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WillyT

(72,631 posts)
Thu Nov 20, 2014, 01:13 PM Nov 2014

Courage, Unions And Democrats’ Identity Problem - Salon

X-Posted from GD:

How to trounce Scott Walker: Courage, unions and Democrats’ identity problem
Party leaders trying to understand how they got trounced this year should take a look at Wisconsin. Here's why

Elias Isquith - Salon
Thursday, Nov 20, 2014 05:30 AM PST

<snip>

I don’t know if the seven stages a partisan goes through after her side gets walloped in an election are quite the same as the ones associated with grief, but after progressing from despair over their party’s failures in the midterms to rage over the GOP’s success, it seems to me that many Democrats now just want to know what comes next.

Hillary Clinton’s pending candidacy — which will reportedly have its big unveiling in January — has an anticlimactic, even perfunctory feel to it. Granted, Clinton is popular with the Democratic rank-and-file. But unless she has changed dramatically during her time out of public office, there isn’t much reason to think a Clinton presidential campaign in 2016 will be any bolder or more visionary than it was in 2008. Early signs, in fact, suggest the opposite.

That said, I don’t think Clinton is much to blame for the tepid enthusiasm her crypto-campaign has inspired among the Democratic intelligentsia. She’s an easy target, with her corporate leanings, her temperamental conservatism and her lengthy history, but the reasons Clinton 2016 feels so uninspiring transcend the former secretary of state and in truth apply to the entire Democratic Party. Yeah, it may be hard to say what the next Clinton run will be about — but is there a single viable candidate out there that’d make a difference?

With apologies to Tommy Carcetti, I’d say no. Not because the Dems’ roster is especially thin currently (though it is) but because the party right now doesn’t really stand for anything. Put differently, it has no real identity. One moment it’s the party that takes on Wall Street; the next moment, it isn’t. One moment it’s the party that’ll save the world from climate change; the next moment, not so much. Sometimes it’s the party that promises to fight economic inequality head-on; most of the time, it’s content to leave the basic setup of our economy intact. It’s hard to say what the Democratic Party stands for, really — except being in opposition to Republicans.

To be fair, the “Not-Republican” strategy worked all right in ’06 and ’08, when being seen as the opposite of George W. Bush was often enough. But as a recent report from the Huffington Post’s Sam Stein finds, the Democratic Party’s leadership is starting to worry whether that’s still true, especially now that Barack Obama’s electoral career is over. After repeatedly pointing to demographics and the six-year itch to explain their recent thwacking, Stein says Democrats are now realizing that “the party lacks other critical elements” of success, like “a message that addresses the top concerns of voters and effective messengers to share it.” In other words, an identity.

Yet for all the hand-wringing, most of the sources in Stein’s piece seem more interested in blaming the president for the midterm failure than engaging in any actual introspection. There’s a lot of insider-y whining about the DNC, and the typically D.C. myopia of thinking stories about process matter to voters. (If I never again hear another pundit or anonymous Dem authority vaguely criticize the White House’s response to Ebola, which was completely appropriate, it will be too soon.) At no point do any of these professional Democrats mention flatlining wages, the delay of immigration-related executive orders or worries over being sucked back into the Iraq quagmire. Policy might as well not exist.

What may be the most frustrating thing about this desperate flailing for a more fine-tuned message, though, is the fact that it’s so very unnecessary. The Democrats may not have much of an identity right now, but that’s not because this or that wing of the party’s political infrastructure dropped the ball, or because President Obama is so fond of golf, or any other Beltway nonsense. On the contrary, the Democratic Party’s increasing opacity is the result of their having an identity but deciding not to use it. Students of the last 50 or so years of American political history can probably guess where I’m going with this. It’s one single, simple word: unions.

<snip>

More: http://www.salon.com/2014/11/20/how_to_trounce_scott_walker_courage_unions_and_democrats_identity_problem/

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Cosmic Kitten

(3,498 posts)
1. Meh, Isquith uses "bubble-speak" to no effect.
Thu Nov 20, 2014, 05:10 PM
Nov 2014

Yeah, Unions important... derp

Commenting on the Democratic party
having an identity crisis without discussing
the 3rd Way, and dark money is either
intentionally obtuse, or ignorant?
Not that it matters because the result is the same.

Jackpine Radical

(45,274 posts)
2. Ditching the unions was an example of 3rd-Way interplay
Thu Nov 20, 2014, 07:16 PM
Nov 2014

with dark money. You're correct to call attention to these things.

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
6. True, but not everyone is aware of the enormous influence of the Third Way in the Dem Party
Sun Nov 23, 2014, 12:00 AM
Nov 2014

so they are puzzled by their performance in general, not just during elections.

I remember being that puzzled before I learned about the DLC/Third Way and then it all became clear.

Perhaps that is something populists ought to take on also. Educating people about the stealth takeover of the Dem Party by the DLC/Third Way.

Even if it's only by informing friends and family and anyone who is willing and interested in the information.

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
3. Good article. I think the answer is fairly simple. To the question of why they seem to be lost as to
Thu Nov 20, 2014, 10:18 PM
Nov 2014

what their goals/message is that the Third Way has a very different agenda to what the Dem Party presents itself to be. And over the past few decades, they and the money they bring to the Party, have gained control. But they know that to continue to get the votes of the base, they have to at least pretend to care about issues that the Dem Party claims to be supportive of. But it's getting more and difficult to present themselves as the Party of the People when there is so much obvious influence by Wall St.

hotrod0808

(323 posts)
4. As a union man,
Fri Nov 21, 2014, 12:31 AM
Nov 2014

I think the greatest shame is that unions have been so thoroughly demonized in the media that there is no hope for us to grow our membership. It pains me that people in my shop complain about food joints unionizing. I really hate what has happened to our membership over the years.

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
7. That is a shame. The Unions have been loyal to the Dem Party. But many Dems have not
Sun Nov 23, 2014, 12:03 AM
Nov 2014

been loyal to the Unions. Breaking the Unions is a goal of Corporate America and they are succeeding. I'm sorry for what is happening to Labor. People died to get the rights that people are taking so much for granted today.

appalachiablue

(42,906 posts)
5. Wondered how the Dem. Party could attract voters & strengthen this country w/o
Sat Nov 22, 2014, 08:49 PM
Nov 2014

strong Unions anymore and the Media being 90% RW, Corporate, Consolidated (end of fairness doctrine, deregulation in '90s) and many people don't even realize it. No the 'NET' is not accessible to all, it co$ts, & many are unaware of the many left news websites. I was.

 

Eleanors38

(18,318 posts)
8. Good post. Unions ARE the core element of the Democratic dilemma...
Mon Nov 24, 2014, 10:09 AM
Nov 2014

Because they are the CORE threat to corporate power, here and abroad. Dark Money, mumblings about being somewhat better than the GOPers, no message, no plans, no stands, no speaking back to the Constant RW attacks, and a constant vacuous reliance on getting out the voters thru a supposed superior Inet presence, and a banal faith in future demographic trends -- all this is in reality a billboard that says:

We are Weak. We are Afraid. We will not Fight.
We also Support Corporate Power.

The GOPer (and much of the nation) KNOWS this, and pounds the "Party" at its obvious unopposed pleasure.

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