Radical Centrist Politics from Pragmatic Necessity  :
the example of Israel & other  possibilities
 
 
Ernie :
The thought struck me that the case of Israel suggests still other places  
where
the idea of Radical Centrism might offer practical solutions to  current
political problems. At the head of the list :   India.
 
Other nations where the RC concept could have value in an immediate  sense
are fairly obvious :
Japan
Great Britain
France
Germany
 
The trouble in these cases is that, like the USA, existing political  
systems are
highly entrenched with two political parties so dominant that  breakthroughs
are next to impossible in any near term future that is thinkable. Which, of 
 course,
is our major problem here are RC.org ( to use a shorthand designation  ).
 
The trend toward genuine RC seems to be furthest along in Israel,  however,
with Kadima being an early example of an actual RC party which held  power
for a time. No need to go into the shortcomings of Kadima. The point is  
that
the idea of an "active" RC type party is now alive and well in Israel and  
the
possibility is real of learning from Kadima's mistakes.
 
As for India, if any country needs some way to resolve the serious  problem
of competing political parties that are all over the map ( figuratively as  
well
as literally ) that is the place. This would be quite a challenge for any  
putative
RC political movement since the situation is to complicated and  sometimes
downright volatile, but any progress at all could be a game changer.
 
Another English speaking country where similar considerations may apply 
is the Philippines.
 
A Muslim nation where some version of RC has potential but also so  many
problems that it is very unlikely, is Iraq. But discussion of the  potential
could be very useful at some point. 
 
I should say that this assumes a diminishing role for any kind of  strictly 
Islamic parties. If this is not in the cards, then forget it. Which is why  
Egypt 
cannot be considered as another possibility since, there, the Muslim  
Brotherhood
is on the rise and that means a very different kind of political  equation
than one in which RC is at least remotely plausible.
 
Just maybe some small countries besides the special example of Israel
are also good possibilities.  Not sure about these, I simply  don't know 
enough
to have any confidence on the matter, but to suggest a few nations--
 
Panama
Trinidad
Rwanda
Belgium
Croatia
Nepal
Singapore
Micronesia ( 'Federated States' of )
 
Not so small but maybe in the cards :
Czech Republic
Finland
Denmark
 
Uruguay

 
Senegal
 
Taiwan

New Zealand

 
To emphasize the fact, these are conjectures. Half could turn  out to be
far off the mark. Still that would leave the other half that just might 
prove to be viable possibilities.
 
Next might be to think about US cities where there is a need for RC
yet which, so far, have nothing at all like an RC presence. More  
speculation,
but for discussion or contemplation anyway, how about Atlantic City,  
Atlanta,
Denver, San Jose, Las Vegas, El Paso, St, Louis, or Miami ?
 
At the state level ?  Maybe New Mexico, Connecticut, Indiana, or  Kentucky.
 
Still another approach might be university politics, say, the University of 
 Utah,
Arizona State, Hawaii, Southern Illinois University, Baylor, Kansas, or 
the University of South Carolina.
 
These are brainstorm ideas and nothing more. But to open up some new lines  
of thought.
 
Billy
 
 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
message dated 8/14/2011  [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])     writes:

A very nice reply to DRB's question about what the alternative to  
capitalism and socialism 
("capilism" - nice, Chris!) would look like. 









 
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wishdaily.com)  

Breaking Jewish News Updated Throughout The  Day
 
What Now?
In Its Search for Social Justice, Israel Must 
Take the Third Way

 
August 14, 2011
 
By Benjamin Kerstein 
The protest movement that has dominated Israeli politics and culture for  
the past month would seem to have run its course. It has succeeded in  
changing the public discourse, rearranging priorities across the social and  
economic spectrum, bringing hundreds of thousands into the streets, and  
garnering the support of an overwhelming number of Israelis, according to  some 
reports, as much as 90 percent. 
In terms of concrete accomplishments, however, not much has happened. The  
Netanyahu government has put together a blue-ribbon panel to examine the  
situation and recommend reforms. According to _Haaretz_ 
(http://www.worldjewishdaily.com/toolbar.html?4t=extlink&4u=http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/ne
tanyahu-i-understand-my-views-on-israel-s-economic-policy-need-to-change-1.3
77784) , there are some good signs that the panel,  unlike most similar 
bodies, may actually intend to do something: 
Netanyahu told Professor Manuel Trajtenberg, the head of the panel of  
experts who will talk with protest leaders, that he understood it was  
necessary 
to change economic policy.   
But Trajtenberg went further, telling Netanyahu he had to change his  
fundamental positions. Netanyahu agreed and said he had read a new book  about 
how Herzl adapted himself to changing circumstances. 
"I understand my views need to change," Netanyahu reportedly  replied.
There is a strong possibility, however, that this is simply a stalling  
tactic. Netanyahu may well be hoping that, come the U.N. vote on Palestinian  
statehood in September, the protests will be quickly forgotten and things  
will return to normal. By the time the panel issues its report, no one will  
care or even pay much attention. 
If true, this is likely wishful thinking on Netanyahu's part. The  
objective economic factors that have driven the protests - income  inequality, 
high 
prices, shortage of housing, under funded public services,  etc. - will not 
go away by themselves. Even if public sentiment is moderated  by concern 
over security issues, after a short period of time it will likely  return, 
angrier than ever, to the issue of social justice. No god, the  saying goes, 
can 
stop a starving man. 
There is no need, however, for Israel to wait on the PM's panel. The  
process of reform can be undertaken immediately, and on a non-partisan  basis. 
At 
this very moment, a viable right-left social justice bloc already  exists 
in the Knesset. It would be composed of the major opposition parties  Kadima 
and Labor, along with large sections of the Likud and the religious  
parties.  
Given the widespread sentiment across all sectors of society in favor of  
reform, major legislation would also likely be supported by Meretz, the  
religious nationalist parties, and the Arab parties. Such an informal  
coalition 
would compose well over half the Knesset. More than enough to  enact the 
reforms the public is demanding so fervently. 
This is the case because, in spite of its success over the last few  
decades in remaking Israeli society, the free market system favored by  
Netanyahu 
actually has very little political support in Israel. At most, it  is 
fervently believed in by Netanyahu and a few of his close advisors.  Everyone 
else 
has gone along because it seemed to be necessary and seemed to  be working. 
Now, it seems to be doing neither. 
For most of Israel's neoliberal era, support or acquiescence in free  
market policies was also driven by two other factors: an acknowledgement of  
the 
historical failure of socialism, and a fear of returning to the bad old  
days of Israeli austerity and the domination of the Labor Party.  Neoliberalism 
appeared to be, under these circumstances, the only viable  policy. 
There is already another option, however, and it may be uniquely  
well-suited to Israeli society: the "third way." 
Third way economic policies have been described by economist _Joseph E. 
Stiglitz_ 
(http://www.worldjewishdaily.com/toolbar.html?4t=extlink&4u=http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/2001/stiglitz-autobio.html)
  
as a system that 
recognized the important, but limited, role of government, that  unfettered 
markets often did not work well, but that government was not  always able 
to correct the limitations of markets.
A successful third way policy would be a synthesis of the virtues of  
socialism and the free market system, while using both systems to ameliorate  
each other's flaws. It would involve, for example, a country in which  
businesses are encouraged to flourish and grow, but the tax revenues  garnered 
by 
this growth are then channeled into the public sector in order  to provide for 
a more equitable distribution of wealth and a strong  foundation of basic 
services like education and health care. 
In a small, tightly-knit, socially conscious, but also dynamic and  
innovate nation like Israel, a third way policy would likely be both  
successful 
and garner widespread political support. 
The third way is often linked to two other political-economic concepts:  
the "_radical center_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_center_(politics)) 
" and _communitarianism_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communitarianism) . 
A radical center stresses the  importance of a pragmatic middle way between 
more extreme ideological poles,  while communitarianism emphasizes the 
importance of recognizing the  non-political binds that unite various 
communities 
within a larger nation,  as well as a recognition of the responsibility of 
these communities to their  members and the state's responsibility, in turn, 
to these communities. 
In many ways, Israel is already a communitarian society, with a highly  
fractured society composed of many different ethnic and cultural groups,  most 
of which are nonetheless united on certain basic principles. The state,  
moreover, grants substantial rights and autonomy to many of these groups and  
recognizes the importance of their communal bonds. 
The radical center has had a rough time of it in Israel as late, but  there 
are strong indications that it also exists, albeit in latent form. The  
90-something percent of Israelis who support the protests come, must come,  
from many different groups and sectors in Israeli society. It is highly  
unlikely that this massive majority supports the more extreme demands of the  
protest leaders. They come, must come, from Israel's beleaguered middle  class. 
They want radical change, but they want that change to be neither  socialist 
nor neoliberal in nature. They must be, in other words, radical  centrists. 
Squeezed between the radical socialists and anarchists who are attempting  
- quite unsuccessfully - to hijack the current discontent to their own ends, 
 and a small but powerful neoliberal establishment, this radical center 
needs  and deserves a third way, and the Knesset should act immediately to 
satisfy  its demands. 
It should do so by informally establishing the social justice bloc I  
mentioned above. This bloc should then propose legislation that deals solely  
with social and economic reform, avoiding the fraught and irrelevant issues  
that have driven Israeli politics to its current impasse. 
Israel has reached another historic moment. The failure of neoliberalism  
has been far less severe than that of socialism, and the human cost has been  
hardly comparable, but it has failed nonetheless. If Israel wants to avoid  
the terrible consequences of that failure that have now engulfed most of 
the  rest of the world, it must act and act soon. 
Israel is lucky in that all the tool to do so are readily available.  There 
is a third way and there is the political means to enact it. The  radical 
center in the streets has found the will to act. It is time for the  radical 
center in the Knesset to do the same.





 

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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