[Mb-civic] IMPORTANT: The Left's Big Ideas - E. J. Dionne - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Apr 25 03:52:42 PDT 2006
The Left's Big Ideas
<>
By E. J. Dionne Jr.
The Washington Post
Tuesday, April 25, 2006; A23
So Democratic Party leaders met over the weekend in New Orleans,
gleefully criticized President Bush's stewardship and issued a "vision"
statement that most pundits and reporters saw as less than visionary and
not terribly specific.
Perfectly true, which underscores a central fact of American politics:
"New ideas," "bold visions," "detailed solutions" and "courageous
policies" almost never originate with politicians, especially
politicians in the middle of election campaigns. Political consultants,
with a few honorable exceptions, don't do "vision" either.
Politicians typically pick up their ideas from intellectual
entrepreneurs, professional visionaries and impatient ideologues who
wonder why the parties they support seem to stand for little.
Ronald Reagan could not have become, well, Ronald Reagan, if William F.
Buckley Jr. and his allies at National Review magazine had not spent
years developing modern conservatism's core ideas -- and if
neoconservatives such as Irving Kristol and Norman Podhoretz had not
tweaked the philosophy in directions that brought in new converts.
What has become clear in recent months is that the impatience on the
center-left with the hopeless endeavor of waiting for workaday
politicians to come up with ideas -- Godot would deliver faster -- has
spilled over the barriers of conventional politics. The brooding, musing
and, yes, thinking since President Bush's victory in 2004 is starting to
show results.
The biggest change is that moderates and liberals have begun to accept
the fact that they cannot simply adjust to conservative dominance of the
political debate and alter their ideas to fit the current consensus. As
Michael Tomasky writes in the current issue of the American Prospect,
Democrats and their allies must destroy the current political "paradigm"
based on "radical individualism" and replace it with a politics of the
"common good." Only a larger argument rooted in a different conception
of government and society, Tomasky argues, will allow the party to "do a
lot more than squeak by in this fall's (or any) elections based on the
usual unsatisfying admixture of compromises."
In describing his common-good approach, Tomasky notes it has
implications in challenging Democrats to stand for more than "diversity
and rights," however valuable these commitments might be. Both diversity
and rights, he argues, would be better defended in a common-good framework.
There are arguments to be had with Tomasky -- I think he needs to not
only talk about citizen sacrifice but tell us more about self-interest,
rightly understood. Progressive ideas do best when a majority of
citizens believe their own self-interest is implicated in a common
project, something Tomasky recognizes but doesn't stress enough.
And there are competing organizing ideas for a resurgent center-left.
John Schwarz, an emeritus professor at the University of Arizona,
recently argued at the Center for American Progress that the vital task
for liberals is to steal back the idea of "freedom" from the right and
broaden its implications.
What's important about Tomasky and Schwarz is that they are
representative of an awareness on their side of politics that laundry
lists of policy proposals are insufficient to the task of moving a nation.
Which is not to say that there is a shortage of specific policy
proposals emerging from liberal and moderate research institutions. To
mention just one, the Center for American Progress recently put forward
15 new ideas on subjects ranging from taxes and education to pensions
and energy.
And a new generation of policy entrepreneurs is doing what Kristol and
his friends did 40 years ago: reinvigorating old magazines and starting
new ones to create controversy and forward movement. Democracy: A
Journal of Ideas, founded by thirtysomething moderate Democrats Ken Baer
and Andrei Cherny, appears in June. The Web is brimming with impatient
calls for alternatives to President Bush's philosophy and his policies.
None of this means a new liberalism will soon reign triumphant. It does
mean that after a long period of reacting to conservative initiatives,
progressives sense that conservative failures have created a vacuum that
needs to be filled. The marketplace of ideas is not always efficient,
but it eventually responds to felt needs.
That is what's happening, even if some of the ideas are still less than
completely baked, as the political philosopher Dustin Hoffman might put
it -- and even if it will take a long time for any of the ideas to
penetrate Democratic National Committee meetings. It has always been thus.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/24/AR2006042401393.html?nav=hcmodule
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