NYT
Delusions of the  Democrats

 
By KEVIN BAKER NOV. 15, 2014
 
DEMOGRAPHICS is not enough. 
For years  now, it’s been an article of faith among Democrats that the 
future belongs to  them, thanks to the country’s changing demographic mix. The 
rising percentage of  voters who are women, Americans of color and especially 
Latinos were always  about to turn the country deep “blue.”
 
I never believed this — largely because I have been hearing it since  1971. 
That was the year the 26th Amendment passed, lowering the voting age to  
18. Democrats had already been the dominant political party since the 1930s, 
and  now with young people getting the vote, a permanent Democratic majority 
was  guaranteed, right?  

The future failed to arrive on time again this fall.  Democrats lost all 
over America, and they lost big, by much wider margins than  predicted. They 
lost statewide races in the Midwest where Democrats have won  repeatedly in 
presidential elections for more than 20 years. They lost in races  against 
radical right-wing Republicans they might have been expected to defeat,  like 
Sam Brownback in Kansas and Paul R. LePage in Maine.
 
Nor was  this month’s election an anomaly. It was the third disastrous 
midterm for  Democrats in the past 20 years. The party suffered similar or even 
worse losses  at all levels of government in 1994 and 2010, along with a 
lesser catastrophe in  2002. It now holds fewer elected offices at both the 
federal and state level  than it has at any time since the 1920s. 
Democratic  tacticians maintain that things will be different in 2016, when 
their base will  go to the polls in greater numbers, and when demographics —
 again — will render  the country less white, more Latin and more female. 
They blame this latest  meltdown on terrible candidates, administration flubs 
and foreign crises. They  argue that voters favored Democratic positions in 
state referendums, from a  higher minimum wage to abortion rights and legal 
marijuana.
 
In other  words: “Problem, what problem? We Democrats are in great shape, 
if only we could  turn out our base, find good candidates, deal with crises 
efficiently or get  people to vote our way even when they agree with us.” 
The accepted wisdom is that the Democrats hamstrung  themselves many years 
ago, when they passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and  thereby lost the 
Solid South forever. It’s a nice story, one that allows  everyone to feel 
good: liberal Democrats, who would like to believe their party  was martyred in 
as noble a cause as there could be, and Clinton-Obama Democrats,  who have 
long cited it as proof that the party needs to move to the right and  start 
appealing to conservative Southern whites again.
 
The only  trouble is, it’s not true. 

Yes, the South was never “solid” for Democrats again  after 1964, and the 
party lost five of six presidential elections from 1968 to  1988. But at 
every other level of government, Democrats remained highly  competitive, even 
dominant, in the South for years to come. 
Going into  the 1994 elections, Democrats still held 16 of the 30 United 
States Senate seats  from the 15 Southern states (which I define as the 11 
states of the Confederacy,  plus Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri and West 
Virginia), and nearly two-thirds of  the Southern seats in the House. On a 
state 
level, the figures were even more  one-sided. Democrats held 12 of the 15 
Southern governorships, and 29 of the 30  state legislative chambers.
 
It’s only in the last two decades that these numbers  flipped. In the next 
Congress, fewer than a third of the South’s representatives  will be 
Democrats; if Mary Landrieu loses her seat in Louisiana, there will be  seven 
Democratic senators in the region. Democrats there will hold four  
governorships 
and both chambers in just one legislature. 
Democrats  did lose the South, but they didn’t lose it because of the Civil 
Rights Act.  Instead of waiting for all those mean old Southern white men 
to die, Democrats  might be better off asking themselves why so many of them 
were still voting  Democratic just 22 years ago. 
Nor have  Democratic losses in the South been much worse than they were all 
over the  country. To give just one egregious example, Democrats lost the 
Massachusetts  statehouse this year — for the fifth time in their last seven 
tries.
 
 
This is a historic shift. From 1931 to 1995, Democrats  held majorities in 
the House of Representatives for all but four years and in  the Senate for 
all but 12. On the state level, they held their own with (or  outnumbered) 
Republicans in governorships and state legislatures for the vast  majority of 
those 64 years. 

It’s been a completely different story since 1994,  however, and by next 
January, Democrats will not only be in the minority in both  houses of 
Congress. They will likely hold 18 statehouses and both chambers in  only 11 
state 
legislatures. 
Suffering a  series of historic defeats is not a sign that you’re winning. 
The Democrats no  longer please anyone much, neither their depressed base 
nor the less committed.  Meanwhile, Republicans still manage to portray them 
as wild-eyed socialists. The  party does take the White House more often now, 
but at the state level, and in  the midterms, when a third of the senators 
and all representatives are up for  election, the party has been hollowed 
out.
 
THE trouble  was that the Clinton-Obama strategy got things upside down 
from the start. Why  try to cast yourselves as economic moderates and cultural 
progressives when the  disparate elements of your coalition have little in 
common culturally, but are  all struggling with the same wretched economy? 
The  Democratic Party that shot to some 50 years of overwhelming electoral 
success  beginning in the 1930s was helped in part by changing demographics. 
But many of  those who built what George Packer calls “the Roosevelt 
Republic” started out as  Republicans. Or “Bull Moose” Progressives, or 
Populists, or Socialists, or  Communists, or simply the politically alienated 
and 
disengaged.
 
The people  who built that party rallied around big things — and usually 
big things they had  come up with themselves. The reforms that Democrats 
embraced were almost all  culled from grass-roots movements, and they were big 
enough to erase the lines  between cultural and economic issues. 
Electrifying large swaths of the South and West changed  how people lived 
and worked every day, how their cities grew and their farms  survived. The 
G.I. Bill, to take another of a thousand examples, was intended to  reward 
veterans and stave off a postwar depression, but it also opened up new  
possibilities of learning and travel (and therefore work) for millions of young 
 
men. This blurring of the cultural and the economic includes the civil rights  
legislation of the 1960s, which threw the weight of the federal government  
behind the struggle of African-Americans to go about their daily lives with 
hope  and dignity and which did not alienate every white person in the  
South.
 
Today’s  Democratic Party, with its finely calibrated, top-down fixes, does 
not offer  anything so transformative. It seems scared of its own shadow, 
which is probably  why it keeps reassuring itself that its triumph is 
inevitable. It needs instead  to fully acknowledge just how devastating the 
recession was for working people  everywhere in America, and what a generation 
of 
largely flat wages did to their  aspirations even before that. It needs to 
take on hard fights, even against  powerful forces, like pharmaceutical and 
insurance companies that presume to  tell us the limits of what our health 
care can be or energy companies that would  tell us what the world’s climate 
can endure. It means carving out a place of  respect for working men and women 
in our globalized, finance-driven world. 
Invite us  to dream a little. You don’t build an enduring coalition out of 
who Americans  are. You do it out of what we can be.

-- 
-- 
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/d/optout.

Reply via email to