Outside the Beltway
 
 
Radical Center: Friedman’s  Fantasy
 

_James Joyner_ (http://outsidethebeltway.com/)   ·   Wednesday, March 24, 
2010   
 
 
(http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/archives/radical_center/thomas-friedman-photo/)
 For a really  bright fellow who spends a lot of time talking to 
cabbies and world leaders, _Tom  Friedman_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/24/opinion/24friedman.html?partner=rss&emc=rss) 
 has a remarkably naive view of 
how the world  works.   His latest brainstorm is a “Tea Party of the radical  
center.”

 
My definition of broken is simple. It is  a system in which Republicans 
will be voted out for doing the right thing  (raising taxes when needed) and 
Democrats will be voted out for doing the  right thing (cutting services when 
needed). When your political system  punishes lawmakers for the doing the 
right things, it is broken. That is why  we need political innovation that 
takes America’s disempowered radical center  and enables it to act in 
proportion to its true size, unconstrained by the two  parties, interest groups 
and 
orthodoxies that have tied our politics in  knots. 
The radical center is “radical” in its  desire for a radical departure 
from politics as usual. It advocates: raising  taxes to close our budgetary 
shortfalls, but doing so with a spirit of equity  and social justice; 
guaranteeing that every American is covered by health  insurance, but with 
market 
reforms to really bring down costs; legally  expanding immigration to attract 
more job-creators to America’s shores;  increasing corporate tax credits for 
research and lowering corporate taxes if  companies will move more 
manufacturing jobs back onshore; investing more in  our public schools, while 
insisting on rising national education standards and  greater accountability 
for 
teachers, principals and parents; massively  investing in clean energy, 
including nuclear, while allowing more offshore  drilling in the transition. 
You 
get the idea.
I do! 
The problem with this is manifold but,  most obviously, as _Ramesh  
Ponnuru_ 
(http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=YTQxNTlkOGUzNDQzMjlkOGU4MzlmYmY3ZDUyZTJkYzY=)
  points out, “The fundamental reason that politicians  haven’
t cut entitlements and raised middle-class taxes isn’t the power of  
hard-core liberals and conservatives. It’s that the public—including most 
people  
who could reasonably be described as moderates—doesn’t want them to do 
these  things.” 
Aside from overreading his own  idiosyncratic policy preferences into a 
majority view — an amusing but  forgivable error given how common it is in the 
pundit class — Friedman  fundamentally misunderstands our institutions.  He 
wants to “Break the  oligopoly of our two-party system,” despite the fact 
that two-party systems  follow first-past-the-post, single member district 
setups like night follows  day.   How? 
First, let every state emulate  California’s recent grass-roots initiative 
that took away the power to design  Congressional districts from the state 
legislature and put it in the hands of  an independent, politically neutral, 
Citizens Redistricting Commission. It  will go to work after the 2010 census 
and reshape California’s Congressional  districts for the 2012 elections. 
Henceforth, districts in California will not  be designed to be automatically 
Democratic or Republican — so more of them  will be competitive, so more 
candidates will only be electable if they appeal  to the center, not just 
cater to one party.
While perhaps not in the spirit of the  Framers, who clearly intended 
redistricting to be a political process, this is a  reasonable enough idea.  So 
much so that at least 12 states — not including  California — were doing it 
in 2000.  And several others have advisory  committees and other 
extra-legislative inputs. (See, “The Experiences of Other  States — A 
Comparison of 
Redistricting Commissions,” _PDF_ 
(http://www.ucdc.edu/faculty/California_Election/Redistricting%20Commissions%20-%20All.pdf)
 .) I’m not sure there’s any 
evidence that  those states are less partisan, much less more prone to tax 
hikes, benefit cuts,  or passing others of Friedman’s pet programs. 
Second, get states to adopt “alternative  voting.” One reason independent, 
third-party, centrist candidates can’t get  elected is because if, in a 
three-person race, a Democrat votes for an  independent, and the independent 
loses, the Democrat fears his vote will have  actually helped the Republican 
win, or vice versa. Alternative voting allows  you to rank the independent 
candidate your No. 1 choice, and the Democrat or  Republican No. 2. Therefore, 
if the independent does not win, your vote is  immediately transferred to 
your second choice, say, the  Democrat.
Again, I tend to like the idea, which I  tend to think of as an “instant 
run-off” since the effect of “alternative  voting” would almost always be to 
decide very close races, especially those  where there’s no majority winner. 
 But let’s not kid ourselves: The impact  would be to continue to elect 
Democrats and Republicans in almost every  instance.  It’s rare, indeed, that a 
third party candidate is in second  place in the polls going into Election 
Day. 
Regardless of whether we pass these  changes — and I see very little 
groundswell, indeed, for either, especially the  second — we’re still going to 
have a very polarized polity.   We’re  genuinely divided on major issues of 
war and peace, freedom and security, and  cultural stability vs. tolerance.   
And we live in a 24/7/365 permanent  campaign conducted in a self-selected 
communications environment. 
It’s safe to see that it’s going to take  more than a few tweaks — or 
another six months — to turn us into a nation of  Friedmans.

-- 
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