There's this old standard about a
Congressional Democrat during the long period after the Civil War when the
Republicans were almost always in power. He said: "I am a Democrat still…very
still."
Now unlike the overwhelming number of
writers on this blog and quite a few so-called progressives I'm an
institutionalist as well as a pragmatist. That means if you want to get things
done you have to be loyal to some institutions and then especially includes
political parties. In my lifetime it's never been easy to be a Democrat, mainly
because we kept losing elections we should have won, because we kept letting
the conservatives and Republicans frame the contours of debate, because to much
of the time we believe in systems rather than the emotional reactions that
drive politics. But I am a Democrat still – very still – mainly because
in the 21st century we've always been grownups in contrast to the
increasing Republican insanity at a Congressional and particularly Presidential
level. I admit that acting like an adult and being sane shouldn't be the sole
qualification for being in political office but in an era where the loudest
voices on the right were increasingly being the voices of lunacy I found it
very appealing and I always do.
To be clear I long since stopped expecting
that from the GOP long before the 2016 election occurred. If
anything the years since have made me firmer in my commitment to the
Democrats. A Return to Normalcy helped
lead the Republicans to a landslide in 1920 and it might well have been Joe
Biden's slogan 100 years later. I realize now that it was probably a pipe dream
for normal to ever come back but at the very least I would have preferred
politics to be much less exciting and interesting, particularly from the
Democrats.
Now I do get why after everything that
happened in 2024 the decision to panic among the party elders and the loudest
voices on that side was understandable. It wasn't held by more than a
few Congressional Democrats and I really wish leadership had been willing to
listen to the Jared Goldens and John Fettermans, particularly given that the party was no
longer in a position to really do anything. We were now a minority party in the
House and the Senate and much as we might hate that fact the people had made their
choices clear in that election. And particularly considering the immediate
aftermath of the 2020 election there was something to be said for providing a
contrast to the GOP in what was going to be a post-Trump America by acting with
something resembling maturity and dignity.
That has not, by and large, been what
Congressional Democrats have done in the last year and a half. On the contrary
what their behavior reminds me of is that of the members of the Tea Party in
the aftermath of the 2010 election and throughout the majority of Obama's
Presidency as well as the behavior of the Freedom Caucus during Biden's
administration. During that period the Democrats rightly called out this
behavior as juvenile, undignified and unworthy of the political system. It now
seems that's their new business model much of the time.
Because here are Congressional Democrats
and state officials storming ICE rallies and courthouses and getting arrested.
Here are Congressional Democrats and Senate Democrats shouting belligerently at
Trump's cabinet members during their meetings before the Senate. Here they are
walking out of confirmation meetings for Trump's judges to appellate courts.
Here they are shutting down the government
in order to make political points with their base.
Now I'm sure that I will be told countless
times over that this is what is necessary to make it clear just how horrible
the actions of the current President are and that the Democrats will not stand
for it, how he's running roughshod over the Constitutional process. I do get
that. But the thing is, nothing the Congressional Democrats are doing is stopping
his administration from rolling out their agenda and ripping up norms. Is
it bad that the President is doing his agenda without input from Democrats from
Congress? Sure. But he has the votes to do it.
And as I recall more than once from Democratic newsletters a minority of
representatives standing in the way of the duly elected President to complete
his agenda is an act of immaturity. I read that line more often then not in a
group of Democratic fundraising emails during Biden's term. I didn't see in
small print "Void when a Republican is President".
And I welcome anyone to explain to me what
the difference between when in 2013 Republicans shutdown the government out of
funding Obamacare for nearly a month and when Democrats have engaged in a
similar shutdown of Homeland Security in order not to fund ICE. I'm sure I'll
be told in no uncertain terms why the former was an act of immaturity and the
latter is an act that is standing up to tyranny but the result is the game: one
party is purposely not funding a vital part of the government for the sole purpose
of scoring political points with their base in what is pure political theater.
As it stands Majority Leader John Thune is in the process of forming a bill
that will ended up completely funding ICE that will occur without any
concessions to Democrats and will pass with solely Republican support.
So two months have gone by with a vital
part of our government not working – one that aside from ICE is vital to
protecting America in countless ways and has been feeling the pinch across the
board in our airports, in FEMA, in cybersecurity. When it reopens the Democrats will have
proved exactly what everyone knew at the start of the shutdown – that they are
opposed to the President's policies. In
exchange they gave away their dignity, which is in short supply these days
anywhere, and made it clear to civil servants who are already feeling under
attack by the current administration that the Democratic Party is just as
capable of using them as pawns to make points with their base as Republicans
are. All the damage that Republicans
have doing to the civil servants who work in government agencies by tearing
them down during the last two years, we're going to need help rebuilding them
in the future – and how easy do you think it's going to be to do that now that
they know either political party considers them as pieces that they will
use in order to help them gain political points?
I've heard all of these arguments before –
when Republicans make them. "Burn down the village in order to save
it." "We have to go to the dark side." "The ends justify
the means." I didn't buy them during W's administration or any Republican
who has made them before and I sure as hell don't buy them when Democrats make
that same argument.
But it's not merely that this demeans the
Democrats and political dialogue that bothers me; it's that the very approach
is the exact thing that will further isolate the average voter. Because the big
difference between the Republican base and the Democratic one is that the
extremists in our base have always had the effect of pushing people into the
Republican tent while never winning a substantial amount of new voters to
balance it out. This has been a large part of what has given the Republicans
power for decades and while the left knows this, they don't really seem to
think its a problem. And I suspects
that's because the loudest voices on their part are emotionally little better
than toddlers.
Oh to be sure, many of them are college
students, may have advanced academic degrees, write for prominent journals or
have positions in the entertainment industry. But when it comes to politics
they can barely comprehend it at a second grade level. And this has gotten
exponentially worse with so much of how technology has changed and how much of
our society is based on so-called planned obsolescence. For many of these
people they think our Constitution and system of government because of its
advanced age needs to be completely replaced or upgraded to a newer model. They
really can't comprehend that one just can't download Constitution 2.0 on your
iPhone nor that you can't bring about economic inequality or provide universal
health care if you just check agree in the box and don't bother to read the
terms and conditions. They think that institutions like capitalism and
democracy are out of date and need to be completely replaced with something
newer and by the way they view things – which is technology – better. That you just can't trade these things in at
your Apple store for better models nor that you can't ask Siri what form of
government would work better and then make everyone else in the country – not just
elected officials but everyone connected with the government – magically make
it work isn't something they can understand. To them passing a law or amending
the Constitution at most should be no more difficult then ordering a meal at Uber
Eats and they get very cranky when you tell them it isn't.
No one will pretend – certainly not me –
how much reform and repair our government needs and that much work must be done
to do so. The problem is that too many people in this country if not the world
have mistaken activism for governing. It is bad enough that one of our major
political parties has essentially turned most of it into a circus; now too many
members seemed determined that the only way to do gain power is to put up a
rival act that is just as loud and equally destructive. That the majority of Americans
either don't pay attention in the first place and when they do they are turned
off by the whole thing should matter at least to the Democratic office holders.
It definitely matters to me as a voter and I do think it matters to the vast
majority of them, regardless of their party affiliation.
And after more than a decade on this blog
I'm very clear that the loudest voices on the left can't be reasoned with on
this matter and have no alternative solution to offer. Any attempt by the
Democrats to appeal to them is a wasted effort because to these people
everything they are doing is the bare minimum and they never credit to anybody
for doing what they considers was the right thing anyway. They've made it clear
they have no use for any of the Republicans or conservative commentators who
have repented off their ways in the last decade which is as juvenile behavior
as anything that the Justice Democrats have done. And as we saw when the
Democrats attempted to shutdown the government the first time and finally
agreed to reopen it all they received was contempt because "they had the
GOP right where they wanted."
To be clear the Democrats had no leverage
then any more then they do when they started to shutdown ICE two months ago.
When the Republicans finally reopen the government even if it is done entirely
absent Democratic votes they will get nothing from the left for what they've
done. They've already moved on to shinier issues like everything in Iran and as
I've written before, that's a whole other set of baggage the left has saddled
the Democrats with for decades.
To its credit the Democrats have been doing
other things that I'm in favor of it and have written about it when it comes to
being focused on winning. They are attempted their most advanced campaign
strategy for the upcoming midterms: one that involves competing at a state and
local level in a way they really haven't since Obama became President. They
have been getting back to what they used to be good at: trying to compete in
states where they shouldn't be able and understanding that the strident left-wing
models of the Squad and the Sanders' don't play in Iowa and Alaska. They
understand something that the mostly activist wing of the party they represent
refuse to comprehend: that playing the political game is the only way to bring
about your goals. That it is more important to stand by your principles then
forsake them for short-term goals.
We've seen this in the battles over
gerrymandering in this past year. In Maryland the bluest state of the Union
Governor Wes Moore attempted to lead the battle to redistrict Maryland to
eliminate the sole Republican seat in the state. That movement failed because
Democratic members of the statehouse refused to go along with this obviously
partisan grab. If there was a sign of hope among the Republicans during this
period it came in Indiana when members of the Republican state legislature
refused to kowtow to their Republican governor and party and gerrymandered the
state to eliminate Democratic seats.
The battle for redistricting in the last
year has brought out the most juvenile aspects of both parties. You'll going to
gerrymander Texas; we'll gerrymander California! You'll gerrymander Ohio; we'll
gerrymander Virginia! Nyah-Nyah-Nyah! That the overall effect is to leave the
voting public cold is not in consideration of either party.
It should be mentioned that while the
people agreed to the referendum to redistrict Virginia, it was a much closer
margin then the one in California, barely managing to pass 51 percent to 49
percent. That result, far more than the one in California, should be a message
to Democrats that the voters don't think these battles matter as much to them
as ones that will make their lives better economically. They wanted their
elected officials to make their lives easier, not engage in political
maneuvering for the national party and they were not thrilled by Governor
Spangenberger's decision to do so. Spangenberger has always struck me as a
mostly pragmatic woman and I can only wonder what it has to have been like to
spend her first few months engaging in the kind of childish battles that won't
help the people she's supposed to be leading but rather Congress who should be
on her side anyway.
But she is a Democrat still…very still
and she seems to have accepted reluctantly that this is how the game is being
played by Gavin Newsom and Wes Moore. That both of these governors care less
about being grownups and have ambitions for the highest office in the land is
something that unnerves me as well. As I said if the last decade has taught me
anything its that I want the grownups the run the country and by indulging in
this kind of behavior governors like Moore and Newsom are only showing that
they can be just as childish as the Republicans on a national stage. That
shouldn't be a strength if you want to be leader of the free world. I should know because I heard that argument
the first time Trump ran for President from the Democrats.
I have to believe in my soul that the light
at the end of the tunnel for America is not an oncoming train and that in a few
years we will emerge on the other side, battered, heavily bruised but intact
and hopefully smarter. Part of growing up is learning from the mistakes you've
made and doing what is necessary to make sure they don't happen again. This is
not an attitude that the left has ever held; its always been: "If you
don't do exactly what I say, I'm not going to play with you anymore!" For
too long my party has tried its hardest to indulge these emotionally stunted
individuals who refuse to tell us what they want but are more than happy to
share how much were ruining their lives just by existing. I think its well past
time we told them to grow the hell up.
And that includes stop let the most
childish members of the Democratic party outshout the grownups when it comes to
strategy and attitude. Its time to tell Elizabeth Warren and AOC to stop acting
like Nancy Mace and Lauren Boebert. If they led their party off a cliff would
you do the same thing? You're Democrats still, very still, and I think I
speak for the electorate that we really wish you'd act like it.