The New Politics of Evasion: How Ignoring Swing Voters Could Reopen the Door for Donald Trump and Threaten American Democracy

By William A. Galston and Elaine Kamarck
Contributing authors for the Progressive Policy Institute

FORWARD
From Will Marshall, President of the Progressive Policy Institute

In September 1989, the brand-new Progressive Policy Institute published The Politics of Evasion: Democrats and the Presidency. Nearly 33 years later, this political study remains one of the most important and influential documents in the PPI catalogue. It holds more than historical interest today, however, as the Democratic Party once again must wrestle with basic questions of political outlook and electoral strategy.

The Politics of Evasion was written by two distinguished political scholars, Bill Galston and Elaine Kamarck. Their purpose was to explain a 20-year Democratic losing streak in presidential elections. In the six elections between 1968 and 1988, Democrats won only once — Jimmy Carter in 1976 – while averaging just 42% of the popular vote.

Their analysis refuted the principal “myths” that the party’s establishment embraced to explain away these losses and avoid confronting the fundamental reasons voters were rejecting its candidates. The Politics of Evasion laid the political predicate for the rise of the “New Democrats” and Bill Clinton and their successful efforts to infuse new ideas into a stale governing agenda and snap the string of presidential defeats.

Today, Democrats obviously face a very different political environment and set of electoral challenges. What hasn’t changed, however, is the need for unflinching honesty about the party’s struggles to consolidate a broad and a durable majority — even after four years of Donald Trump’s chaotic, divisive and lawless presidency.

Facing a difficult midterm election and the ominous prospect of a second Trump run for the White House, Democrats are once again in need of political reality therapy. Galston and Kamarck have obliged with a fresh analysis of the party’s predicament: The New Politics of Evasion: How Ignoring Swing Voters Could Reopen the Door for Donald Trump and Threaten American Democracy.

The New Politics of Evasion is both a trenchant critique of contemporary myths and a constructive blueprint for the course corrections the party urgently needs to make. It should be required reading for Democratic candidates, strategists, the media, and any citizen worried about the health of our democracy.

PPI is proud present this worthy successor to the original, and I’m personally grateful to Bill and Elaine, longtime friends and foxhole companions, for undertaking it.

 

INTRODUCTION

In 1989, in the wake of the Democratic Party’s third consecutive presidential defeat, we offered our thoughts for the party’s recovery and renewal. Our diagnosis was blunt. “Too many Americans,” we wrote, “have come to see the party as inattentive to their economic interests, indifferent if not hostile to their moral sentiments, and ineffective in defense of their national security.”[1] Worse, we argued, too many Democrats were explaining away these problems or denying them outright. Instead of facing reality, they had embraced a “politics of evasion” that ignored electoral reality and impeded needed change.

This was 33 years ago. But recent developments compel us to renew our warning. The resurgence of inflation caught Democrats flat-footed and was initially dismissed, making many Americans wonder whether Democrats were in touch with everyday economic reality. The way the United States left Afghanistan weakened confidence in Democrats’ management of foreign and defense policy, raising the political stakes in Ukraine. And worst of all, too many of the most vocal Democrats have adopted stances on fraught social issues — policing, immigration, public schools, and others — that repel a majority of Americans. The title of veteran political analyst Ronald Brownstein’s recent article told a hard truth: “Democrats are losing the culture war.”[2] And when they lose this war, they lose elections — as they did in Virginia last November.

In recent years, a substantial portion of the Democratic Party has convinced itself that Americans are ready for a political revolution that transforms every aspect of their lives. This assumption has crashed into a stubborn reality: Most Americans want evolutionary, not revolutionary, change. They want more government in some areas but not all, and within limits. And they want government that respects their commonsense beliefs — for example, that defunding the police is not the path to public safety, abolishing immigration enforcement is not the cure for our southern border, and that it is wrong to exclude parents from decisions about the education of their children.

When we recommended that the party change course in 1989, the alternative was a second term for George H. W. Bush. Today the stakes are much higher.

Thirty-three years ago, the problems Democrats faced seemed crucial. The Reagan Revolution had attacked the safety net Franklin Roosevelt and successive Democratic presidents had built.  What seemed to be at stake was the future of American liberalism.

Nevertheless, the Republican party in 1989 was still led by people like President George H.W. Bush and Senate Minority Leader Robert Dole. While we disagreed with many of their policies, they were leaders who respected the Constitution and the democratic norms that had been followed by American presidents, regardless of party, for centuries. By contrast, the Republican Party that Donald Trump created is much more than a challenge to good public policy; it is a threat to democracy itself. From the refusal to concede an election in which there was no evidence of widespread fraud to efforts to suppress the vote and politicize the apparatus responsible for counting the votes, the Republican Party Trump leads poses the most direct threat to democracy that the United States experienced in modern times.

A Democratic loss in the 2024 presidential election may well have catastrophic consequences for the country and for the nations that have long depended on our stability for their security. The party’s first duty is to protect democracy by winning the next presidential election, and every other consideration, however worthy, must yield to this overriding necessity.

We fear that the Democratic Party is not positioning itself to fulfill this duty. Once again, it is in the grip of myths that block progress toward victory; it does not recognize the new realities that shape American politics; and it has barely begun to develop an agenda on cultural issues that a majority of Americans can support. This triple failure is what we call the new politics of evasion, the refusal to confront the unyielding arithmetic of electoral success.

High ideals are important, but they mean little without the power to put them into practice. Pursuing them in a manner that undermines public support is self-defeating. In this paper, we seek to administer reality therapy to the Democratic Party to prepare the way for victory in 2024. To this end, we will critique the party’s self-defeating myths, explore the realities that must shape successful political strategies, and offer some guidelines for an agenda that can command the support of a new American majority.

THE MYTHS THAT CLOUD DEMOCRATS MINDS

In December of 2021, veteran strategist Doug Sosnik circulated a memo warning his fellow Democrats to disabuse themselves of beliefs that the 2020 presidential election and the off-year election of 2021 have proven to be false.[3] He pointed out that Trump’s victory in 2016 was not, as many Democrats think, an aberration. Trump received 11 million more votes in 2020 than 2016 and increased his share of the popular vote by about 1 percentage point.

Second, Sosnik observed, Democrats’ belief that a higher turnout is always good for Democrats is no longer true. The shift of the Republican Party toward populism and a working-class orientation has increased its share of occasional voters and people who had not previously participated in elections, especially in the midwestern battleground states of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. The result is an “arms race” in which both parties vie to mobilize new and occasional voters.

We agree with Sosnik about these two myths — and their implications. If Trump seeks the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, he is likely to receive it. And if he does, he will be a formidable opponent. While Democrats must do everything in their power to mobilize voters who support them, the certainty of a strengthened Republican counter-mobilization means that the Democratic candidate must also seek to persuade swing voters, as Joe Biden did in 2020.

As Democrats ponder their future, they must face some hard facts about the current structure of American national politics.  Put simply, the country is both deeply divided and closely divided, and each of these dimensions limits the party’s strategic options. Many political activists have concluded, wrongly in our opinion, that deep partisan divisions have increased the importance of mobilizing each party’s most loyal supporters (the “base”) while rendering efforts to persuade swing voters increasingly irrelevant. But the second dimension of today’s elections — how close our national elections have become — calls the exclusive emphasis on base mobilization into question. Swing voters are critical and will remain so for the foreseeable future.

Too many Democrats have evaded this truth — and its implications for the party’s agenda and strategy.  They have been led astray by three persistent myths: that “people of color” think and act in the same way; that economics always trumps culture; and that a progressive majority is emerging.[4]

MYTH 1: PEOPLE OF COLOR THINK AND ACT ALIKE

Early in the 21st century, many Democrats came to believe that long-term demographic trends would move the electorate inexorably toward a Democratic majority. The expectation was that decades of robust immigration from previously under-represented countries in the Western Hemisphere and the Asia-Pacific region would steadily increase the diversity of the U.S. population. As they entered the electorate, they would join forces with other people “of color” — especially African Americans and Native Americans — to strengthen support for the Democratic Party, especially its progressive wing. Underlying this projection was the assumption that these new groups would experience various forms of discrimination that would define their political identity and unite them with African Americans and Native Americans in demands for justice and equality.

For a while there was evidence that what some called the “Rising American Electorate” would indeed transform our politics. The coalition that gave Barack Obama a strong majority in 2008 was diverse in all the expected ways, and younger voters brought new and often progressive perspectives into the political arena. Black turnout has remained high, Hispanics continue to stream into the electorate, and turnout among Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders rose by 39% from 2016 to 2020.[5]

But more recently, developments among the largest segment of this coalition, Hispanic Americans, have called into question the belief in the basic similarity among people of color. It was widely recognized that the term “Hispanic” — a census category — covered an internally diverse community from dozens of different countries. It turned out that differences of national origin shaped political outlooks: It was one thing to flee countries dominated by brutal right-wing dictatorships, quite another to hail from socialist societies like Cuba and Venezuela.

As support for socialism surged among young progressive Democrats, these differences of origin influenced voting patterns. Nationally, support for Democratic presidential candidates fell from 71% in 2012 to 66% in 2016 and 59% in 2020 among Hispanic voters.[6] In Florida, home to large numbers of Cuban and Venezuelan refugees, Joe Biden received just 53% of the Hispanic vote, compared to Hillary Clinton’s 62%. This may have cost Biden the state with its 29 electoral college votes.

Since the 2020 presidential election, Hispanics have continued to drift away from the Democratic Party. An Economist/YouGov survey conducted in late December 2021 found that only 48% of Hispanics approved of Joe Biden’s performance as president and just 47% believed that Biden “cares about people like you.” Forty-three percent of Hispanics reported that they felt closer to the Republican Party than to the Democratic Party.

At the same time, gaps widened between Hispanics and African Americans on key issues. For example, just 12% of African Americans viewed police misconduct as isolated incidents rather than systemic, compared to 40% for Hispanics. Not surprisingly, just 48% of Hispanics regarded criminal justice reform as “very important,” compared to 73% of African Americans. Across the board, Hispanics were less likely to support Biden’s handling of domestic issues, from the pandemic to jobs and the economy and health care.

Hispanics and African Americans also disagree on Critical Race Theory and its role in education. Only 35% of Hispanics have a favorable view of CRT, compared to 60% of African Americans. By 43 to 18%, Hispanics oppose teaching CRT in public schools, while African Americans favor including it, 43 to 20%.[7]

In foreign policy, Hispanics were more hawkish than African Americans; only 43% of Hispanics approved of Biden’s foreign policy, versus 60% of African Americans.[8] Democrats have long assumed that immigration is the top concern for Hispanics, a proposition that survey research does not support.

Like other immigrant groups, Hispanics have faced prejudice and discrimination. But because Hispanics are immigrants, arriving here on their own free will, equating their experience with that of African Americans is misleading. Democrats must consider the possibility that Hispanics will turn out to be the Italians of the 21st century — family-oriented, religious, patriotic, striving to succeed in their adopted country, and supportive of public policies that expand economic opportunity without dictating results. It took three generations for Italians to break down barriers to equal participation in all aspects of American life, and that may turn out to be the case for Hispanics as well. In the end, a majority of Italians became Republicans. Democrats must rethink their approach if they hope to retain majority support among Hispanics.

This case-study points to a broader truth: the phrase “people of color” assembles highly diverse groups under a single banner. The belief that they will march together depends on assumptions that are questionable at best — in particular, that not being white is more important than the differences that define their distinct identities. American history offers many counterexamples to this assumption, and Democrats would be unwise to bet their future on its validity.

MYTH 2: ECONOMICS TRUMPS CULTURE 

Ever since Franklin D. Roosevelt created the modern social welfare state and a plethora of laws designed to protect workers, the Democratic party has viewed itself as the party of working-class and middle-class voters who would be bound to the party by economic and material benefits.

Much has changed since FDR took office nearly nine decades ago, but for some Democrats it will always be 1933. Too many Democrats believe that economic issues are the “real” issues, and that cultural issues are mostly diversions invented by their adversaries for political purposes. This gives rise to the “What’s the Matter with Kansas?” syndrome in which Americans are allegedly manipulated into voting against their economic self-interest.[9]

For Americans across the political spectrum, social, cultural, and religious issues are real and — in many cases — more important to them than economic considerations. These issues reflect their deepest convictions and shape their identity. Economic circumstances do not determine views on guns, abortion, or religion, and attitudes toward immigration reflect deep-seated beliefs about ethnic and national identity.[10]

The myth of economic determinism has another political downside: It leads too many Democrats to believe that showering Americans with public resources is the surest path to victory. This is true in some circumstances but not others. First, the structure of public programs must be consistent with the people’s moral sentiments. FDR understood that programs, such as Social Security, to which individuals contribute in return for future benefits are most likely to enjoy enduring political support, which is why Lyndon Johnson went down the same road with Medicare.

Non-contributory programs must pass two tests in the court of public opinion: beneficiaries must need these benefits and they must deserve them. Victims of natural disasters almost always pass these tests, and big economic downturns are the moral equivalent of natural disasters. But most people don’t understand why upper-income Americans deserve big tax breaks like deducting the full amount of property taxes on their mansions, and most people believe that it’s reasonable to ask needy beneficiaries to reciprocate by doing what they can to improve their own lot.

The myth of economic determinism goes a long way towards explaining why Democrats have had such a hard time winning back the votes of the white working class—and why they seem to be losing support among Hispanic working-class voters as well. Announcing his presidential campaign in 2015, Donald Trump pledged not to cut Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Society.[11]

In rejecting calls for “entitlement reform” in the name of fiscal responsibility, policies advocated by Speaker Paul Ryan’s wing of the Republican Party, Trump took away one of the Democrats’ best and most time-tested attacks. And by reorienting the Republican Party away from cuts in programs on which working- and middle-class voters depended for their security, Donald Trump removed the key obstacle to a cultural appeal based on anti-immigrant sentiments and nationalism. This improved his party’s prospects in states with above-average shares of white working-class voters. This cultural appeal helped move two states (Ohio and Iowa), which Barack Obama won as recently as 2012, beyond Democrats’ reach. Democrats are now unlikely to win these two states until there is a Democratic landslide — which hasn’t happened since 1964. And it has made the upper Midwest fiercely competitive, a face-off that is likely to persist until the battle lines between the parties are redrawn.

A glance at the demography of voters in swing states shows why this shift is so important.

With the exception of Georgia and Texas, white non-college voters in these swing states comprise a substantially larger share of the electorate than Black and Hispanic voters combined. Seven of these nine states have shares of white non-college voters above the national average, while the remaining two (again, Georgia and Texas) are at the average.  Conversely, five of these states have below-average shares of white college-educated voters, three are average, and only one (Pennsylvania) is significantly above average. Black voters are well above the national average in two swing states (North Carolina and Georgia), while Hispanic voters are significantly above average in four states (Arizona, Nevada, Florida, and Texas). Of these states where Hispanics are strong, Biden won just two. Florida is the only swing state where Trump increased his winning margin in 2020 over 2016, while Biden’s gains in Texas, though significant, fell short of expectations.

As Table Two shows, compared to Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden scored significant gains among both college-educated and non-college white voters and equaled her showing among Black Americans. In every state Biden won, the critical change was that he managed to improve her performance among white non-college voters. If he had not done so, he would have lost in Georgia, Arizona, and Wisconsin, wiping out his advantage on the Electoral College.

By contrast, as the last column of Table Two indicates, Biden fell short of Clinton’s share among Hispanics in seven of nine swing states and could do no better than match it in the remaining two. Unless Democrats can improve their performance among Hispanics, Florida will remain out of reach, and their hopes of turning Texas blue will remain unfulfilled.

Democrats who think that the mobilization of their base will be sufficient to win elections overlook the sheer number of white non-college voters in key states. This does not mean that Democrats should ignore their base, but it does mean that they need to walk a fine line between mobilizing their base and attracting enough white non-college voters to win. In 2020, COVID had created an economic and social crisis that brought just enough of these voters back to the Democrats in key swing states. But these successes must not blind Democrats to the fact that these voters often have found Republicans’ cultural claims more persuasive than the Democrats’ economic arguments.

MYTH 3: A PROGRESSIVE ASCENDENCY IS EMERGING

The Democratic Party is a broad coalition of left-wing progressives, center-left liberals, and moderates. In the country as a whole, both conservative and moderate voters are more numerous than are those who consider themselves liberal or progressive. But despite these well-known statistical truths, many Democrats have convinced themselves that a new “very liberal” or “progressive” majority was emerging, in the party and in the country.

There is little evidence that this is true today or that the attitudes of the electorate are moving in this direction. The most recent survey of voters’ ideology found that only 7% of the

electorate considers itself very liberal.[12] Another survey found that only 9% of voters associated themselves with policies identified with leaders such as Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, compared to 26% who supported the center-left positions identified with Joe Biden.[13]

It is true that Americans turn to government when problems arise that the market cannot solve (or even exacerbate). Measures to expand investments in infrastructure, education, research, and technology enjoy broad public support, as do efforts to rein in the cost of prescription drugs. When economic inequality becomes blatant, Americans will support efforts to reduce it — for example, by increasing taxes on large corporations and wealthy individuals.

At the same time, decades of declining trust in the competence and integrity of the public sector have left Americans wary of government as the solution to social problems. Capitalism has its excesses and deficiencies, they believe, but socialism is not the answer. And when government responses to real issues — such as the hardships created by the pandemic — contribute to new problems such as inflation, support for an activist public sector quickly wanes. There is scant evidence that Americans will accept the costly government-led economic agenda of which progressives dream.

Nowhere is the myth of the progressive ascendency more powerful than in the sphere of culture. Many Democrats believe that the most progressive cultural attitudes enjoy the support of a popular majority. These Democrats are living in a bubble defined by education, income, and geography. Time after time, Republicans use progressives’ overreach in areas such as crime, immigration, and education to drive wedges between swing voters and the Democratic Party. This pattern will not end until Democrats break out of the mindset that dominates deep blue areas, familiarize themselves with the rest of the country and then carefully craft stances on these issues that move the country forward — and that a majority of Americans can embrace.[14]

Much of this cultural bubble is a consequence of changing educational patterns in the electorate. Starting in 2000, whites with four-year college degrees moved towards the Democrats as whites without four-year degrees maintained their long-term movement away. Biden’s candidacy continued the shift of educated voters toward the Democratic Party while reversing only modestly the shift of voters without four-year degrees in the opposite direction.

Source: New York Times

Among all voters with a four-year degree or higher, Biden got 61% of the vote, up from Hillary Clinton’s 57% in 2016. This total included 57% of white voters with a college degree or more, 69% of college-educated Hispanics, and 92% of college-educated African Americans. The gap in support for Biden among whites with and without college degrees was 24 points; among Hispanics with and without college degrees, 14 points. (By contrast, there was no education gap whatsoever among Black voters.)[15]

A college degree matters in two ways: it contributes to higher incomes; and independent of income, college-educated voters have a cultural outlook that on average leans in a more liberal or progressive direction.

As Democrats have gained ground among college-educated voters while losing support among less-educated voters, they have increased their support in upper-income jurisdictions. Although the popular vote in 2016 was fairly close, Hillary Clinton won counties accounting for 64% of GDP. Although the popular vote remained relatively close in 2020, Biden won counties totaling an astounding 71% of GDP.

Source: Brookings

The cultural bubble is also the result of the increasingly intense geographic polarization that has shaped the outlook of a new generation of political activists. In deep blue states like Massachusetts and California, the political spectrum runs from the far left — where a concept like democratic socialism, for example, is very popular — to the center. In these states, groups like Justice for All, wage war against officials in the center, whom they often refer to as “corporate Democrats.” A generation of political office holders and activists has come of age never having to speak to evangelical Christians, pro-life advocates, or just plain old Republicans.[16]

In sum: for reasons of education, income, and geography, many Democratic voters and leaders are far removed from the daily experiences and cultural outlooks of non-college voters. For example, in the wake of the George Floyd murder in Minneapolis, whites joined Blacks all over the country to protest police brutality. Out of this was born a reinvigorated interest in police reform as many whites learned more about the experiences of African Americans at the hands of the police. Much of the work on police reform was broadly popular since it focused on commonsense measures to make policing more accountable and getting others to do the work that diverts police from their mission of fighting crime.[17] But then advocates settled on a disastrous slogan — defund the police — to describe their aims.  For prosperous whites living in safe urban neighborhoods or the suburbs, this label and the polices were unfortunate, but not a deal breaker. But for whites and others living in or near neighborhoods with high crime rates, it was.

As it turned out, African Americans in high-crime neighborhoods didn’t think much of the idea either. A reform ballot initiative in Minneapolis (George Floyd’s city) and the mayoral candidate who supported it went down to defeat. The opposition to this initiative included African American voters, 75% of whom were opposed to shrinking the size of the police force.[18]

Although most high-profile Democrats explicitly rejected the “defund the police” language, Republicans worked overtime to ensure that the public knew the phrase and associated it with the Democrats. Congressman Jim Clyburn, the Majority Whip in Congress, believes that it cost the party as many as a dozen seats in the House of Representatives in the 2020 election.[19]

This should not have come as a surprise. Since the late 1960s, Republicans have made unprincipled but effective use of Democrats’ vulnerabilities on social and cultural issues, especially those with racial overtones. There’s a straight line from Willie Horton, the Black rapist and murderer who featured prominently in George H. W. Bush’s 1988 campaign, to rhetoric used in the fight around “defund the police” and “critical race theory,” which figured prominently in the 2021 Virginia gubernatorial campaign.

A similar story played out in recent elections that featured renewed interest in socialism. Among the young, favorable attitudes towards socialism are much stronger than they are among older people.[20] But there is an important generational difference; younger people tended to equate socialism with a robust welfare state along Scandinavian lines, while to older people it meant state control of the means of production. Even though Biden often said —clearly and forcefully — “I am not a socialist,” the image stuck to the party like glue. For important segments of the population, especially those who can remember the Cold War and those who escaped from socialist failures in Eastern Europe and Latin America, socialism was nothing short of a disaster, and a party that seemed sympathetic to it was unacceptable.

When we first wrote about the politics of evasion over three decades ago, Democrats had allowed the public to form an impression of them as the party that sympathized with criminals more than with their victims — that is, a party outside the moral mainstream. Although many of today’s cultural issues are different, the problem remains the same, and Democrats will remain on the cultural defensive until they pursue social change with policies and language — and at a pace — that can command a sustainable majority.

A new survey commissioned by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee may finally get the party’s attention. The poll found that when Democratic candidates leave Republicans’ cultural attacks unanswered, the GOP lead on the generic ballot increases from 4 to 14 points. These attacks are especially potent among swing voters, including centrists, Independents, and Hispanics.  A strong Democratic response — supporting the police and border security, for example — undoes much but not all the damage.[21] [22]  If this survey doesn’t wake up the Democratic Party and its candidates, Democrats face a brutal reckoning in November, and the problem will persist until the party, led by the president, clearly signals that it is rejoining America’s cultural mainstream.

III. REALITIES THAT DEMOCRATS MUST FACE: THE NEW STRUCTURE OF AMERICAN POLITICS

Everyone senses that partisanship is more intense and more comprehensive than it was four decades ago, and that building bipartisan coalitions is far more difficult. The share of safe House seats where party primaries settle the outcome of general elections has soared, making it more difficult for moderates to be nominated since their party will retain the seat even if nominees are far outside the mainstream. The sorting out of the electorate into increasingly homogenous geographical areas has created echo chambers that intensify partisan beliefs and sentiments.

But there is another, less discussed structural feature of contemporary politics — how closely divided we are along partisan lines, and how the absence of a stable majority shapes competition between the parties.

When we assess our national politics over the past century, a remarkable pattern emerges. Of the 17 presidential elections between 1920 and 1984, 10 were settled by margins of 10 percentage points or more in the popular vote, and five yielded landslides in which the winner’s margin exceeded 20 points. But in the nine elections between 1988 and 2020, no candidate has come close to a 10-point victory margin, and five of the past six have been settled by margins of less than 5 percentage points. In five of these elections, the winner failed to secure a majority of the national popular vote; in two, the candidate who lost the national popular vote prevailed in the Electoral College. During this 32-year period, neither political party has been able to establish a stable national majority, and the White House has changed hands between the parties five times. Of the roughly 1 billion votes cast for the major party candidates in the past nine elections, Democrats received 51.2% compared to 48.2% for Republicans.

Our conclusion: Even though deepening partisanship has reduced the number of swing voters, the narrow margins of our recent national elections has made these voters more important than ever. This reality will dominate national politics until one party breaks the deadlock of the past three decades and creates a decisive national majority. 

As evidence, consider the difference between the election of 2016, which the Democratic presidential nominee narrowly lost, and 2020, which the Democratic nominee narrowly won. Hillary Clinton bested Donald Trump by 2.2 percentage points in the national popular vote, while Joe Biden beat him by 4.4 percentage points, and the additional two points proved decisive.

The 2020 election witnessed a massive increase in the popular vote, with the highest turnout in more than a century. But the mobilization extended across the political spectrum. Joe Biden received 15.4 million more votes than Hillary Clinton and increased the Democratic share of the popular vote by 3.1 percentage points, while Donald Trump raised his vote total by 11.2 million over his 2016 performance, and his share of the popular vote by 0.8 points. Meanwhile, votes cast for independent and third-party candidates, which had soared to nearly 6% of the electorate in 2016 fell back to 1.8%, roughly the average in the past two decades.

Here is the crucial point: because voters in both parties surged to the polls in record numbers, the shape of the electorate changed only marginally. Compared to 2016, white Americans’ share of the electorate fell by 2 points, matching the average decrease in recent quadrennial cycles. The Black share rose from 10 to 11 points, while Hispanics remained steady at 10.[23] Looking across most sub-groups, including age and geography, the same pattern prevails. Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential contest not by changing the shape of the electorate, but rather by improving his share of the vote in key parts of the electorate.

For example, Biden won 48% of the male vote, up from Clinton’s 41%, while raising Democrats’ margin of victory among white college-educated men from 3 to 10 points. He even managed to raise the Democratic share of the white working class men’s vote — the heart of the Trump coalition — to 31%, versus Clinton’s weak 23% showing.

Although Joe Biden made incremental gains across most parts of the electorate, there is no guarantee that these swing voters will stick with him next time, and recent polls suggest that they are pulling away.[24] None of these changes fundamentally transformed the Democratic coalition or broke the partisan stalemate.

We are likely to face a close contest for the popular vote in 2024. But as every high school student should know, the national popular vote does not determine the outcome of presidential elections; it is the state-by-state vote.

It seems logical that as the number of close presidential elections has increased, so would the number of swing states.  But just the opposite has happened: as swing elections have become the norm, swing states have been disappearing.

Consider four presidential elections over the past six decades, each resolved by less the 5 percentage points in the national popular vote.

 

Although the number of swing states has decreased by more than one-half over the past six decades, they continue to determine the outcome of presidential contests. If Biden had received 11,780 fewer votes in Georgia (0.2% of the total), 10,458 in Arizona (0.3%), and 20,683 fewer in Wisconsin (0.6%), his 306-232 Electoral College victory would have turned into a 269-269 tie, and the election would have been thrown into the House of Representatives, handing Donald Trump another four years in the Oval Office. If Biden’s national popular vote had been 3% rather than 4.4%, Trump probably would have prevailed outright in the Electoral College.

The explanation is familiar but bears repeating: because Democrats are highly concentrated in a handful of states, Democratic candidates win these states by huge margins that do not improve their prospects in the Electoral College. Biden won the five states with the largest Democratic edge in the popular vote by a total of 11.3 million votes. By contrast, Trump won the five states with the largest Republican popular vote edge by only 3.0 million votes. Biden won California’s 55 electoral votes by 5.1 million popular votes, while Trump won Texas’s 38 EVs by only 600,000.

Whatever the moral arguments in favor of electing presidents by national popular vote, a constitutional change of this magnitude will not occur anytime soon, if ever. In the meantime, Democrats must play the hand they have been dealt. Presidential elections will be won or lost in the Electoral College, and — fair or not — some states have more impact than others in determining who wins. This reality does not please progressives, many of whom come from solidly blue states, and it often eludes Democratic activists who hail from deep blue states. But unless they want to spend their careers in a minority party, they must acknowledge the need to win swing states — and the political implications of this necessity.

We cannot rule out the possibility that one of the two political parties will run an unappealing candidate with an unpopular message, creating a surge of support for the other major party candidate. Nor can we rule out a national crisis of some sort that results in a one-time rejection of the incumbent party. Such crises occurred in 2008 at the onset of the Great Recession, and in 2020 with the onset of the COVID pandemic. But until one political party breaks the stalemate and forges an enduring national majority, close elections will remain the rule, swing voters in swing states will remain the key to victory, and grandiose interpretations of victory will prove to be hollow if not downright dangerous.

SWING STATES, SWING VOTERS

If swing voters in swing states are the key to victory, we must understand what and who they are. Table Five, which compares outcomes in 2016 and 2020 for states decided by 10 percentage points or less in 2016, helps identify the analytical questions.

 

 

As we see in Table Six, Biden moved five crucial states from the Republican to the Democratic column by making large gains among swing voters in the heart of the electorate, especially moderates and independents.

Consistent with these developments, Biden increased the Democratic share of the suburban vote, where moderates and independents are dense on the ground, from 45% in 2016 to 54% in 2020 while failing to improve on Hillary Clinton’s dismal showing in rural areas, where conservative voters cluster.[25]

Unfortunately, recent surveys indicate that during his first year in office, Biden has surrendered these gains. For example, an Economist/YouGov survey conducted in February 2022 found that only 46% of moderates and a dismal 30% of independents approve of Biden’s performance as president.[26] The outcome of the Virginia gubernatorial race points in the same direction.  According to an analysis by the Democratic Governors Association, while Joe Biden won Virginia’s independents by 17 points, Terry McAuliffe lost them by 10.[27]

A recent report from the Pew Research Center offers addition evidence of substantial losses in the center of the electorate.[28]

In early 2021, when public approval for President Biden was at its peak, support among independent voters who say they “lean” toward the Democrats was nearly as high as among voters who identify as Democrats, and differences between strong and not-strong Democrats were insignificant. Since then, the gap between these groups has widened significantly. While the president’s ratings among Democrats have declined by 19 percentage points (from 95% to 76%), they have declined by 32 percentage points among “leaners.” A similar gap has opened between those who say they are “strong” and “not strong” Democrats.

Other findings from the Pew study show that differences among these three groups of Democratic supporters are closely correlated with ideology. The erosion of support for Biden has been greatest among not-strong Democrats and independents leaning Democratic, groups in which conservatives and moderates outnumber liberals.

Other survey data support Pew’s findings. For example, compare two polls conducted by the Economist and YouGov, the first in mid-March of 2021,[29] the second in the third week of January 2022.[30]

 

If the next presidential election were held tomorrow, these losses in the center of the electorate mean that Biden would lose all the swing states he moved from the Republican to the Democratic column in 2020, setting the stage for an Electoral College defeat.

But what about Donald Trump?  Will the voters who switched from Trump to Biden in 2020 vote to return a uniquely destabilizing and divisive figure to the Oval Office? No one knows for sure, of course, but recent surveys are not reassuring. Two recent surveys placed the current and former president in a dead heat, and the most respected Iowa poll found Trump leading Biden by 11 points in the Buckeye State, 3 points better than Trump did in the 2020 election. Democrats dare not assume that Trump’s conduct as president (and afterwards) has made him unelectable.

Our conclusion: Despite intense partisan polarization, swing voters form the heart of the electorate in swing states, and Democrats cannot win without them. Reversing losses among moderate and independent voters will be key indicators of success between now and the 2024 election.

IV. THE PATH AHEAD: RENEWING THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY 

It is beyond our power to offer a comprehensive plan to win the 2024 election and defeat the threat Donald Trump poses to constitutional democracy. But we can make a start. Simply stated, Democrats need an agenda that advances their policy aims in a manner that a majority of Americans can support, and they need an operating manual to ensure that bad execution does not undermine good intentions.

A. The agenda
Economics for the kitchen table

In a rapidly changing economic environment, unexpected events often outrun specific policy recommendations. Still, we can offer some guidelines for the Democrats’ long-term agenda.

The American people favor policies that expand opportunity and mobility while protecting them against negative economic developments with which individuals and families cannot cope on their own. And they favor fairness, including asking corporations and wealthy individuals to contribute more to build an economy that works for all, not just a favored few. They do not favor limited government as Republicans have long defined it, they want protection against the excesses and inadequacies of the market, but they do not want socialism. The administration should offer policies within this framework, and it should defend them by appealing to these widely held values.  In addition, the administration should:

 

  • Make it clear that the party pursues growth that is both inclusive and non-inflationary. In current circumstances, this means fully funding new programs with revenues that match the pace of outlays. Until inflation has been brought under control, a policy of “Buy now, pay later” would be irresponsible.

 

  • Invest in programs that increase supply — including labor supply — for the long-term. This includes legislation to boost domestic production of computer chips to programs, such as universal pre-K, that help potential workers — especially women — return to the paid labor force.

 

  • Focus less on omnibus bills known mainly for their price-tag and more on targeted legislation whose benefits for average families can be explained briefly and persuasively.

 

  • Design benefit programs that aid people who need assistance, not those who don’t. Policies that help families making $400,000 or more per year are hard to justify and even harder to pay for.

 

National security in a new era

During the Obama administration, it became fashionable to assert that conflicts among nations were giving way to transnational threats such climate change, mass migration, and nuclear proliferation. Progressives welcomed this shift on the grounds that transnational problems required international cooperation rather than competition that required expensive armed forces and sometimes led to war. We need to shift away from “an artificially constructed system of 195 countries,” says a leading proponent of this view, and “put people first,” wherever they may live.[31]

Unfortunately for progressives, reality has not conformed to their aspirations. A new axis of autocracy now stretches from the Baltic to the Pacific, and a new era of great power competition has begun. Presidents, regardless of party, will be judged by how they meet its challenges. A Russian takeover of Ukraine would be debited to Joe Biden’s account, as would a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.

After two decades of unending war, the American people do not want another one. But neither do they want to endure defeat and national humiliation.  President Biden must do his best to preserve our vital interests by deterring our adversaries from committing acts of aggression.

But deterrence is not cheap. Progressives were dismayed when mainstream Democrats added $25 billion to the president’s defense budget request. This probably won’t be the last time. In current circumstances, it would be irresponsible to use reductions in the defense budget to fund domestic programs, a perennial progressive strategy. Deterring aggression in both Europe and the Asia-Pacific region may well require spending more than the 3.7% of GDP that we now devote to national defense.

After a year in office, 63% of Americans — including 59% of moderates, 65% of suburban residents, 75% of independents, and 59% of Hispanics — see President Biden as a weak leader.[32] Another major national security reverse on top of his chaotic exit from Afghanistan, would reinforce this belief, undermining his party’s credibility as well as his own. He cannot allow this to happen, which means that he will have to face down Democrats who do not want to do what is needed to prevent it.

Social issues in a culturally moderate country

As we have argued through this report, the progressive cultural agenda does not enjoy majority support and weakens Democrats’ electoral prospects whenever it is seen as the dominant force within the party. On all these issues, however, there is an honorable middle ground that enjoys wide public support. Most Americans favor both humane treatment for immigrants, including a path to citizenship for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients or DREAMers and other longtime residents, along with vigorous enforcement to secure our border. Most Americans don’t want fewer police; they want better police, along with reforms that hold bad cops responsible and weeds them out. Most Americans favor teaching both the positive and negative sides of our history, including slavery and racial discrimination, but they will not tolerate pedagogy they see as dividing students along racial and ethnic lines. And they favor keeping the schools open for their children as we recover from the COVID pandemic.

During the 2020 campaign, Joe Biden understood these distinctions. He made sure that slogans such as “Defund the police” and “Abolish ICE” were excluded from the party’s platform. He was willing to draw lines when necessary. More recently, he met with Eric Adams, the new mayor of New York City, to underscore his agreement with Adams’ support for both strong policing and police reforms. “The answer is not to defund the police,” Biden said. “It’s to give you the tools, the training, the funding to be partners, to be protectors. The community needs you.”[33] And on February 13, House Speaker went on national television to emphasize that defunding the police was not the position of the Democratic Party and that “public safety is our responsibility.”[34]

These statements represent an important return to the balanced stance President Biden adopted during the 2020 election.  But neither he nor the party can afford to stop there. Led by the president, Democrats must embrace defensible positions on other social issues — from immigration to the role of parents in public education — that the center of the electorate can accept.

Articulating these positions will cause some strains within the party’s coalition, but there is no alternative. While the president’s desire to preserve party unity is understandable, he cannot afford to do so at the cost of weakening his prospects in 2024. As Terry McAuliffe discovered, social issues often arouse intense passions. By seeking to sidestep Critical Race Theory rather than confronting the political challenge, he allowed himself to become associated with a way of thinking that the majority of his state could not accept. Because Joe Biden may be the last man between Donald Trump and the Oval Office, he cannot afford to repeat this mistake.

B. Implementing the agenda: some notes for the operating manual

In government as in other important activities, it’s not only what you do, but how you do it — and how you talk about it. Implementation failures can undermine parties and presidencies, and communication failures can create barriers to public understanding and acceptance of key policies. Many Americans identify confusing and conflicting advice from public health officials as a core defect of the administration’s pandemic policies.[35] In this spirit, we offer President Biden some operational advice.

How you do it: Pay attention to how your government runs

President George W. Bush suffered greatly from the mess that was the federal government’s response to Hurricane Katrina and from failing to develop an effective plan for Iraq after the U.S. invasion succeeded. President Obama suffered from the crashing of the Affordable Care Act health care marketplace websites and from the scandal at the Veterans Administration that resulted in the deaths of several veterans for lack of timely care. Both presidents suffered these implementation failures in their second terms, and both were succeeded by presidents of the opposite party. As President Harry Truman famously said, “The buck stops here.” Because Democrats have been the party of government ever since the New Deal, every failure that befalls the party of government hurts it even more than it hurts Republicans.

The chaotic Afghanistan withdrawal was a major implementation failure from which President Biden has yet to recover, and his plans for overcoming the pandemic have suffered from over-promising, shifting tactics, and unclear communications.  Between now and 2024, Biden and his senior officials must pay more attention to the nitty-gritty of implementation.  For example, the distribution of infrastructure funds must be efficient and scandal-free, immigration policy must deploy personnel and resources to adjudicate refugees claims quickly and fairly, and pandemic policy must do a better job of anticipating problems such as new COVID variants and shortages of home-based tests.

CONCLUSION

A remarkable scene took place in Congress on January 6, 2022. Accompanied by his daughter, Representative Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), former Vice President Richard Cheney came to the floor of the House for ceremonies in remembrance of the attacks on the Capitol the year before. One by one, Democrats warmly greeted the former vice president, whom they had reviled little more than a decade earlier for his role in fomenting the ill-fated Iraq War.

The stakes had changed. Following his daughter’s lead, Dick Cheney had become one of the few Republicans speaking out firmly against the threat to democracy that the Trump-dominated Republican Party had come to represent. Saving constitutional government is a paramount goal that overrides policy differences, however deep.

In these extraordinary times, only a Democratic president stands between Trump and the Oval Office. It is the president’s duty to do everything he can to win the 2024 election. There is no greater cause. To do so will require subordinating everything else to this goal — and bringing the Democratic Party along. This will not be easy, but the alternative is defeat — and the further erosion of American democracy.

 

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ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

William A. Galston is a contributing author for the Progressive Policy Institute. He holds the Ezra Zilkha Chair in the Brookings Institution’s Governance Studies Program, where he is a Senior Fellow. A participant in six presidential campaigns, Galston served from 1993 to 1995 as Deputy Assistant to President Clinton for Domestic Policy.  He previously served as professor and acting dean at the University of Maryland’s school of public affairs and founded the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) in 2001.

Galston is the author of ten books and more than 100 articles in the fields of political theory, public policy, and American politics.  His most recent book is Anti-Pluralism: The Populist Threat to Liberal Democracy. A winner of the American Political Science Association’s Hubert H. Humphrey Award, he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2004.  He writes a weekly column for the Wall Street Journal.

 

Elaine C . Kamarck is a contributing author for the Progressive Policy Institute. She is a Senior Fellow in the Governance Studies program as well as the Director of the Center for Effective Public Management at the Brookings Institution. Elaine is an expert on American electoral politics and government innovation and reform in the United States, OECD nations, and developing countries. She focuses her research on the presidential nomination system and American politics and has worked in many American presidential campaigns. Kamarck is the author of Primary Politics: Everything You Need to Know about How America Nominates Its Presidential Candidates” and Why Presidents Fail And How They Can Succeed Again.” She is also the author of “How Change Happens—or Doesn’t: The Politics of US Public Policy” and “The End of Government-As We Know It: Making Public Policy Work.”

Kamarck is also a Lecturer in Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. She started at the Kennedy School in 1997 after a career in politics and government. She has been a member of the Democratic National Committee and the DNC’s Rules Committee since 1997. She has participated actively in four presidential campaigns and in ten nominating conventions—including two Republican conventions—and has served as a superdelegate to five Democratic conventions. In the 1980s, she was one of the founders of the New Democrat movement that helped elect Bill Clinton president. She served in the White House from 1993 to 1997, where she created and managed the Clinton Administration’s National Performance Review, also known as the “reinventing government initiative.”

 


 

RESOURCES:

1. William Galston and Elaine Ciulla Kamarck, “The Politics of Evasion: Democrats and the Presidency,” Progressive Policy
Institute, September 1989, https://www.progressivepolicy.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Politics_of_Evasion.pdf.
2. Ronald Brownstein, “Democrats Are Losing the Culture Wars,” The Atlantic, December 9, 2021, https://www.theatlantic.
com/politics/archive/2021/12/democrats-lose-culture-war/620887/.
3. Doug Sosnik, “A Look Ahead to the 2022 Midterm Elections and Beyond,” The Brunswick Group, December 15, 2021.
4. For similar arguments, forcefully presented, see Ruy Teixeira, https://thedemocraticstrategist.org/_memos/SM_Teixeira_
Not_Build_Coalition.pdf.
5. Yair Ghitza and Jonathan Robinson, “What Happened in 2020,” Catalist, https://catalist.us/wh-national/.
6. “Behind Biden’s 2020 Victory,” Pew Research Center, June 30, 2021, https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/06/30/
behind-bidens-2020-victory/.
7. Economist/YouGov survey, February 12-15, 2022, https://docs.cdn.yougov.com/mfe5ie0pbd/econTabReport.pdf.
8. Economist/YouGov survey, December 12-14, 2021, https://docs.cdn.yougov.com/pnu6yfcz0j/econTabReport.pdf.
9. This refers to the 2004 book by Thomas Frank of that name.
10. For a compelling interpretation of the 2016 election along these lines, see John Sides, Michael Tesler, and Lynn Vavreck,
Identity Crisis and the Battle for the Meaning of America (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2018).
11. “Donald Trump’s Presidential Announcement Speech,” Time, June 16, 2015, https://time.com/3923128/donald-trumpannouncement-speech/.
12. Lydia Saad, “U.S. Political Ideology Steady; Conservatives, Moderates Tie,” Gallup, January 17, 2022, https://news.gallup.
com/poll/388988/political-ideology-steady-conservatives-moderates-tie.aspx.
13. Pat Canny, “A Five Party America,” Medium (Half Baked Fixes, September 30, 2021), https://medium.com/market-failures/
a-five-party-america-6436f0f8d4b6.
14. For a parallel argument, see Ezra Klein, “David Shor Is Telling Democrats What They Don’t Want to Hear,” New York Times,
October 8, 2021, https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/08/opinion/democrats-david-shor-education-polarization.html.
15. Pew Research Center, “Behind Biden’s 2020 Victory,” https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/06/30/behind-bidens2020-victory/.
16. The situation is mirrored on the other side of the aisle, where a generation has come of age never having to understand
the trials and tribulations of transgender persons or the persistent racism that so many Americans live with every day.
Just as left-wingers vilify centrists as corporate Democrats, right wingers vilify their center as RINOs (Republicans in
Name Only.)
17. Rashawn Ray, “What Does ‘Defund the Police’ Mean and Does It Have Merit?,” Brookings, June 19, 2020, https://www.
brookings.edu/blog/fixgov/2020/06/19/what-does-defund-the-police-mean-and-does-it-have-merit/.
18. “Minnesota Poll Results: Minneapolis Policing and Public Safety Charter Amendment,” Star Tribune, September 18,
2021, https://www.startribune.com/minnesota-poll-public-safety-minneapolis-police-crime-charter-amendment-ballotquestion/600097989/.
References
THE NEW POLITICS OF EVASION: HOW IGNORING SWING VOTERS COULD REOPEN
THE DOOR FOR DONALD TRUMP AND THREATEN AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
P24
19. Matthew Brown, “Democratic Whip James Clyburn: ‘Defund the Police’ Cost Democrats Seats, Hurt Black Lives Matter
Movement,” USA Today, November 9, 2020, https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/11/08/james-clyburndefund-police-cost-democrats-seats-hurt-black-lives-matter/6216371002/.
20. E.J. Dionne and William A. Galston, “Socialism: A Short Primer,” Brookings, May 13, 2019, https://www.brookings.edu/blog/
fixgov/2019/05/13/socialism-a-short-primer/.
21. Sarah Ferris and Ally Mutnick, “GOP Culture War Attacks ‘Alarmingly Potent,’ DCCC Warns,” Politico, February 15, 2022,
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/02/15/gop-culture-war-attacks-alarmingly-potent-dccc-warns-00009265.
22. Ryan Lizza and Rachael Bade, “Politico Playbook: Exclusive Poll: Answers to the Midterm’s 2 Big Questions,” Politico,
February 16, 2022, https://www.politico.com/newsletters/playbook/2022/02/16/exclusive-poll-answers-to-the-midterms2-big-questions-00009342?cid=hptb_primary_0.
23. Pew Research Center, “Behind Biden’s 2020 Victory,” https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/06/30/behind-bidens2020-victory/.
24. A recent Economist/YouGov poll (https://docs.cdn.yougov.com/npwlx2cq4r/econTabReport.pdf) found that President
Biden’s job approval stands at 46% among moderates, 30% among independents, 36% among Hispanics, 38% among
suburban voters, and 27% among whites without four-year degrees — all significantly lower than the share of their voters
Biden received in the 2020 election.
25. “Behind Biden’s 2020 Victory.”
26. Economist/YouGov survey, February 5-8, 2022, https://docs.cdn.yougov.com/npwlx2cq4r/econTabReport.pdf.
27. Democratic Governors Association, “What happened in Virginia and what we can learn from it heading into 2022,”
December 20, 2021.
28. “Biden Enters Year Two Facing Diminished Support, Daunting Challenges,” Pew Research Center, January 25, 2022, https://
www.pewresearch.org/politics/2022/01/25/biden-starts-year-two-with-diminished-public-support-and-a-daunting-list-ofchallenges/.
29. Economist/YouGov survey, March 13-17, 2021, https://docs.cdn.yougov.com/bajzsg3506/econTabReport.pdf.
30. Economist/YouGov survey, January 22-25, 2022, https://docs.cdn.yougov.com/w6rek2s6zg/econTabReport.pdf.
31. Anne-Marie Slaughter, “It’s time to get honest about the Biden doctrine” The New York Times, November 12, 2021, https://
www.nytimes.com/2021/11/12/opinion/biden-foreign-policy.html.
32. Economist/YouGov survey, January 22-25, 2022.
33. Mike Memoli, “Biden Rolls out Election-Year Crime Messaging in New York,” NBC News, February 3, 2022, https://www.
nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/biden-roll-out-election-year-crime-messaging-new-york-n1288516.
34. David Cohen, “‘Defund the Police’ Is Not the Policy of the Democratic Party, Pelosi Says,” Politico, February 13, 2022,
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/02/13/pelosi-defund-police-democrats-00008449.
35. Having said this, we rejected the claim that the main problem facing the Democrats today is poor “messaging.” The real
problem lies in the substance and ideological profile of its agenda. For a clear expression of this view, see Dan Pfeiffer on
the Democratic brand: Sean Illing, “Why Good Messaging Won’t Save Democrats,” Vox, January 31, 2022, https://www.vox.
com/vox-conversations-podcast/2022/1/31/22869091/democrats-messaging-dan-pfeiffer-midterms-2022.

Marshall for The Hill: How Biden Can Get His Presidency Back on Course

By Will Marshall

President Biden’s fall from political grace has been swift and steep. He began 2021 basking in the gratitude and approval of a solid majority of Americans and ended it only marginally less unpopular than former President Donald Trump.

What happened? Last week Biden blamed Republican obstructionism, marveling that not one voted for the $1.9 trillion bill Congress passed last March to fight the pandemic and speed the economic recovery. He’s also had to endure non-stop political sabotage by Trump, who in refusing to accept the voters’ thumbs down in 2020 has shredded yet another vital norm of American democracy.

Nonetheless, the White House missed an important opportunity in not making more of the president’s big bipartisan breakthrough — passing the first major infrastructure bill in decades. Instead, they attempted to use it as leverage in an unsuccessful bid to pressure dissident Senate Democrats into supporting the strictly partisan reconciliation bill.

Read the full piece in The Hill.

Marshall for The Hill: Can France turn back the nationalist tide?

By Will Marshall

Brexit is done and U.S. voters have fired Donald Trump, but the neo-nationalist uprising that gave rise to both continues to shake up transatlantic politics. No country has seen its traditional political order more thoroughly fractured than France.

President Emmanuel Macron, who is running for reelection next spring, leads a centrist party he created in a tour de force of political improvisation after leaving the Socialist Party shortly before his 2017 election. Long France’s leading party of the left, the Socialists have been decimated. Their presidential candidate, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, barely registers in the polls with about 4 percent support.

The wild card in the race is Eric Zemmour, a political neophyte many observers are calling the French Trump. He is a writer and television pundit whose best-selling book, “Le Suicide Francais,” contends that immigration, globalization and a fast-growing Muslim minority represent fundamental threats to French values and culture.

Read the full piece in The Hill. 

Ritz for Forbes: ‘Temporary’ Programs Threaten The Success Of Build Back Better

By Ben Ritz

As the U.S. Senate postpones its vote on the Build Back Better Act (BBBA) into next year, it’s becoming increasingly clear that lawmakers’ attempt to enact almost every major program proposed by President Biden on a temporary basis — rather than prioritize a few key programs or find enough revenue to sustainably finance all of his proposed programs permanently — threatens both the bill’s prospects for passage and the success of its core initiatives should the bill become law. Democrats must rethink and revise this approach to address the most urgent national needs and secure a successful legacy for President Joe Biden.

The problem became clear last week in part thanks to a new estimate from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, which suggested that the policies in the House-passed version of the BBBA would cost over $4.7 trillion between now and 2031 if none of them are allowed to expire before then. CBO’s analysis has given pause to Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who has consistently said he would only commit to supporting a bill that increases federal spending by no more than $1.5 trillion over the next decade and fully covers offsets the additional cost. Manchin holds the crucial 50th vote needed to pass any bill through the Senate without Republican support, so the bill cannot move forward until his concerns are addressed.

Read the full piece in Forbes. 

Marshall in The Atlantic: Democrats Are Losing the Culture Wars

Democrats Are Losing the Culture Wars

By Ronald Brownstein, for The Atlantic 

Read the full piece here. 

Maybe Bill Clinton got a few things right after all.

For years, Democrats have rarely cited Clinton and the centrist New Democrat movement he led through the ’90s except to renounce his “third way” approach to welfare, crime, and other issues as a violation of the party’s principles. Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, and even Bill Clinton himself have distanced themselves from key components of his record as president.

But now a loose constellation of internal party critics is reprising the Clintonites’ core arguments to make the case that progressives are steering Democrats toward unsustainable and unelectable positions, particularly on cultural and social questions.

Just like the centrists who clustered around Bill Clinton and the Democratic Leadership Council that he led decades ago, today’s dissenters argue that Democrats risk a sustained exodus from power unless they can recapture more of the culturally conservative voters without a college education who are drifting away from the party. (That group, these dissenters argue, now includes not only white Americans but also working-class Hispanics and even some Black Americans.) And just as then, these arguments face fierce pushback from other Democrats who believe that the centrists would sacrifice the party’s commitment to racial equity in a futile attempt to regain right-leaning voters irretrievably lost to conservative Republican messages.

Today’s Democratic conflict is not yet as sustained or as institutionalized as the earlier battles. Although dozens of elected officials joined the DLC, the loudest internal critics of progressivism now are mostly political consultants, election analysts, and writers—a list that includes the data scientist David Shor and a coterie of prominent left-of-center journalists (such as Matthew Yglesias, Ezra Klein, and Jonathan Chait) who have popularized his work; the longtime demographic and election analyst Ruy Teixeira and like-minded writers clustered around the website The Liberal Patriot; and the pollster Stanley B. Greenberg and the political strategist James Carville, two of the key figures in Clinton’s 1992 campaign. Compared with the early ’90s, “the pragmatic wing of the party is more fractured and leaderless,” says Will Marshall, the president of the Progressive Policy Institute, a centrist think tank that was initially founded by the DLC but that has long outlived its parent organization (which closed its doors in 2011).

For now, these dissenters from the party’s progressive consensus are mostly shouting from the bleachers. On virtually every major cultural and economic issue, the Democrats’ baseline position today is well to the left of their consensus in the Clinton years (and the country itself has also moved left on some previously polarizing cultural issues, such as marriage equality). As president, Biden has not embraced all of the vanguard liberal positions that critics such as Shor and Teixeira consider damaging, but neither has he publicly confronted and separated himself from the most leftist elements of his party—the way Clinton most famously did during the 1992 campaign when he accused the hip-hop artist Sister Souljah of promoting “hatred” against white people. Only a handful of elected officials—most prominently, incoming New York City Mayor Eric Adams—seem willing to take a more confrontational approach toward cultural liberals, as analysts such as Teixeira are urging. But if next year’s midterm elections go badly for the party, it’s possible, even likely, that more Democrats will join the push for a more Clintonite approach. And that could restart a whole range of battles over policy and political strategy that seemed to have been long settled.

The Democratic Leadership Council was launched in February 1985, a few months after Ronald Reagan won 49 states and almost 60 percent of the popular vote while routing the Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale. From the start, Al From, a congressional aide who was the driving force behind the group, combatively defined the DLC as an attempt to steer the party toward the center and reduce the influence of liberal constituency groups, including organized labor and feminists.

The organization quickly attracted support from moderate Democratic officeholders, mostly in the South and West and also mostly white and male (critics derided the group alternately as the “white male caucus” or “Democrats for the Leisure Class”). After moving cautiously in its first years, the DLC shifted to a more aggressive approach and found a larger audience following Michael Dukakis’s loss to George H. W. Bush in 1988. Losing to a generational political talent like Reagan amid a booming economic recovery was one thing, but when the gaffe-prone Bush beat Dukakis, who had moved to the center on economics, by portraying him as weak on crime and foreign policy, more Democrats responded to the DLC’s call for change. “That’s when it clicked in brains that we just don’t have an offer [to voters] that can sustain majority support around the country,” Marshall, who worked for the DLC since its founding, told me.

The DLC responded to its larger audience by releasing what would become the enduring mission statement of the New Democrat movement. In September 1989, the Progressive Policy Institute, the think tank the DLC had formed a few months earlier, published a lengthy paper called “The Politics of Evasion.”

The paper’s authors, William Galston and Elaine Kamarck, were two Democratic activists with a scholarly bent, but on this occasion they wrote with a blowtorch. In the paper, they dismantled the common excuses for the party’s decline: bad tactics, unusually charismatic opponents, and the failure to mobilize enough nonvoters. Dukakis’s defeat meant that Democrats had lost five of the six previous presidential elections, averaging only 43 percent of the popular vote, and the party, Galston and Kamarck argued, needed to face the dire implications of that record. “Too many Americans,” they wrote, “have come to see the party as inattentive to their economic interests, indifferent if not hostile to their moral sentiments and ineffective in defense of their national security.”

The party had veered off course, they argued, because it had become dominated by “minority groups and white elites—a coalition viewed by the middle class as unsympathetic to its interests and its values.” Unless Democrats could reverse the perception among those middle-class voters that they too were profligate in spending and too permissive on social issues such as crime and welfare, the party was unlikely to win them back, even if a Republican president mismanaged the economy or Democrats convincingly tarred Republicans as favoring the wealthy. “All too often the American people do not respond to a progressive economic message, even when Democrats try to offer it, because the party’s presidential candidates fail to win their confidence in other key areas such as defense, foreign policy, and social values,” Galston and Kamarck wrote. “Credibility on these issues is the ticket that will get Democratic candidates in the door to make their affirmative economic case.”

The only way to prove to these disaffected middle-class voters that the party had changed, the pair suggested, was for centrists to publicly pick a fight with liberals. “Only conflict and controversy over basic economic, social, and defense issues are likely to attract the attention needed to convince the public that the party still has something to offer,” they declared.

Bill Clinton, who took over as DLC chairman a few months after “The Politics of Evasion” was published, “devoured these analyses of the Democrats’ difficulties as if they were so many French fries,” as Dan Balz and I wrote in our 1996 book, Storming the Gates. Clinton sanded down some of the sharpest edges of these ideas and adapted them into the folksy, populist style he had developed while repeatedly winning office in Arkansas, a state dominated by culturally conservative, mostly non-college-educated white Americans. But the basic prescription of the Democratic dilemma that Galston and Kamarck had identified remained a compass for him throughout his 1992 presidential campaign and eventually his presidency.

After a quarter century of futility, Clinton’s reformulation of the traditional Democratic message restored the party’s ability to compete for the White House. But after he left office, more Democrats came to view his approach as an unprincipled concession to white conservatives, particularly on issues such as crime and welfare. Compared with Clinton, Barack Obama generally pursued a much more liberal course, especially on social issues and especially as his presidency proceeded. Hillary Clinton, in her 2016 primary campaign, felt compelled to renounce decisions from her husband’s presidency on trade, LGBTQ rights, and crime (though not welfare reform). Similarly, in the 2020 primary race, Biden distanced himself from both the 1994 crime bill (which he had steered through the Senate) and welfare reform, without fully repudiating either. Even Bill Clinton, in a 2015 appearance before the NAACP, apologized for elements of the crime bill, which he acknowledged had contributed to the era of mass incarceration. With the DLC having folded a decade earlier, the PPI enduring only as a shadow of its earlier size and prominence, and other centrist organizations raising relatively fewer objections to the Democratic Party’s course, the rejection of Clintonism and the ascent of progressivism appeared complete as Biden took office.

Eleven tumultuous months later, the neo–New Democrats have emerged as arguably the loudest cluster of opposition to the party’s direction since the DLC’s heyday. But so far, the new critics of liberalism have not produced a critique of the party’s failures or a blueprint for its future as comprehensive as “The Politics of Evasion.” David Shor, a young data analyst and pollster who personally identifies as a democratic socialist, has promoted his ideas primarily through interviews with sympathetic journalists (taking criticism along the way for failing to document some of his assertions about polling results). Ruy Teixeira and his allies have advanced similar ideas in greater depth through essays primarily in their Substack project, The Liberal Patriot. Stan Greenberg, the pollster, summarized his approach in an extensive recent polling report on how to improve the party’s performance with working-class voters that he conducted along with firms that specialize in Hispanic (Equis Labs) and Black (HIT Strategies) voters.

These analysts don’t always agree with one another. But they do overlap on key points that echo central conclusions from “The Politics of Evasion.” Like Galston and Kamarck a generation ago, Shor, Teixeira, and Greenberg all argue that economic assistance alone won’t recapture voters who consider Democrats out of touch with their values on social and cultural issues. (Today’s critics don’t worry as much as the DLC did about the party appearing weak on national security.) “The more working class voters see their values as being at variance with the Democratic party brand,” Teixeira wrote recently in a direct echo of “Evasion,” “the less likely it is that Democrats will see due credit for even their measures that do provide benefits to working class voters.”

Also like Galston and Kamarck, Shor and Teixeira in particular argue that Democrats have steered off track on cultural issues because the party is unduly influenced by the preferences of well-educated white liberals. Like the pugnacious DLC founder Al From during the 1980s, Teixeira believes that Democrats can’t convince swing voters that the party is changing unless they publicly denounce activists advocating for positions such as defunding the police and loosening immigration enforcement at the border. Several Never Trump Republicans fearful that Biden’s faltering poll numbers will allow a Donald Trump revival have offered similar advice. (Shor also believes that Democrats must move to the center on cultural issues but he’s suggested that the answer is less to pick fights within the party than to simply downplay those issues in favor of economics, where the party’s agenda usually has more public support, an approach that has been described as “popularism.” “On the social issues, you want to take the median position,” he told me, “but really the game is that our positions are so unpopular, we have to do everything we can to keep them out of the conversation. Period.”)

In all this, the critics are excavating arguments from the Clinton/DLC era that had been either repudiated or simply forgotten in recent years. Teixeira sees a “family resemblance” between his views and the case that Galston and Kamarck developed. Shor has more explicitly linked his critique to those years. “When I first started working on the Obama campaign in 2012, I hated all the last remnants of the Clinton era,” Shor told one interviewer. “There was an old conventional wisdom to politics in the ’90s and 2000s that we all forget … We’ve told ourselves very ideologically convenient stories about how those lessons weren’t relevant … and it turned out that wasn’t true. I see what I’m doing as rediscovering the ancient political wisdom of the past.”

When I spoke with him this week, Shor argued that his generation had incorrectly discarded lessons about holding the center of the electorate understood by Democrats of Clinton’s era, and even through the early stages of Obama’s presidency. The electorate today, he said, is less conservative than in Clinton’s day but more conservative than most Democrats want to admit. “It took me a long time to accept this, because it was very ideologically against what I wanted to be true, but the reality is, the way to win elections is to go against your party and to seem moderate,” Shor said. “I like to tell people that symbolic and ideological moderation are not just helpful but actually are the only things that matter to a big degree.”

As Teixeira told me, most of today’s critics reject the Clinton/DLC economic approach, which stressed deficit reduction, free trade, and deregulation in some areas, such as financial markets. Even the most conservative congressional Democrats, such as Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, have signaled that they will accept far more spending in Biden’s Build Back Better agenda than Clinton ever might have contemplated. Shor remains concerned that Democrats could spark a backlash by moving too far to the left on spending, but overall, most in the party would agree with Teixeira when he says, “You don’t see that kind of ideological divide between tax-and-spend Democrats and the self-styled apostles of the market like you had back in those days.”

On social issues, too, the range of Democratic opinion has also moved substantially to the left since the Clinton years. No Democrat today is calling for resurrecting the harsh sentencing policies, particularly for drug offenses, that many in the party supported as crime surged in the late ’80s and ’90s. All but two House Democrats voted for sweeping police-reform legislation this year. Similarly, Biden and congressional Democrats have unified around a provision that would permanently provide an expanded child tax credit to parents without any earnings, even though some Republicans, such as Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, claim that that would violate the principle of requiring work in the welfare-reform legislation that Clinton signed in 1996. The Democratic consensus has also moved decisively to the left on other social issues that bitterly divided the party in the Clinton years, including gun control, LGBTQ rights, and a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.

All of these changes are rooted in the reconfiguration of the Democratic coalition and the broader electorate since the Clinton years. Compared with that era, Democrats today need fewer culturally conservative voters to win power. Roughly since the mid-’90s, white Americans without a college degree—the principal audience for the centrist critics—have fallen from about three-fifths of all voters to about two-fifths (give or take a percentage point or two, depending on the source). Over that same period, voters of color have nearly doubled, to about 30 percent of the total vote, and white voters with a college degree have ticked up to just above that level (again with slight variations depending on the source).

The change in the Democratic coalition has been even more profound. As recently as Clinton’s 1996 reelection, those non-college-educated white voters constituted nearly three-fifths of all Democrats, according to data from the Pew Research Center, with the remainder of the party divided about equally between college-educated white voters and minority voters. By 2020, the Democratic targeting firm Catalist, in its well-respected analysis of the election results, concluded that non-college-educated white Americans contributed only about one-third of Biden’s votes, far less than in 1996, only slightly more than white Americans with a college degree, and considerably less than people of color (who provided about two-fifths of Biden’s support). This ongoing realignment—in which Democrats have replaced blue-collar white voters who have shifted toward the GOP (particularly in small towns and rural areas) with minority voters and well-educated white voters clustered in the urban centers and inner suburbs of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas—has allowed the party to coalesce around a more uniformly liberal cultural agenda.

Shor, Teixeira, Greenberg, and like-minded critics now argue that this process has gone too far and that analysts (including me) who have highlighted the impact of demographic change on the electoral balance have underestimated the risks the Democratic Party faces from its erosion in white, non-college-educated support, especially in the Trump era. Although Democrats have demonstrated that they can reliably win the presidential popular vote with this new alignment—what I’ve called their “coalition of transformation”—the critics argue that the overrepresentation of blue-collar white voters across the Rust Belt, Great Plains, and Mountain West states means that Democrats will struggle to amass majorities in either the Electoral College or the Senate unless they improve their performance with those voters. Weakness with non-college-educated white voters outside the major metros also leaves Democrats with only narrow paths to a House majority, they argue. Shor has been the starkest in saying that these imbalances in the electoral system threaten years of Republican dominance if Democrats don’t regain some of the ground they have lost with working-class voters since Clinton’s time.

These arguments probably would not have attracted as much notice if they were focused solely on those non-college-educated white Americans who have voted predominantly for Republicans since the ’80s and whose numbers are consistently shrinking as a share of the electorate (both nationally and even in the key Rust Belt swing states) by two or three percentage points every four years. What really elevated attention to these critiques was Trump’s unexpectedly improved performance in 2020 among Hispanics and, to a lesser extent, Black Americans. The neo–New Democrats have taken that as evidence that aggressive social liberalism—such as calls for defunding the police—is alienating not only white voters but now nonwhite working-class voters.

If it lasts, such a shift among working-class voters of color could largely negate the advantage that Democrats have already received, and expect moving forward, from the electorate’s growing diversity. “You won’t benefit that much from the changing ethnic demographic mix of the country if these overwhelmingly noncollege, nonwhite [voters] start moving in the Republican direction, and that concentrates the mind,” Teixeira told me.

As in the DLC era, almost every aspect of the neo–New Democrats’ critique is sharply contested.

One line of dispute is about how much social liberalism contributed to Trump’s gains last year with Hispanic and Black voters. Polls, such as the latest American Values survey, by the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute, leave no question that a substantial share of Black and especially Hispanic voters express culturally conservative views. Greenberg says in his recent study that non-college-educated Hispanics and Black Americans, as well as blue-collar white voters, all responded to a tough populist economic message aimed at the rich and big corporations, but only after Democrats explicitly rejected defunding the police. “You just didn’t get there [with those voters] unless you were for funding and respecting, but reforming, the police as part of your message,” Greenberg told me. “The same way that in his era and time … welfare reform unlocked a lot of things for Bill Clinton, it may be that addressing defunding the police unlocks things in a way that is similar.”

Yet some other Democratic analysts are skeptical that socially liberal positions on either policing or immigration were the driving force of Trump’s gains with minority voters (apart, perhaps, from a localized role for immigration in Hispanic South Texas counties near the border). Stephanie Valencia, the president of the polling firm Equis Labs, told me earlier this year that Biden might have performed better with Hispanics if the campaign debate had focused more on immigration; she believes that Trump benefited because the dialogue instead centered so much on the economy, which gave conservative Hispanics who “were worried about a continued shutdown [due] to COVID” a “permission structure” to support him. Terrance Woodbury, the CEO of the polling and messaging firm HIT Strategies, similarly says that although Black voters largely reject messaging about defunding the police, they remain intently focused on addressing racial inequity in policing and other arenas—and that a lack of perceived progress on those priorities might be the greatest threat to Black Democratic turnout in 2022.

Other political observers remain dubious that Democrats can regain much ground with working-class white voters through the strategies that the neo–New Democrats are offering, especially when the Trump-era GOP is appealing to their racial and cultural anxieties so explicitly. Even if Democrats follow the critics’ advice and either downplay or explicitly renounce cutting-edge liberal ideas on policing and “cancel culture,” the party is still irrevocably committed to gun control, LGBTQ rights (including same-sex marriage), legalization for millions of undocumented immigrants, greater accountability for police, and legal abortion. With so many obstacles separating Democrats from blue-collar white voters, there’s “not a lot of room” for Democrats to improve their standing with those voters, says Alan Abramowitz, an Emory University political scientist who has extensively studied blue-collar attitudes.

Rather than chasing the working-class white voters attracted to Trump’s messages by shifting right on crime and immigration, groups focused on mobilizing the growing number of nonwhite voters, such as Way to Win, argue that Democrats should respond with what they call the “class-race narrative.” That approach directly accuses Republicans of using racial division to distract from policies that benefit the rich, a message these groups say can both motivate nonwhite intermittent voters and convince some blue-collar white voters. “We’re much better off calling [Republicans] out—scorning them for trying to use race to divide us so that the entrenched can keep their privileges—and laying out a bold populist reform agenda that actually impacts people across lines of race,” says Robert Borosage, a longtime progressive strategist who served as a senior adviser to Jesse Jackson when he regularly sparred with the DLC during his presidential campaigns and after.

For their part, first-generation New Democrats such as Galston and Marshall believe that the current round of critics is unrealistic to assume that neutralizing cultural issues would give the party a free pass to expand government spending far more than Clinton considered politically feasible. Too many Democrats “think it’s about the things government can do for you, but lots of working people of all races … want opportunity … They want a way to get ahead of their own effort,” Marshall told me.  Shor, unlike some of the other contemporary critics of progressivism, largely seconds that assessment. “There are things that people trust Republicans on and you have to neutralize those disadvantages by moving to the center on them, and that includes the size of government, that includes the deficit,” he said. “You have to make it seem that you care a lot about inflation, that you care a lot about the deficit, that you care about all of those things.”

Though Biden hasn’t directly engaged with these internal debates, in practice he’s landed pretty close to the critics’ formula. The president has overwhelmingly focused his time on trying to unify Democrats around the sweeping kitchen-table economic agenda embodied in his infrastructure and Build Back Better plans. He’s talked much less about social issues whether he’s agreeing with the left (as on many, though not all, of his approaches to the border) or dissenting from it (in his repeated insistence that he supports more funding, coupled with reform, for the police.) “I don’t know where his heart is on this stuff, but I think he’s a creature of the party and what he thinks is the party consensus,” Teixeira told me. “He doesn’t want to pick a fight.”

Yet despite Biden’s characteristic instinct to calm the waters, the debate seems destined to intensify around him. Galston, now a senior governance fellow at the Brookings Institution, has recently discussed with Kamarck writing an updated version of their manifesto. “Is there a basis for the kind of reflection and rethinking that was set in motion at the end of the 1980s? I think yes,” Galston told me. Meanwhile, organizations such as Way to Win are arguing that Democrats should worry less about recapturing voters drawn to Trump than mobilizing the estimated 91 million individuals who turned out to vote for the party in at least one of the 2016, 2018, and 2020 elections.

The one point on which both the neo–New Democrats and their critics most agree is that with so many Republicans joining Trump’s assault on the pillars of small-d democracy, the stakes in Democrats finding a winning formula are even greater today than they were when Clinton ran. “There’s a greater sense of urgency, I would say. Because if we had gotten it wrong in 1992, the country’s reward would have been George H. W. Bush, which wasn’t terrible at the time and in retrospect looks better,” Galston said. “This time if we get it wrong, the results of failure will be Donald Trump.”

Marshall for The Hill: Popping the progressive bubble

By Will Marshall

For Virginia Democrats like me, the odd-year elections earlier this month were like a gruesome coda to Halloween. Republicans swept the top three statewide offices, took over the House of Delegates and knocked the Old Dominion back into swing state status.

As painful as they were, however, the Democratic losses in Virginia and close shave in New Jersey have had one salutary effect: They seem to have popped the progressive bubble — the activist left’s claims, credulously accepted by many media commentators, to be the authentic voice and future of the Democratic Party.

Post-election analysis has highlighted the pitfalls for Democrats of heeding only that voice. The protracted battle in Washington over progressives’ big social spending demands has reinforced public doubts about President Biden. Republicans also made notable gains among parents angry over school closures, falling standards and academic “antiracism” theories promoted by progressive social justice warriors.

Read the full piece in the Hill.

Mortimer for Newsweek: The House’s SALT Cap Proposal Is Bad Policy and Bad Politics

The tax bill passed by Republicans in 2017 mostly made our tax code worse, increasing the federal debt by up to $2 trillion and delivering the bulk of its tax cuts to corporations and the rich. But the bill contained one very good, very progressive provision: capping the State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction at $10,000 per household. Unfortunately, House Democrats just made a proposal that would compound the GOP tax bill’s regressiveness: increasing the SALT cap and giving multimillionaires a $25,000 per year tax cut. The Senate must not follow their lead.

The SALT deduction has been around in some form for a long time, dating all the way back to the Civil War. It allows taxpayers to deduct what they pay in state and local income, property and sales taxes from their federal taxes. But not all taxpayers get to reap the benefits of the SALT deduction. Taxpayers must itemize their tax returns to be able to claim the SALT deduction—and only the richest taxpayers tend to itemize. Most taxpayers tend to take the standard deduction rather than itemize, unless they make at least $500,000 in a single year. And as one becomes richer, and consequently pays more in state and local taxes, the dollar benefit of the SALT deduction becomes larger.

Until the 2017 Republican tax bill capped the SALT deduction at $10,000, there was no limit on the amount that could be deducted. The cap amounted to a tax hike that applied almost exclusively to the richest Americans. It raises about $85 billion each year, 90 percent of which comes from the richest 10 percent of Americans.

Read the full op-ed in Newsweek.

Marshall for NYDN: Democrats Must Change Course: Here Are Four Steps to Right the Ship

By Will Marshall

The odd-year contests in Virginia and New Jersey often offer an early test of how voters think the incumbent president is doing and a foretaste of the public mood heading into the next year’s midterm elections. For Democrats, who did badly in both states last night, the message is clear: It’s time for a major course correction.

The Republican sweep of Virginia’s top offices, a year after President Biden’s 10-point victory there, was propelled by a host of factors. Former Gov. Terry McAuliffe ran a generally negative and uninspiring campaign focused mainly on trying to depict Republican Glenn Youngkin as a Donald Trump clone.

Read the full piece in the New York Daily News.

Marshall for The Hill: Remember, Democrats: Business isn’t the enemy

Republicans are following the Pied Piper of Mar-a-Lago down a twisted trail of sedition and anti-democratic extremism. That’s weakening the party’s historically strong bond with U.S. business leaders, who are appalled by former President Trump’s delusional bid to void the 2020 election, as well as a concerted push by red state officials to make it harder to vote, get a legal abortion or protect school children from unvaccinated adults.

In Texas, for example, leading local corporations such as American Airlines and Southwest Airlines are flouting Republican Governor Greg Abbott’s executive order banning private companies from requiring their workers to get COVID-19 vaccines, while iconic Georgia firms such as Coca Cola and Delta Airlines condemned the Republican legislature’s passage of a severely restrictive voting law last Spring.

The growing rift between business and a Trumpified GOP marinating in grievance and paranoia should be opening doors for Democrats. But they’ve got a business problem of their own, namely the high media profile of leftwing activists who are reflexively hostile to our largest and most successful companies.

Read the full piece in The Hill.

Marshall for The Hill: Progressives’ spending proposals are out of step with battleground voters

The House of Representatives is set to vote next week on President Biden’s bipartisan infrastructure bill. At stake is not just a stronger U.S. economy, but whether we still have a functioning democracy.

In normal times, this bill wouldn’t be controversial. Almost no one disputes the need for a major infusion of public investment in modernizing America’s transportation, water and other common goods that undergird U.S. economic innovation and competitiveness. That’s why the bill breezed through an otherwise polarized Senate on a 60-30 vote in August.

In the House, however, progressives are threatening to torpedo the bill unless they get a simultaneous vote on a “reconciliation” bill that would spend trillions more on social and climate programs. Critics have assailed this tactic as political hostage-taking, but it’s more like a murder-suicide pact, since progressives want a big infrastructure bill too.

But they’re apparently willing to sacrifice the infrastructure upgrade to gain political leverage over the growing ranks of moderate Democrats who, although they support many elements of the massive reconciliation bill, are balking at its $3.5 trillion price tag.

Read the full piece in The Hill

Battleground Voters Trust Biden to Improve the Economy, but Democrats Face Headwinds on Job Creation, Deficits and Competition  

As Democrats shape the reconciliation package, Congressional leaders must work to earn voter trust on jobs, debt and support for private enterprise

The Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) recently commissioned a national survey by Expedition Strategies of public attitudes in battleground 44 House districts and eight states likely to have competitive Senate races next year. This second report focuses on how these pivotal voters compare the two parties on jobs and the economy, tax and fiscal policy, and innovation, entrepreneurship and competition.

“Our findings provide crucial context for today’s debate – both between the parties and between the pragmatic and left wings of the Democratic Party – over the size, cost and financing of President Biden’s ambitious Build Back Better plans,” said PPI President Will Marshall.

“The good news is that battleground voters trust Biden and the Democrats more to improve the economy and deliver tax fairness,” he added. “But there are warning signs here on job creation, deficits and paying for public investment that Democrats should heed as they shape their big reconciliation package.”

The full memo on this exclusive polling can be found here. Here are some of the key takeaways:

 

    • Battleground voters trust President Biden (53%- 47%) and Congressional Democrats (52%-48%) more than Republicans to “improve the economy.”
    • They overwhelmingly believe that Republicans stand more for the wealthy (74%) and favor special interests (63%), while Democrats are seen as representing the poor (72%).
    • Although they want Biden to succeed, voters divide evenly on which party “knows how to create good jobs” and lean toward the GOP as the party that “knows how to strengthen the economy (52-48).
    • Republicans appear to have a structural advantage on helping companies be more innovative, working to create private sector jobs, strengthening the economy, and helping U.S. firms win the competition with China for economic and technological leadership.
    • Two-thirds of battleground voters say they are concerned that Democrats are too anti-business. This includes 73% of Independents and even 42% of Democrats.
    • Possibly as a result, voters are more likely to credit the GOP as the party striving to create private sector jobs (54-46).
    • Voters lean strongly toward the Democratic position on tax fairness, saying their top goal for tax policy is “making sure the wealthy and companies pay more in taxes.”
    • Voters also side with Democrats in supporting additional IRS funding to crack down on tax cheats and evaders.
    • Battleground voters favor more public investment to improve the economy over cutting taxes and regulations by a solid margin, 58-42. Republican supply side nostrums aren’t getting traction.
    • On the economy, voters say jobs, growth and rewarding work are more important goals than addressing inequality and fairness. Only 10% said “promoting fairness” should be the most important goal.
    • Battleground district and state voters rank deficits and debt as their second highest economic concern. By 88-12, they say the national debt is a “serious problem.” Independents, undecideds, and Hispanic voters strongly express this view.
    • By 80-20, voters say they are worried about the mounting debt burden on the young and working families. They also express strong concerns about inflation (74-26).
    • Voters are slightly more inclined to blame Democrats than Republicans for running up public debt (32-28). Similarly, they trust Republicans more than Democrats (32-28) to get the debt under control, but a plurality (40%) say they trust neither party.
    • These voters favor (53-47) taxing gains from capital and labor at the same level. However, they oppose capital gains hikes when they are presented as a way to finance public investment in infrastructure and child tax credits (54% opposed).

 

Read the poll here.

Last week, PPI released the first report on the poll, which focused on voter attitudes towards President Biden’s infrastructure plan and the social investment package Democrats hope to pass using the reconciliation process.

The Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) is a catalyst for policy innovation and political reform based in Washington, D.C. Its mission is to create radically pragmatic ideas for moving America beyond ideological and partisan deadlock. Learn more about PPI by visiting progressivepolicy.org.

Follow the Progressive Policy Institute.

 

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Marshall for NYDN: What the far left needs to learn: Work with, not against, other Democrats

This piece first appeared in the New York Daily News. Read it here.

Hailed by many credulous observers as the future of U.S. politics, the progressive left is on an epic losing streak. Democratic primary voters in Cleveland last week dealt the latest rebuff, choosing Joe Biden loyalist Shontel Brown over Nina Turner, a combative acolyte of Sen. Bernie Sanders, in the race to fill a vacant congressional seat.

Brown’s upset victory followed centrist Eric Adams’s comfortable win over the progressive favorite in New York City’s mayoral Democratic primary in June, as well as recent drubbings of leftist hopefuls in primaries in Virginia and Louisiana.

Progressives also stumbled in last year’s main event — the 2020 presidential nominating contest. It began amid lavish media coverage of the jockeying by Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, Julian Castro and Bill de Blasio for “more progressive than thou” honors. It ended with Biden, the unfashionable old party warhorse, coasting to the nomination on his way to a resounding victory over Donald Trump in November.

The country got a preview of the left’s narrow electoral appeal two years earlier, in the 2018 midterm. No doubt Democrats benefitted from activist energy, but they won back control of the House mainly by recruiting mainstream candidates who wrested 41 swing districts from Republicans. Sanders-style progressives fared badly.

The activist left was cheered by socialist India Walton’s victory in June’s Democratic primary for this fall’s mayoral race in Buffalo. Otherwise, the campaign by Sanders, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and her Squad and allied activist groups to refashion the Democratic Party in their image isn’t going very well. The insurgents keep stumbling over the same obstacle and, it’s not a monolithic party “establishment” that exists mostly in their imagination. It’s grassroots Democrats, anchored by Black and Brown working-class voters and moderate suburbanites.

These voters seem to like their party and share its pragmatically liberal outlook. Like Brown, they also trust Biden and want him to succeed. No wonder they are put off by Sanders’ monotonous railing against “corporate Democrats,” or AOC’s lament that she has to run in the same party as Biden, or Turner’s infamous crack that having to vote for Biden was like being forced to eat excrement.

Nonetheless, the party’s Jacobin faction keeps insisting that its ideas are popular, even if its candidates aren’t. That’s probably true in some deep blue urban districts, but across wider geographies, the progressive catechism clearly repels voters Democrats need to build majorities. A confident prediction: In competitive races next year, you won’t hear many Democrats running on nationalizing health care and abolishing private insurance; giving affluent kids a free ride to college; shutting down oil and gas production ASAP; defunding the police, or decriminalizing illegal immigration.

It’s true that Democrats have become more liberal since 2000, especially on social issues and government spending. Even so, the party remains a heterogeneous coalition about evenly balanced between self-identified liberals on the one hand and moderates and conservatives on the other.

To understand where that coalition’s true center of gravity lies, however, you also have to take into account its generational and class cleavages.

The activist left is overwhelming white, college-educated and urban. Older and working-class Black voters are more religious and socially moderate. “The median Black voter is not AOC and is actually closer to Eric Adams,” says Stanford political scientist Hakeem Jefferson. The picture is similar for Hispanic voters, as Democrats learned to their chagrin last November when Trump made unexpected gains among blue-collar men.

In an analysis of Americans’ ideological composition in presidential years going back to 1980, Brookings scholars Bill Galston and Elaine Kamarck note that one thing hasn’t changed: Self-identified liberals are still the smallest part of the U.S. electorate. They constituted 24% of the voters in 2020, compared to 38% each for conservatives and moderates. Nearly half of independent voters identify themselves as moderates.

Progressive pretensions to historic inevitability, based on America’s changing demographics, keep colliding with these electoral realities. The left has a choice to make: It can continue to hector Biden and the party to adopt purist positions that will make it difficult to win elections and govern. It can accept its role as an influential but not dominant part of a broad Democratic coalition that’s respected more for its passion and mobilizing energy than its often utopian ideas. Or it can turn Democratic Socialists of America into a real political party and try to win elections on its own.

For our country’s sake, let’s hope it’s option two. The Republicans, led by a vengeful sore loser, lacking any kind of unifying vision for the country, and stewing in paranoia and hatred of their political competitors, are incapable of governing the country.

It’s up to Democrats, working together, to right our ship of state.

Marshall is president of the Progressive Policy Institute.

Carolina Postcard: Will Pat McCrory Pop Trump’s Balloon?

Former Governor Pat McCrory is something of a political punching bag in North Carolina. But he could go from chump to champ in 2022 if he shatters the conventional wisdom that the state Republican Party belongs to Donald Trump.

In June, Trump endorsed Congressman Ted Budd in the 2022 Republican Senate primary. Conventional wisdom saw that as a mortal blow to McCrory.

But two Republican strategists in North Carolina – Paul Shumaker and Carter Wrenn – think McCrory, like Toto in The Wizard of Oz, might expose the man behind the curtain.

The Charlotte Observer reported that Shumaker, who is working with McCrory’s campaign, “released polling last month in a memo arguing that (Trump’s) endorsement might actually hurt a Republican’s chances in the general election.”

Noting that “the memo was not paid for or commissioned by the McCrory campaign,” the Observer said:

“Among the unaffiliated voters cited in Shumaker’s poll, 47% said they would prefer a candidate who pledged to help President Joe Biden’s agenda over one who voted against certifying the presidential election results…. Just 30% said they would prefer a candidate who voted against certifying the election, and 23 percent declined to answer.”

Budd voted against election certification, while McCrory said he would have voted to certify Biden as the winner. They’re running to succeed retiring Senator Richard Burr, who was one of seven Republicans who voted to convict Trump for inciting the January 6 riot at the Capitol.

The poll Shumaker cited said voters prefer a Biden-endorsed candidate over one endorsed by Trump by 49-39%. Shumaker wrote:

“When comparing a Trump endorsed candidate to a Biden endorsed candidate, (Republicans’) advantage with the Unaffiliated voters evaporates. Candidates for state and federal office at any level who are on the wrong side of these issues will alienate suburban voters and jeopardize Republicans’ chances of winning in 2022.”

Shumaker isn’t a disinterested source, of course. And his poll was about the general election, not the primary. But Carter Wrenn isn’t working for anybody, and he wrote in his blog about a national poll that found weakness in Trump’s support among Republicans:

“Half the Republican primary voters…said Trump’s endorsement didn’t matter to them; the rest split, some for Trump’s candidate, some against.”

Wrenn said “Texas’ Special Election confirmed the numbers didn’t lie.” Trump’s candidate lost a special congressional race there last month. Trump’s candidate won a special primary in Ohio, but that’s a safe Democratic seat.

Wrenn and Shumaker are both smart, veteran strategists – from different wings of the party. Shumaker is from the Burr/Jim Martin/Jim Broyhill tradition. Wrenn is from the more ideological Jesse Helms school.

McCrory, like Shumaker, came out of the Charlotte- and Western-based Chamber of Commerce, country-club, big-business wing. He was elected governor in 2012, when nobody imagined a President Trump. He lost reelection in 2016 even though Trump carried North Carolina.

McCrory’s GOP pretty much was the state party until 1972, when Richard Nixon and Jesse Helms began bringing in white voters who didn’t like the Democratic Party’s liberal tilt, especially on civil rights.

The party changed again in the 1980s with an influx of white evangelical Christians, led by Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority. They opposed abortion, and they wanted tax subsidies for all-white Christian academies.

Now the GOP has changed again as Trump has brought in displaced and disaffected working-class whites – as well as the neo-Nazi, QAnon, Confederate-flag-waving white supremacists like those who attacked the Capitol.

The Senate primary next year will tell us whether North Carolina Republicans are more at home with the Chamber of Commerce or with the Proud Boys.

 

Links:

Charlotte Observer story: https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/politics-government/article253118418.html

Carter Wrenn blog: https://talkingaboutpolitics.com/echoing-a-proverb/#.YQlW645KiM8

Texas primary: https://www.texastribune.org/2021/07/27/susan-wright-jake-ellzey-texas-6-congressional-seat/ 

Rep. Joe Courtney and Hon Ed Husic MP of the Australian Labor Party Join Joint PPI and McKell Institute Event on Tech, Civic Integrity, and Democracy 

Last night, the Progressive Policy Institute, based in Washington, D.C., and the McKell Institute, based in Sydney, Australia, hosted an event focused on global technology and democracy, featuring U.S. Representative Joe Courtney (CT-02), and the Hon. Ed Husic MP (Australian Labor Party).

The event, titled “Global Tech, Global Democracy: How Has Tech Broken Down International Boundaries?” focused on how the U.S., Australia, and their international partners can develop international solutions to ensure that we benefit from technology’s promise while avoiding its dangers. The lawmakers and an expert panel discussed civic integrity, the importance of combating online misinformation, protecting freedom of speech, and the role tech has played in elections.

Watch the twitter livestream here:

Representative Joe Courtney is a Democrat representing Connecticut’s 2nd Congressional District, and is the Co-Chair of the Friends of Australia Caucus. He serves on the House Armed Services Committee and the Education and the Workforce Committee.

The Honorable Ed Husic is a member of the Australian House of Representatives for Chifley and a member of the Australian Labor Party. He is the Shadow Minister for Industry and Innovation.

They were joined by an expert international panel on technology innovation, including Sunita Bose, Managing Director of DIGIDamian Kassabgi, Executive Vice President, Public Policy and Communications, of Afterpay, and Mike Masnick, Editor of TechDirt. The event was moderated by Michael Mandel, Chief Economic Strategist at PPI and Michael Buckland, President of the McKell Institute, and featured welcoming remarks by Alec Stapp, Director of Technology Policy at PPI.

The Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) is a catalyst for policy innovation and political reform based in Washington, D.C. Its mission is to create radically pragmatic ideas for moving America beyond ideological and partisan deadlock. Learn more about PPI by visiting progressivepolicy.org.

Follow the Progressive Policy Institute.

The McKell Institute is a progressive research institute based in Sydney, Australia, dedicated to providing practical and innovative solutions to contemporary policy challenges. Since its establishment in 2011, the Institute has played an important role in shaping the public policy agenda at both state and federal level. Learn more about the McKell Institute by visiting mckellinstitute.org.au.

Follow the McKell Institute.

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Media Contact: Aaron White – awhite@ppionline.org

Marshall for American Purpose: Can the Democrats Save our Democracy?

The Democratic Party must fend off extremes and hold on to responsible, center-left politics.

Ideologues of all stripes are perennially frustrated with America’s two-party “duopoly.” They say it stifles voices of radical reform, fails to offer voters meaningful choices, and delivers only tepid incrementalism. Many yearn for the doctrinal coherence and discipline shown by parties in Europe, where multiparty systems are the rule.

Whatever the merits of these complaints, it’s true that America’s two-party system seems immutably entrenched. Third parties come and go; but except for the Republicans in the 1850s, none has succeeded in supplanting either of the two major parties—and it took the Civil War to make that happen.

Most U.S. voters reasonably figure that if they want their vote to count, they’d better line up with Democrats or Republicans. As duopoly critics note, that arrangement doesn’t give the public an ideological choice, since both parties normally offer variations on America’s classically liberal creed. But party allegiance isn’t strictly a matter of intellectual conviction; it’s also influenced by sectional, family, ethnic, class, and religious ties.

Historically, the two major parties have been broad, loose, and shifting coalitions. That feature has given them a pragmatic bent, since today’s political foe could become tomorrow’s convert. It’s reinforced by a presidential system designed to diffuse and share power rather than alternate one-party rule.

To prevent untrammeled majority rule, the Founders created structural incentives for compromise so that minority interests get taken into account. But heterogeneous and pragmatic parties don’t suit Americans with more dogmatic dispositions. These Americans demand adherence to fixed principles, typically expressed as moral absolutes. Not for them the tedious drilling of hard boards; they want the romance of revolution.

Read the full piece in American Purpose. 

Carolina Postcard: What Boris Johnson Can Teach Democrats

By Gary Pearce, Guest Author

To many Americans, especially Democrats, Boris Johnson is a clownish British version of former President Trump. But Democrats might take a page from Johnson, especially on how to talk to people.

The party is going through self-analysis now. Yes, President Biden beat Trump and Democrats won a 50-50 split in the Senate. But they’d hoped to do much better; they want to get to the bottom of why the bottom fell out on their high hopes.

Democrats being Democrats, they think they need a stronger economic-policy message – and the right set of policy proposals.

Not so fast. There’s a reason most people avoid economics classes in school. Economics is boring. Economic policy proposals are boring.

Americans want specifics, but they yearn for hope and optimism. They’re listening more for tone: confidence, strength and persistence. They want to hear music, not just read lyrics.

Boris Johnson gets it. He says his goal as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom is “to recapture some of the energy and optimism that this country used to have.”

Democrats could use more energy and optimism – and less hectoring and lecturing.

 

Biden and Boris

 

Johnson’s style is analyzed in a new article in The Atlantic, “The Minister of Chaos: Boris Johnson knows exactly what he’s doing,” by Tom McTague. He wrote of Johnson, “To him, the point of politics—and life—is not to squabble over facts; it’s to offer people a story they can believe in.”

Johnson led the Brexit “Leave” campaign in 2016, just before Trump won the Presidency. McTague notes that the “two campaigns looked similar on the surface—populist, nationalist, anti-establishment.”

But Johnson’s story isn’t the same as Trump’s “American carnage.” Johnson says the UK, contrary to “claims of impending disaster…is a great and remarkable and interesting country in its own right’.”

Johnson is a former journalist. He knows the power of words. He says, “People live by narrative. Human beings are creatures of the imagination.”

The article added:

“Johnson understands the art of politics better than his critics and rivals do. He is right that his is a battle to write the national story, and that this requires offering people hope and agency, a sense of optimism and pride in place. He has shown that he is a master at finding the story voters want to hear.”

Writing the national story is the challenge Democrats face. Studying the UK makes sense; we share a mother tongue.

At this month’s G7 meeting in Cornwall, England, there was much talk about the “special relationship” between the US and the UK. There also has been, over the last 40 years, a rhythmic relationship between the two nation’s politics.

Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, both conservatives, came to power at the same time. So did New Democrat Bill Clinton and New Labour Tony Blair. Then came Trump and Johnson. Now Biden and Johnson.

Despite their parallels, Johnson isn’t a Trump clone. At the G7 meetings, he and President Biden agreed on climate change, women’s rights, sanctions against Russia and a middle-class economic agenda. Johnson’s compared Biden’s infrastructure bill to his promise of “leveling up” the economically struggling north of England with the more prosperous south.

He said, “When it comes to building back better, we’re totally on the same page. It’s been very interesting and very refreshing.”

As Democrats struggle to tell their story in today’s divided America, they might study how Johnson tells his. Sometimes he might be a clown. But sometimes clowns are on to something. And given today’s angry politics, it wouldn’t hurt to laugh and lighten up a bit.

 

Atlantic article: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2021/07/boris-johnson-minister-of-chaos/619010/