by SAM SMITH
Many Americans think they know what the Republicans and Democrats stand
for. The trouble is that they learned it from the Republicans.
This
is because Democrats and progressives have been miserably incapable of
stating clearly what they are about. This is not - as some have
suggested - a matter of better rhetoric or proper branding; it is a
matter of having something you believe in and explaining it well to
others.
The Vichy Democrats in control of the party aren't
interested in this because it destroys their flexibility to appear to be one
thing to their contributors and another thing to their constituents. But
clever as this may appear, it has left the left to be defined by the right
as being interested primarily in gay marriages and abortions.
In the
end, to many it appears the GOP stands for all the good things - patriotism,
values, family, the economy, security et al - while the Democrats stand for
nothing. Nominating Kerry, of course, merely played into the stereotype.
Liberals have also shown an astounding indifference to some of the
assumptions that have grown up about them. Worthy as gay rights and
conception choices are, it is helpful to remember, as a political
matter, that gays constitute something less than five percent of the
electorate and only about 700,000 more women have abortions each year
than when Roe v. Wade was handed down. If you want to win a national
election, you need broader priorities than these.
But I can hardly
remember the last time an average liberal expressed any concern to me over
health care, pensions, or jobs. There are, of course, those like Dean Baker
who continue to carry the load on classic Democratic issues, but sadly too
many liberal activists seem to think they can win based on their collective
nobility. Politics doesn't work that way.
There is a need for a
progressive platform, preferably one that can be written on a single side of
a sheet of paper. Here's a sample:
- A foreign policy that makes
America a model of and friend to the rest of the world rather than a bully
and a threat.
- The restoration of democracy and constitutional
government in the U.S.
- Single payer health care
- A safe and
clean natural environment
- Fair working conditions for all including
pay, workplace safety, labor rights, and pensions.
- An end to the
corruption in the Democratic Party that has done it so much harm
-
Electoral reform including instant runoff voting and public campaign
financing.
If you don't like that list, then write your own.
But in the end, progressives need to come together and select a handful
of issues such as the aforementioned to which they will dedicate their
major energies and which will thus finally define them fairly.
Since
the sixties there has been a tremendous splintering of progressives into
groups specializing in a single issue or around a cluster of single issues.
This has produced a high level of expertise on these issues, raised the
national consciousness on many of them, and provided a cadre capable of
writing and criticizing legislation. The
less happy side-effect has been
that progressives have forgotten how to work in coalition with one another
and seem incapable of providing a holistic vision of that for which they are
striving. They have become specialists and technocrats of change rather than
leaders and prophets. And far too many fit G. K. Chesterton's description of
liberals: they can't lead; they won't follow, and they refuse to
cooperate.
This has to change if there is to be any hope for progressive
politics.
THE PROGRESSIVE REVIEW
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Editor: Sam
Smith
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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