Booman Tribune

The Threat of Governing from This Center

by BooMan
Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 11:41:03 AM EST

The problem of not having a rational alternative party to the Democrats became obvious in the New Jersey gubernatorial race. In July, the FBI, in a widespread money laundering and corruption investigation, arrested dozens of people in New Jersey, including (mostly) Democratic politicians. The incumbent Democratic governor, Jon Corzine, was already unpopular, but this called for some serious repudiation of his party by the voters. The problem? His opponent was one of Karl Rove's corrupt U.S. Attorneys. What kind of choice is that?

How do you tell the Democrats in the Garden State to clean up their act by electing a guy who subverted the integrity of the Department of Justice? We'd all like to vote on the issues, but sometimes you just have throw the bums out, even when they're on your side of the issues. You can't do that, though, when the alternative is plum-crazy. And that is basically what Paul Krugman is saying in his column today. Looking at the mainstreaming of the teabagging movement by the Republican establishment, Krugman notes, "What all this shows is that the G.O.P. has been taken over by the people it used to exploit."

The GOP used to be run by sober people like James Baker. Today, it doesn't appear to be run by anyone. Baker was bad enough, but you knew that he wasn't going to start enacting Pat Robertson's pet agenda, or amplify the party base's paranoid conspiracy theories. Candidate recruitment for the GOP is in the hands of two utterly nutty Texans (Sen. John Cornyn and Rep. Kevin McCarthy Rep. Pete Sessions).

Update [2009-11-9 12:51:39 by BooMan]: Brain fart alert. McCarthy is doing candidate recruitment for Sessions, but he's a Californian.

But they are coming under relentless criticism from their right for attempting to attract candidates that suit their states and districts. It may prove impossible for Cornyn and McCarthy to clear the field for their recruits. Many of them may lose contested primaries because the party's base is now whittled down to a lunatic fringe. But far from discouraging this insurrection in their ranks, the Republicans are trying to benefit from its energy and financial power. That's why they held a teabagging event on the Capitol Steps last week, and that is why they now have to explain their decision to consort with people who think health care reform is akin to National Socialism.

The Democrats are toying with some of the same problems, but for a different reason. Read this bit from Krugman, but replace 'right-wing' with 'left-wing.'

When Hofstadter wrote, the right wing felt dispossessed because it was rejected by both major parties. That changed with the rise of Ronald Reagan: Republican politicians began to win elections in part by catering to the passions of the angry right.

Until recently, however, that catering mostly took the form of empty symbolism. Once elections were won, the issues that fired up the base almost always took a back seat to the economic concerns of the elite.

There is an angry, fringe-left in this country, but the progressive base of the Democratic Party is not fringe. At least, we're not fringe if you poll the American people on what they want to see in domestic and foreign policy. But, we are feeling a bit dispossessed at the moment because we're seeing policy get crafted to appeal to the most conservative elements of the Democratic Party. Part of this is just a concession to the make-up and rules of the Senate, which make the Senate more conservative than the nation as a whole, and allow any Democrat to exercise veto power over policy. But, most progressives don't concern themselves with such details. All they know is that they're getting treated the same way the right-wing base has been treated by the economic elites for decades.

We don't have anywhere to go. We're certainly not interested in seeing a bunch of teabaggers get elected. But a captive vote is not an energized vote. The Republicans have sold their base an incoherent set of ideas about the evils of the federal government. Once they controlled the federal government, they broke every promise because they weren't willing to devolve all federal authority to the states. They'd do the same thing again, if they retook power in Washington. The Democrats, on the other hand, have sold their base a bunch of promises about checking excessive executive power, rolling back our foreign military commitments, protecting a woman's right to chooise, and creating a universal health care system with a public option. A failure to produce on those promises threatens to make the Democratic Base lose faith.

It doesn't look to me like the center will hold. Either the Democrats snap out of their funk and lead this country to the left, or the anti-incumbent mood will bring teabaggers to power and we'll have real problems like we haven't seen since the Civil War rent this country in two. I know it is self-serving and convenient for a progressive to argue for more progressive policies, but we're in real jeopardy here if the Democrats can't overcome this gridlock, and if they don't get serious about keeping their promises. I'm not talking about some lurch to the far left here. I'm talking about doing what you campaigned on.



Display:
Perhaps DC Dems are simply unaware of the situation and will change course once it is explained to them, slowly and clearly.  That's unlikely either way.

We might get Sanders to sign on to killing the filibuster on principle.  But beyond that, who else?

So what leverage do progressives have?  Primaries?  Or do we just hope enough people call their critters?

by PeakVT on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 12:17:25 PM EST
I definitely think filibusters need to go.
by CD Rates on Wed Nov 11th, 2009 at 02:40:18 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I agree with you, BooMan, totally and completely.  It has become a matter of trust in the word of democrat campaigners.  Do they keep their word to the electorate of this nation or not? God help us all, if that electorate loses faith in the politicians who who won national office on the basis of the points that you mentioned.

Be bold, for boldness conquers everything.
by Dongi 2 on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 12:19:53 PM EST
In the interest of accuracy, Kevin McCarthy is actually the wingnut congressman from Bakersfield, which I suppose is about as close to Texas as we get out here in California.  Make no mistake about it though, he's bad news.
by Horneet (El_Hornito@charter.net) on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 12:37:38 PM EST
Thank you.  Had a brain fart there.  I was thinking of Sessions.  
by BooMan on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 12:53:06 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Yours (and Krugman's) is a very realistic and practical view of the true political landscape.  The biggest problem is that reality has a very difficult time penetrating the hard skin of the Washington bubble.  Reality inside the bubble always lags significantly the true reality out in the hinterlands.  So by the time that any insider realizes what is even happening, it is too far down the road to stop it.  The momentum is almost irreversible.

Honestly, I really don't think that the Democrats in Washington have it in themselves to defeat this on their own.  The best that they will be able to do, because of their lack of cohesiveness and unity as a party, is play some kind of half-assed defense to buy time in the hopes that this opposition movement collapses due to its own internal meltdown.

The Democrats have proven many times quite incapable of looking over the horizon and anticipating shifting political winds and adjusting their game


"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity"

by MikeInOhio on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 12:41:46 PM EST
This is what I've been talking about all this while ... as much as the TradMed tries to portray us as fringe .. we aren't .. and as much as those Obama fan-boys whine .. we don't want to see him fail .. we want to see him do what he promised .. I know in the past politicians would make all sorts of promises and then never deliver .. but that time is over ... where is Obama's inner LBJ?  After all .. Holy Joe can talk all he wants .. but he owes Obama ... where is Obama's FDR "Bring on the hate" moment?  Stop sucking up to asshats like David Brooks and George Will ... they'd like nothing more than to see you fail(despite what they might say at WH luncheons)
by Calvin Jones and the 13th Apostle on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 12:42:33 PM EST
And can anyone tell me .. what "Governing from the center" means?  Besides making David Brooks giddy like a 7th grade school girl
by Calvin Jones and the 13th Apostle on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 12:45:50 PM EST
It depends on how you calculate the center. You can take the mean average, in which case you end up with a center that is skewed by the lunatic fringe the same way you'd end up with a distorted picture of American prosperity if you averaged our incomes: the insanely rich would make it look like we're paving the streets with gold.

The alternative is to take the median, in which case the center is considerably further to the left than David Brooks would like to think it is.

by corvus on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 02:18:51 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The Democrats, on the other hand, have sold their base a bunch of promises about checking excessive executive power, rolling back our foreign military commitments, protecting a woman's right to chooise, and creating a universal health care system with a public option

Ooops, looks like someone didn't use spellcheck. let me fix that:

The Democrats, on the other hand, have sold their base a bill of goods about checking excessive executive power, rolling back our foreign military commitments, protecting a woman's right to chooise, and creating a universal health care system with a public option

There, much more accurate.

John Mccain Called his wife WHAT??

by brendan on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 01:12:48 PM EST
Fully agreed, for once.

I'd go a little further and say we've been on the road to civil war since Dubya was elected. We've had one definite coup d'etat at the hands of the Supreme Court, and possibly a second one at the hands of corrupt election officials in Ohio. And we learned, in the aftermath, that the Bush administration's plans for America -- interrupted only by the disasters in Iraq and Afghanistan -- included suspension of the Posse Comitatus Act and the use of airstrikes to combat domestic terrorists -- whoever those "terrorists" happened to be when Darth Cheney rose from his crypt in the morning.

We just narrowly averted the election of an even more serious nutcase and his giggly secessionist running mate, and we still have the wingnut fringe stockpiling arms like there's no tomorrow. Within the federal government, we have the Family and other theocratic conspiracies whose cohorts include people who urge their megachurch followers to infiltrate the government and prepare for the violent seizure of power in the name of God. And I don't know about you, but every morning I get up and discover that no one has yet tried to assassinate our president, I feel relief entirely out of proportion to how useless he's been so far.

Either we generate some progressive success stories in the mid- to near-term future, or the downward spiral will continue, and we'll have to pin our hopes on the uncertain prospect of the match up being between our AC-130 gunships versus their small arms instead of the reverse.

by corvus on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 02:27:45 PM EST
BooMan and John Aravosis are starting to sound alike now. Hopefully the policy folks in the Obama administration start to get the message.

I'd introduce a huge bill in January (maybe at the State of the Union) to fund a major infrastructure program. High speed rail, rebuild crumbling schools and bridges, etc. A fast-track program that will hire millions within six months of passage, with a federal clearinghouse body to determine which projects are funded (so we don't have bridge to nowhere boondoggles, and so that state legislatures can't delay the spending for years).

Pay for it with a higher estate tax and tax on financial transactions.

Also, they really need to pass legislation lowering the interest rates for student loans. Right now it's at 6.8%, when for years it was always 2-3%!

by existenz on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 02:45:53 PM EST
The reason for student loans being so high is that they were not seen as something that led to the common good (an educated population with modern skills) but rather people wanting something for nothing. So they were privatized, jacking the rate up. It was more important that someone make money off of it thus defeating the purpose.

These are conservative talking points run amok. This and so much more needs to be reversed 180 degrees ASAP.

by ppatt on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 03:19:00 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I was never a fan of Obama.  He didn't have a record for me to look at.  I submit it's clear he and his administration is smack-dab in the Center, meaning Center-Right.  That's neither where the country is nor what is needed.  With the U-6 unemployment rate at 17-something and rising the Center-Right policies ain't gonna cut it.  We need a New(er) Deal and we need it yesterday.

On the other hand, Obama is the best political mind I've seen in decades.  I refuse to believe he isn't willing to shift his economic policies -- AFAIK he knows nothing of economics -- to address the very real problems facing the country.  The problem is getting to him, getting inside his decision cycle, with enough uff-dah to make him change course.

by ATinNM on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 07:44:27 PM EST
Uff-dah?

As a Minnesotan I disapprove of this phrasing.

________
The Raptor of Spain: A Webserial
From Muslim Prince to Christian King: An Alternate History

by MNPundit on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 07:47:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]
A phrase I learned upon my farfar's knee.
by ATinNM on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 07:53:24 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Gotta ask: Is OpenLeft and FDL fringe?

________
The Raptor of Spain: A Webserial
From Muslim Prince to Christian King: An Alternate History
by MNPundit on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 07:46:46 PM EST
Did we learn nothing from Karl Rove? If you turn out your base, you win.
by CrapIsKing (CrapIsKing) on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 08:34:10 PM EST
Yeah, I'd understand these essays a little better if Booman would name names. Who are the fringe left? What makes them fringy?

I suspect Booman may think I'm fringy.

by Bob In Pacifica on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 10:34:02 PM EST
the loonies finally got full control.  Once the right wing crazies ousted all the crappy Dems, their inability to govern and just plain craziness would swing the pendulum the other way and we could elect real progressives.

Oh wait,that already happened and websites like DailyKos with their rabid moderates squelched all hope of the pendulum swinging back to the left.

Clinton or Obama?  Seriously?  That was our choice?

by Pen on Tue Nov 10th, 2009 at 03:09:52 AM EST
The threat is NOT governing from the center. The question is this. Do you govern from the center, and lose you progressive base, or do you govern from the left, and lose the more moderate and conservative Democrats?? To me, there is no real choice, you have to govern as a moderate. The left wing certainly isn't going to vote Republican, and if they want to stay home and act like a bunch of babies, that's there problem. But this country is a moderate country. 40% of this country doesn't belong to a political party, and calls themselves independents. They went with Obama in 2008. You move too far to the left, they will abandon you just as quick. So Boo-Man pick your poison, left or center. The smart choice is center.

Why is it that both parties are so intent on screaming at each other, rather than trying to find solutions to this country's massive problems??
by eastcoastmoderate on Tue Nov 10th, 2009 at 10:51:45 AM EST
You blithely assert that it is the left's problem if they stay at home, as though it isn't the politicians' problem when their base doesn't turn out and they lose.  
by BooMan on Tue Nov 10th, 2009 at 11:36:27 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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