 23, 2002
          Prepared Remarks

          "If Saddam Hussein does not present an imminent threat, then is it justifiable for the Administration to be seeking by every means to precipitate a confrontation, to find a cause for war, and to attack?"

               "I believe we should focus our efforts first and foremost against those who attacked us on September 11th and have thus far gotten away with it. "

               "the coalition assembled in 1991 paid all of the significant costs of the war, while this time, the American taxpayers will be asked to shoulder hundreds of billions of dollars in costs on our own."



    posted October 3, 2002 (October 21, 2002 issue)
    Al Gore, democrat

    Eric Alterman

The nexus of the punditocracy's twin "love war/hate Gore" obsessions helps to explain the astonishing explosion of invective unleashed by Gore's calm and soberly delivered warning in San Francisco--one that echoed the underreported testimony of three four-star generals given to Congress the same day.

The New York Post headlined its editorial, "Al Gore, Wimp." Sean Hannity observed, "He's sweating profusely.... He didn't look presidential. I didn't see any gravitas, any leadership," and added, "Are we watching something similar to appeasement before our eyes?" ABC's George Will called the speech "moral infantilism." His Washington Post sidekick, Charles Krauthammer, called it "a disgrace." Their colleague Michael Kelly penned a column that makes Ann Coulter sound like Isaiah Berlin. Kelly termed the speech "dishonest, cheap, low," "hollow," "wretched," "vile," "contemptible," "a lie," "a disgrace," "equal parts mendacity, viciousness and smarm" before running out of adjectives. (If the Post really wants this kind of thing, they should consider replacing the barking-mad Kelly with our prodigal son, Christopher, who at least bashes liberals with a bit of style and panache.)

...

But he sure galvanized Tom Daschle and other Democrats to face up to a frightening juggernaut for war they would have preferred to duck for the sake of re-election. Naderites take note. It was not "smart" in the Washington sense. It was not strategic. But damn it, it was brave. The victim of a stolen presidency demonstrated why democracy matters.

ps: Eric called for Gore/Obama.



The Politics of Preemption

By Sam Parry
October 8, 2002

George W. Bush’¡Çs doctrine of "preemptive war"  the elimination of foreign governments he deems a threat to U.S. security interests  is quickly developing a domestic corollary. Any politician who questions Bush’¡Çs strategy can expect to be confronted by a rapid-deployment force of pro-Bush operatives who counterattack using weapons of ridicule and distortion.

In a kind of test run, this army swung onto the offensive immediately after former Vice President Al Gore on Sept. 23 delivered a comprehensive critique of Bush’¡Çs radical departure from decades of American support for international law. Rather than welcome a vigorous debate on the merits and shortcomings of the so-called "Bush Doctrine," conservative commentators treated Gore and others raising questions as dishonest, unpatriotic and even unhinged.
...

by NeuvoLiberal on Sun Mar 11th, 2007 at 03:54:07 PM EST
Except that missing in here is that Hugo Chavez and many others call the Bush administration's policies neoliberal, which is obviously a horse of a different color.

Chavez isn't the only one.  There's a strange number of ties between Trotsky and what we call the neocons.  I know it's all more than I can easily piece together, all these labels and such.

Pax

Night and day you can find me Flogging the Simian

by soj on Sun Mar 11th, 2007 at 04:38:29 PM EST
Neoconservative, neoliberal, and neolibertarian now all are supposed to mean somebody who thinks we can, and should, storm into foreign countries and kill people until we get a regime we like that does what we tell them too. Wars of conquest are anything but new. Who let them steal all the words implying "new, updated variant" and use them to refer to something both ancient and reprehensible?
by curtadams (curtadams@aol.com) on Sun Mar 11th, 2007 at 05:05:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The Democratic wins in congress was fueled significantly by the return of the "Blue Dogs" to the party ranks. Anti-war proponents cheered this as a huge victory for their cause. However, the fact is that the quiet shift of the "Blue Dogs" (read mainstream conservatives) to the Democratic party is profound indeed. First, you can bet that the upcoming Democratic Convention will reflect a definite right of center posture, which will spun to the public as a standard politically centrist position for the party. This will not be a "Fanny Lou Hammer" convention by any stretch of the imagination! Second, Hillary has already interpreted the past election results correctly, and is busy styling her campaign to appeal to the constituents of the newly arrived Blue Dogs. Third, the hated and isolated DLC is already starting to show more unopposed assertiveness on behalf of the Party. Fourth, pressure will begin to build on Howard Dean to resign. Ironically, many of the returning so-called Blue Dogs are simply the scions of the former oldtime "Dixiecrats" who left the party when Fanny Lou Hammer took her seat in the Mississippi delegation at the Democratic convention decades ago. Liberal Bloggers will have to decide three things, what to do, where to go, and who to go with, and at this late date it won't be easy!
by parvenu on Mon Mar 12th, 2007 at 02:49:09 PM EST


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