Blind Obedience
Autopsy: The Democratic Party in Crisis
Before the Democrats get carried
away with the prosecution of Trump, they better go back in time and take a look
at why they blew it in 2016 with Hillary Clinton.
My sense is that they haven’t
learned a thing. While they might get rid of Trump as the Republican
frontrunner, it’s not inconceivable that another Republican could slip into the
race and defeat Biden.
In October 2017, a team of
progressive researchers published “Autopsy:
The Democratic Party in Crisis,”
which probed the causes of the disastrous 2016 election defeat. The report came
in the wake of the party leadership’s failure to do its own autopsy. In a cover
story for The Nation, William Greider wrote
that the “Autopsy” is “an unemotional dissection of why the Democrats failed so
miserably, and it warns that the party must change profoundly or else remain a
loser.”
Now, “Democratic Autopsy: One Year
Later” evaluates how well the Democratic Party has done in charting a new
course since the autumn of 2017. This report rates developments in each of the
seven categories that the original report assessed.
The upsurge of progressive activism and electoral victories during the last year has created momentum that could lead to historic breakthroughs in the midterm elections and far beyond. Realizing such potential will require transforming and energizing the Democratic Party.
Corporate Power and the Party
The Democratic Party has implemented modest reforms, but corporate power continues to dominate the party. In 2017 and early summer 2018, the Democratic National Committee voted to refuse donations from a handful of toxic industries that contradict the party’s platform—though the ban on fossil-fuel money was effectively repealed in August 2018. Meanwhile, the DNC and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee continue to freely take big corporate donations.
A test for Democrats on Capitol Hill
came this year when the GOP successfully worked with powerful bank lobbyists to
weaken the Dodd-Frank Act (under the guise of helping small community banks).
More than one-third of Senate Democrats joined the effort; many were recipients
of significant banking donations. In the House, 33 Democrats joined most
Republicans to pass the measure; journalist David Dayen reported that nearly
all of the 33 identify as corporate “New Democrats.”
In September, House minority leader Nancy Pelosi preemptively boxed in any potential left-populist agenda on Capitol Hill by backing reinstatement of a “pay-go” rule to offset all new spending with tax increases or budget cuts. A former legislative director for three Democrats in Congress, Justin Talbot-Zorn, responded with an article for The Nation pointing out that “bold progressivism and ‘pay-go’ fiscal conservatism are mutually exclusive.” He added: “The existential challenge of climate change demands that we fully overhaul our energy and transportation infrastructure in a short period of time. The issues of America’s rising inequality and frayed social contract—including stagnant wages, unaffordable college, and exorbitant health care can only be fixed with major new investments.”
Current
Issue
After writing a recent analysis for The
Guardian that looked at how Democratic leaders act on economic issues in
states (from California to Connecticut) that they politically control, David
Sirota put his conclusions in a tweet:
Democrats in blue states “have used their power to block single payer & a
public option, enrich Wall St, subsidize corporations, slash pensions, lay off
teachers, promote fracking & engage in pay to play corruption.”
For the Democratic Party, a crucial
disconnect remains between rhetoric about corporate influence and subservience
to it.
Race and the Party
Mixed developments
In the summer of 2018, Democratic
National Committee chair Tom Perez told a predominantly black audience: “We
lost elections not only in November 2016, but we lost elections in the run-up
because we stopped organizing.… We took too many people for granted, and
African Americans—our most loyal constituency—we all too frequently took for
granted. That is a shame on us, folks, and for that I apologize. And for that I
say, it will never happen again!”
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During the last 12 months, voters of
color have been key to notable electoral wins. But the party has a long way to
go to fulfill Perez’s promise.
In the November 2017 Virginia
gubernatorial election, Democrat Ralph Northam “won three-quarters of the votes
overall” in racial-minority neighborhoods, The Washington Post reported.
“Margins grew by 10 percent in Hispanic neighborhoods.” Black voters turned out
in higher numbers than they had before. Unfortunately, Northam’s campaign
spending priorities were distressingly similar to the party’s 2016 behavior.
Groups like BlackPAC and New Virginia Majority handled essential local black
organizing, but had a difficult
time securing adequate resources.
Alabama’s special election for a
Senate seat tells a similar, slightly more encouraging story. Democrat Doug
Jones defeated Republican Roy Moore, a man accused of pedophilia and with a
history of racist remarks. Jones won 96 percent of the black vote, accounting
for 29 percent of total votes cast—more than the state’s 27 percent black
population. BlackPAC and other groups, including local NAACP chapters,
organized and knocked on more than 500,000 doors with a tailored message
addressing criminal-justice reform, education, and health care. The DNC also
contributed to operations, spending around $1 million on engaging black and
millennial voters. Jones, like Northam, spent big on advertising
aimed at white voters.
Donald Trump’s assault on immigrants
has mobilized some in the party to be stronger on immigrants’ rights. Yet
congressional Democrats were seen as having sold out Dreamers in their budget
negotiations with Republicans. An April 2018 poll found that, while 40 percent
of Hispanics believe Democrats care about Dreamers, 54 percent believe they’re
“using this issue for political gain.”
Likewise, the Democratic Party must
do much more to reform the police and justice systems. Eighty percent of
Democrats want reform and 87 percent want to decrease the prison population.
Running for Philadelphia district attorney as a comprehensive reformer, Larry
Krasner showed that these desires for change could be mobilized
into a winning campaign; turnout for his November 2017 election was much higher
than in previous DA elections. Krasner went on to implement policies such as
dropping marijuana charges and dismissing problematic prosecutors in the DA’s
office.
Such policy approaches, coupled with grassroots organizing, enabled police accountability advocate Randall Woodfin to win the Birmingham, Alabama, mayoral race in 2017 and enabled progressive Democrat Earnell Lucas to win the race for Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, sheriff in August 2018. These campaigns suggest a path forward for Democratic candidates—where the priority is to inspire voters and maximize turnout rather than to woo “persuadable” Republicans.
Young People and the Party
Mixed developments
The Democratic Party still isn’t
offering a bold vision that can excite young adults, a demographic known for
not voting much. Looking to the 2018 midterms, the party put out its “Better Deal for Our Democracy” platform. This is a modest step forward—especially the
“Crack Down on Corporate Monopolies” provisions—but
missing is a focus on the bread-and-butter issues that can materially affect
young people’s lives, such as redirecting resources from our bloated military
toward popular programs for free college education and Medicare for All.
Young people, more than their older
counterparts, are increasingly against obscene military budgets and US wars.
But citizens with those views are without powerful representation in
Washington. Sixty-eight percent of House Democrats and 85 percent of Democratic
senators voted for
the record-breaking 2019 military budget of over $700 billion, including
expansion of the US nuclear arsenal.
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On the issue of paying for college,
party leaders have made a bit of progress. But instead of taking a clear stance
in favor of free public college tuition—something a strong majority of
Democrats support—congressional Democrats proposed a law in July that would
subsidize community colleges only and work to “make college more affordable by
reducing debt and simplifying financial aid,” as The Washington Post
reported. It’s a tepid approach.
Like a growing number of successful candidates for local and state offices as well as congressional seats, most Democratic presidential contenders for 2020 have learned to push some compelling, simple policy measures. But the Democratic leadership is still using a 1990s-era playbook of technocratic half-measures that don’t inspire—or bring out to the polls—America’s youth.
Voter Participation and the Party
Somewhat improved
The depressed turnout that cost
Hillary Clinton the 2016 election was due to both voter suppression efforts by
Republicans and the Democratic Party’s own inability to mobilize its base. The
party has made some progress on both counts.
To diminish turnout, GOP strategists
keep targeting people of color, the young, and others apt to cast ballots for
Democrats. The DNC’s response has grown more robust in the past year, with the
creation of the “IWillVote” program to register new voters and fight voter
suppression. The initiative has provided grants in 41 states and territories,
aiming to reach 50 million voters by November.
The party has also supported
restoring felons’ right to vote. In April, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo
pledged to restore suffrage to felons on parole. In Florida, Democratic
gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum and party leaders are supporting a ballot
measure to restore felons’ voting rights.
Meanwhile, automatically registering everyone to vote has emerged as a popular and practical way to
address discriminatory voter restrictions. In 2018, eight states and the
District of Columbia approved or began implementing automatic voter
registration. These laws were virtually nonexistent three years ago, but now 13
states and DC have them.
Yet most party leaders have remained
hesitant to promote other clearly popular policies. And voters in marginalized
communities often see scant difference between the two major parties. The
Democratic Party could dramatically boost voter participation by mobilizing
around progressive proposals that are broadly popular,
such as higher taxes on the wealthy, Medicare for All, a $15 minimum wage,
stronger environmental protections, public transportation, and criminal-justice reform.
The Democratic Party routinely fails to take full electoral advantage of such public opinion—a major factor in its fundamental lack of credibility with voters. A Quinnipiac poll in March 2018 showed just 31 percent of the country had a positive view of Democrats—down from 37 percent four months earlier and 44 percent a year earlier, according to CNN polls. Voter turnout falls short when many are left doubting that the Democratic Party will make good on its progressive rhetoric.
Social Movements and the Party
Mixed developments
From the party-platform struggles of
2016 through the “Summer for Progress” coalition convened by Our Revolution in
the summer of 2017, the DNC seemed tone-deaf to the policy demands of its base.
When Summer for Progress activists marched to DNC headquarters in Washington,
they were met outside the front door by barricades.
But since mid-2017, many party
leaders have been pulled along by the grassroots. The House of Representatives
recently saw the formation
of a Medicare for All caucus, with at least 70 members. Even ex-President Obama
recently got on board. A year ago, a Vox headline summed up the momentum:
“The stunning Democratic shift on single-payer: In 2008, no leading Democratic
presidential candidate backed single-payer. In 2020, all of them might.”
Student survivors of the mass
shooting at Florida’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School became leaders of an
intense new push for gun control. Within six weeks, the #NeverAgain movement
helped organize the March for Our Lives in Washington—with 800 solidarity
events across the country—and a national voter-registration drive. Though most
congressional Democrats had been avoiding or downplaying the gun-control issue,
it became hard to ignore this youth movement.
Another youth-energized groundswell,
the climate-justice movement, was dealt a slap in the face by the DNC’s
reversal on accepting donations from the fossil-fuel industry. A 350.org co-founder said:
“This sort of spineless corporate pandering is why Democrats keep losing.”
This has been a banner year for
successful primary campaigns by progressive Democrats nationwide allied with
organizations such as Our Revolution, Justice Democrats, Democratic Socialists
of America, People’s Action, Democracy for America, Citizen Action, Working
Families Party and Progressive Democrats of America, to name just a few groups
that knocked on doors and e-mail inboxes all year. In New York State, there was
the defeat of powerhouse Representative Joe Crowley by 28-year-old Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez and then a progressive deluge that unseated six “Independent
Democratic” state senators—corporatists allied with the GOP and Democratic
Governor Cuomo. If there’s a “blue wave” in November, much of the credit will
belong to grassroots groups.
How did the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee react to this grassroots energy? Often by intervening on behalf of establishment primary candidates against progressives, as in Colorado’s sixth district and in Texas’s seventh district (where the DCCC publicly attacked progressive candidate Laura Moser). Social movements have the ability to energize the Democratic Party, but not if blocked by party leaders.
War and the Party
Somewhat worse
Chants of “No More War” from
delegates at the 2016 Democratic National Convention gave voice to sentiments
that still resonate through the party’s base and the broader US public, notably
in communities with higher rates of military sacrifice. While Trump’s 2016 victories in swing states may have been
aided by his posing as a foe of protracted war, his administration’s Middle
East policies have exposed that masquerade. Unfortunately, the positions of
Democratic leaders on endless war and military spending offer little
alternative.
Few Democrats in Congress are
willing to strongly challenge the unaccountable military budget, which soaks up
most discretionary spending that could be redirected toward the party’s
proclaimed domestic agenda. During federal-budget negotiations early this
year—with Trump requesting a huge Pentagon-budget increase—Nancy Pelosi boasted
in an e-mail to House Democrats: “In our negotiations, Congressional Democrats
have been fighting for increases in funding for defense.” The office of Senate
Democratic leader Chuck Schumer declared: “We fully support President Trump’s
Defense Department’s request.” Months later, an overwhelming majority of House
and Senate Democrats supported the massive 2019 “National Defense Authorization
Act” of $716 billion.
Trump has a dangerous admiration for
authoritarian leaders. Democrats need to condemn such admiration without
succumbing to reckless bellicosity.
The United States and Russia possess
93 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons. Yet many Democratic leaders seem
oblivious to the threat of armed conflict with Russia—a peril profoundly
understood by Democratic presidents during the height of the Cold War. Reacting
to evidence of Russian meddling in the 2016 US election, numerous Democrats
engaged in extreme rhetoric, calling it an “act of war” and “equivalent” to
Pearl Harbor. Democratic leaders have rarely acknowledged the crucial need for
“a shift in approach toward Russia” including “steps to ease tensions between
the nuclear superpowers,” in the words of an open letter calling for “Election
Security and True National Security,” released this summer.
On matters of war and peace—for
instance, the 17-year war in Afghanistan and the Trump team’s extremely
one-sided Israel-Palestine policy—top Democrats have offered few alternative
policies. They’ve made scant objections to Trump administration actions that a
director at Amnesty International USA, Daphne Eviatar, has described
as “hugely expanding the use of drone and airstrikes, including outside of war
zones, and increasing civilian casualties in the process.”
The party leadership has routinely
been absent in the face of a humanitarian catastrophe in Yemen caused primarily
by the US-backed Saudi war. In March, Bernie Sanders, Democrat Chris Murphy,
and Republican Mike Lee forced a vote on their Senate resolution to end US
military support for the Saudis in Yemen. In the face of White House opposition
and indifference among Democratic leaders, it went down to defeat (55-44)
thanks to ten Democratic “no” votes. With the disaster continuing to worsen in Yemen, the House
Democratic leadership reportedly
dragged its feet while progressive first-term Congressman Ro Khanna persistently led
a bipartisan
effort to get a vote on a similar measure; finally, in late September, Khanna
was able to introduce the resolution with some high-level party support.
Democrats often denounce the GOP for immoral and extremist domestic policies favoring the powerful. The party’s failure to challenge such foreign policies is a moral and political tragedy.
Democracy and the Party
Somewhat improved
Efforts to democratize the
Democratic Party made some progress in August 2018 when the full DNC voted to
bar superdelegates from voting for the presidential nominee on the first
ballot. This reduction in the power of superdelegates grew out of anger among
Bernie Sanders supporters about DNC favoritism for Hillary Clinton. In the end,
the reform passed with much support from the Clinton wing of the party and a
major assist from DNC chair Tom Perez.
Contrary to claims made by
superdelegate defenders, the reform moved toward greater racial diversity at
the national convention. In 2016, the Pew Research Center found that 20 percent
of superdelegates were black and about 36 percent were people of color; numbers
provided by the Hillary Clinton campaign showed that convention delegates as a
whole were more diverse than superdelegates—25 percent black and 50
percent people of color.
The DNC’S encouraging action on
superdelegate reform contrasts sharply with the DNC’s failure to act on a
proposal by its Unity Reform Commission to establish a Financial Oversight
Committee that would present an annual report on the DNC budget to the entire
DNC, so that it could assess the effectiveness of expenditures and staff, as
required by the DNC’s Bylaws. The current Finance Committee—entirely appointed
by the DNC chair—conducts no such evaluations. A Financial Oversight Committee
could help achieve what the DNC still lacks: transparency and accountability in
how DNC money is spent.
To get closer to living up to its
name, the Democratic Party should rely on a broad base of small donors and
refuse donations from corporations, particularly those with interests adverse
to the party’s platform. The DNC’s reversal of its ban on fossil-fuel donations
was a step backward.
This summer, the DNC voted in
reforms to promote more openness and accessibility in presidential primaries
and caucuses. The reforms urge state parties to work with their state
government to combat voter suppression and implement measures such as same-day
party switching and same-day registration. An extreme example of antidemocratic
obstacles is in the state of New York, where voters must declare their party
affiliation more than six months in advance.
Barriers to democracy inside the
Democratic Party have obstructed efforts to make the party a powerful vehicle
for progressive change. During the last year, grassroots pressure has reduced
some of those barriers. Looking ahead, a truly democratic Democratic Party
could profoundly revitalize the politics of our country.
Norman SolomonNorman
Solomon is the executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy, the
author of War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military
Machine, and a cofounder of RootsAction.org.
Jeff CohenJeff
Cohen is the founder of the media watch group FAIR and co-founder of
RootsAction.org.
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