Bloomberg
 
 
Democrats Are Stupid, Too

By _Clive Crook_ (http://www.bloomberg.com/view/bios/clive-crook/)  Oct 22, 
2013 

 
Even many Republicans agree that they lost the battle over the shutdown and 
 the debt ceiling. The _Tea Party_ (http://topics.bloomberg.com/tea-party/) 
 walked the country to the edge of economic ruin  and their party to the 
edge of political catastrophe until Republican leaders in  Congress flinched. 
Maneuvering themselves into that defeat was an act of insane  recklessness 
by Republicans and a political gaffe of the first order. Perhaps  they’ll do 
it again in a few months.  
Democrats, though, have little to celebrate -- and I’m not talking about 
the  shambolic rollout of the health-insurance exchanges. Republicans saw 
their  approval numbers sink with the debt-ceiling standoff, but not nearly as 
badly as  you might have guessed. This should be making Democrats think. 
 
Opinion polls put them between five and 10 percentage points _ahead_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/other/generic_congressional_vote-2170.html
)  of the Republicans, about where they were  in the first few months of 
the year. President _Barack  Obama_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/barack-obama/)  has a net disapproval rating of 
between five and 10 points. At the  start 
of the year, he had a net _approval_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/other/president_obama_job_approval-1044.html)
  rating of more than 10 
points. The  balance flipped to negative in the summer, and the debt-ceiling 
fight didn’t  flip it back.  
These poll numbers hardly let the Tea Party off the hook. If you ask me, 
the  politicians who designed the strategy of threatening to default and the 
others  who went along with it have shown themselves unfit to hold public 
office. Yet  Republican leaders bowed in the end to what they saw as the 
prospect of certain  defeat, not to an actual landslide of support for the 
Democrats and the  president.  
Mild Backlash 
Why has the anti-Republican backlash, such as it is, been so mild? Here’s 
an  obvious yet strangely neglected answer: Much of the electorate, while 
deploring  the Tea Party’s nihilistic tactics, thinks the movement has a point. 
 
News flash: Most Americans don’t share the _Democratic  Party_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/democratic-party/) ’s instinctive devotion to 
higher taxes 
and a bigger federal  government. An enraged and unhinged minority of voters 
apparently wants to see  the liberal agenda attacked by any means 
necessary, even if it means paralyzing  the government and wrecking the 
economy. But 
a far wider segment wants to see  the progressive program at least 
questioned and held in check -- and who will do  that, if not the Republican 
Party?  
The answer to that question could have been and should have been the  
president. Many Democrats criticize Obama for being too centrist and  
accommodating, but this is a false reading. True, Obama has often given ground  
under 
pressure, which has made him look weak. But when has he ever led the  country 
to a workable compromise, rather than being led there? He’s always the  
reluctant centrist, never the centrist by conviction.  
Think of health-care reform. The White House outsourced this enormous 
project  (whose goals, by the way, I’m all for) to a Democratic Congress guided 
by the  principle that “elections have consequences” -- meaning, never mind 
the other  side’s objections and the idea that a reform of this scope should 
have  bipartisan support. Republicans did push back and Obama did make 
concessions,  but the president was never in charge and never wanted to be.  
Or think of fiscal policy. What has Obama done to advance the discussion 
that  the country still needs on tax and entitlement reform? He appointed a  
presidential commission to advise on the issues and then, in effect, disowned 
 it. All one can really say about the president’s fiscal preferences is 
that he  thinks higher taxes on the rich and higher public spending are, other 
things  equal, good ideas. Obama doesn’t stand for fiscal discipline; he has 
fiscal  discipline thrust upon him.  
Geographic Divisions 
Or think of states’ rights. This is a politically divided country, with big 
 divisions running along geographical lines. An arrangement that 
circumscribes  the federal government’s role, leaving as much as feasible to be 
decided by  states -- an arrangement like the one envisaged in the Constitution 
-- 
has much  to be said for it. Obama could speak up for that idea, but doesn’
t. He could  acknowledge, and perhaps even believe, that the burden of proof 
lies with those  who propose expanding federal powers, but doesn’t. It’s 
worse than that: You  cannot say “states’ rights” to many Democrats without 
being accused of racism.  
There’s another theory to account for the mildness of the backlash against  
the Republicans’ irresponsibility -- and this rival explanation, much 
favored by  their critics, is actually a big part of the Democrats’ problem. It’
s the idea  that voters are just so stupid. One of the things that strikes 
me as a foreigner  living in the U.S. is that American metropolitan liberals 
despise every kind of  bigotry, except the kind directed at the dumb hicks 
who inhabit the middle of  the country. I mean, those people vote Republican! 
 
Trust me, the kind of naked class prejudice that is no longer acceptable in 
 polite U.K. society is rife in _Washington_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/washington/)  and other redoubts of American 
liberal  condescension -- and 
the flyover people know it. Nobody likes to be talked down  to, Americans 
least of all. If Democrats could bring themselves to respect the  people they 
say they want to help, the _Republican  Party_ 
(http://topics.bloomberg.com/republican-party/)  would be in deep trouble. On 
this, the Tea Party has no 
cause for  concern.  
Who’s stupid? The electorate for thinking it needs reckless irresponsible  
Republicans to keep Obama and the Democrats in check? Or Democrats, for 
proving  at every opportunity that that view is correct?

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to