Excellent analysis / self-critique of Democratic Party by a  Democrat ...
What is equally needed is a top quality analysis / self -critique 
of the Republican Party by a Republican.
 
BR
 
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Published on The New Republic (_http://www.tnr.com_ (http://www.tnr.com/) )

 
____________________________________

 
Left Behind: How Democrats Are Losing the Political Center 

    *   William Galston  
    *   September 24, 2011



 
 
If you don’t think ideological perceptions matter in American politics, you 
 need read no further. If you do and you’re a Democrat, there’s something 
to  worry about. Even as the terms of the political debate in Washington, in 
the  eyes of many Democrats, have moved steadily to the right, the 
electorate is  increasingly likely to see itself as ideologically closer to the 
Republican  Party than to Democrats. Unless Obama and Democrats can find a 
solution to this  riddle—and find one fast—they will be contesting the 2012 
election on forbidding  terrain. 
In mid-2005, as disaffection with the Bush administration and the 
Republican  Party was gathering momentum, the Pew Research Center asked 
American to 
place  themselves and the political parties on a standard left-right 
ideological  continuum. At that time, average voters saw themselves as just 
right of 
center  and equidistant from the two political parties. Independents 
considered  themselves twice as far away from the Republican Party as from the 
Democrats,  presaging their sharp shift toward the Democrats in the 2006 
mid-term  election. 
 
(http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/the-new-republic-for-ipad/id454525980?mt=8) In 
August of this year, Pew posed a very similar question  (note to survey 
wonks: Pew used a five-point scale, versus six in 2005), but the  results 
were very different. Although average voters continue to see themselves  as 
just right of center, they now place themselves twice as far away from the  
Democratic Party as from the Republicans. In addition, Independents now see  
themselves as significantly closer to the Republican Party, reversing their  
perceptions of six years ago. 
There’s another difference as well. In 2005, Republicans’ and Democrats’  
views of their own parties dovetailed with the perceptions of the electorate 
as  a whole. Today, while voters as a whole agree with Republicans’ 
evaluation of  their party as conservative, they disagree with Democrats, who 
on 
average see  their party as moderate rather than liberal. So when 
Independents, who see  themselves as modestly right of center, say that 
Democrats are 
too liberal,  average Democrats can’t imagine what they’re talking about. 
Compounding the problem, the American people are gradually polarizing.  
According to Gallup, twenty years ago, as Bill Clinton began his presidential  
campaign, self-described moderates formed the plurality of the electorate—43 
 percent; conservatives were 36 percent, liberals 17 percent. By the summer 
of  2011, the conservative share had risen to 41 percent and liberals to 21 
percent,  while moderates declined to 36 percent, surrendering their 
plurality status to  conservatives. Because nearly all conservatives now vote 
for 
Republicans and  liberals for Democrats, the share of the shrinking pool of 
moderates that  Democrats need to build a majority is now larger than ever. 
Another Gallup finding that should alert Democrats is the ongoing collapse 
of  public confidence in government. A survey released earlier this week 
found that  Americans now believe that the federal government wastes 51 cents 
of every  dollar it spends, the highest estimate ever recorded. Twenty-five 
years ago,  that figure stood at only 38 cents. While estimates of waste at 
the state and  local level remain lower than for the federal level, they have 
also risen by  double digits in recent decades. 
Overall, it’s hard to avoid concluding that the ideological playing-field  
heading into 2012 is tilted against Democrats. This reality only deepens the 
 strategic dilemma the White House now confronts. The conventional strategy 
for  an incumbent is to secure the base before the general public gets 
fully engaged  and then reach out to the swing voters whose decisions spell the 
difference  between victory and defeat. By contrast, the Obama team spent 
most of 2011 in  what turned out to be a failed effort to win over the 
Independent voters who  deserted Democrats in droves last November, in the 
process 
alienating  substantial portions of the base. To rekindle the allegiance and 
enthusiasm of  core supporters, the president now finds himself having to 
draw sharp  ideological lines, risking further erosion among Independents and 
even moderate  Democrats. Tellingly, a number of at-risk Democratic 
senators up for reelection  in 2012 have already refused to go along with key 
elements of the president’s  recent proposals. 
Granted, ideology isn’t everything. Political scientists have long observed 
 that Americans are more liberal on particulars than they are in  general—
ideologically conservative but operationally liberal. (Surveys have  shown 
majority support for most individual elements of the president’s jobs and  
budget packages.) And the Republicans could undermine their chances by  
nominating a presidential candidate who is simply too hard-edged conservative  
for 
moderates and Independents to stomach. 
In the face of widespread skepticism and disillusion, it will be an uphill  
battle for Democrats to persuade key voting blocks that government can 
really  make their lives better. But if they fail, the public will continue to 
equate  public spending with waste, the anti-government message will continue 
to  resonate, and Democrats will be in dire straits when heading into what 
is  shaping up as a pivotal election. 
William Galston is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a  
contributing editor for The New Republic.  
____________________________________

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