Ron Brownstein has been peddling an interesting piece of nonsense lately: He claims that just as the Republican Party has shifted substantially to the right over the past two decades, so, too, has the Democratic Party shifted substantially to the left.
Brownstein’s latest book is entitled The Second Civil War: How Extreme Partisanship Has Paralyzed Washington and Polarized America. He got a plug on the NewsHour on November 21 and in David Broder’s column the next day. Broder summarizes Brownstein’s thesis:
Where each party used to have an ideological mixture, each is now more clearly defined in opposition to the other. The result is a Republican Party that is far more universally (and stridently) conservative; and a Democratic Party whose center of gravity has moved equally far to the left.
No one doubts that the GOP has moved far rightward over the past two to three decades.
But the idea that the Democratic Party has moved equally far to the left is ludicrous.
A generation ago, the Democratic Party vigorously opposed President Reagan’s across-the-board tax cuts. At the time, the top federal income tax rate was 70%. Today, it’s half that, and Democrats are sqeamish about raising the rates to the upper 30s.
A generation ago, the Democratic Party promoted the idea of comparable worth. Because jobs traditionally done by women generally paid less than jobs traditionally done by men, simply outlawing sex discrimination in the workplace was not sufficient. The solution was pay equity based on factors such as how much education, training, and experience particular jobs need. When was the last time you heard Democrats arguing for such a repudiation of the free market?
A generation ago, the Democratic Party was committed to enactment of the Equal Rights Amendment. Today, the ERA is something that shows up on a party platform but is not high on the list of Democratic priorities.
A generation ago, Democrats defended a system of broadcast regulation where the FCC pored over station program logs and carefully analyzed local news coverage to determine whether it served (what the FCC felt was) the public interest. Under Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, this extensive regulatory structure was jettisoned. Nowhere do you hear the Democratic Party calling for a return to those days.
And little more than a decade ago, the liberals in the Democratic Party unsuccessfully fought against the “welfare reform” plan promoted by President Clinton and Congressional Republicans. When was the last time you heard the Democratic Party call for a repeal of that mid-1990s law?
Would the Democratic Party of the 1970s-1980s have confirmed the nomination of an attorney general who refuses to state whether waterboarding is torture, or whether the president is bound by law? Would the Democratic Party that demanded impeachment hearings for Richard Nixon even recognize the party that refuses to even consider impeachment of President Bush for far worse offenses against the United States Constitution?
And the new rising stars in the Democratic Party - the ones whose victories in 2006 allowed the party to recapture both houses of Congress - are conservatives like Jim Webb, Bob Casey, and Heath Shuler.
Yes, the Democratic Party has moved a great deal over the past couple of decades, but it has been a move substantially to the right.
Not surprisngly, Republicans and their supporters are taking Brownstein’s thesis and running with it. It gives a patina of scholarship to their frequent accusation that Democrats are extremists.
It is the obligation of honest people to counter this nonsense forcefully whenever and wherever we hear it being spread.