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The Democratic Strategist

Political Strategy for a Permanent Democratic Majority

Forum Provides Insights on Defeating Authoritarianism

  • Boston Review is holding a forum on”How Not to Defeat Authoritarianism,” which features contributions by Adam Bonica and Jake Grumbaugh, along with:
  • Cori Bush
  • Amanda Litman
  • Matthew Yglesias
  • G. Elliott Morris
  • Julia Serano
  • Eric Rauchway
  • Suzanne Mettler & Trevor E. Brown
  • Thomas Ferguson
  • Timothy Shenk
  • Jared Abbott & Milan Loewer
  • Jenifer Fernandez Ancona
  • Lily Geismer
  • Danielle Wiggins
  • William A. Galston
  • Henry Burke
  • Here’s a teaser from William A. Galston’s response: “I am sympathetic to Adam Bonica and Jake Grumbach’s argument that the term “moderation” conceals more than it reveals and threatens to mislead party reformers who seek to strengthen the Democratic Party as a bulwark against autocracy. I fear, however, that much of their argument is open to the same criticism.The authors lead off by intimating that Kamala Harris might have won with a less moderate campaign. Maybe so, but they offer no evidence. In reality, she lost for several reasons: because she was the successor to an unpopular president from whom she did nothing to separate herself; because the issue of reproductive rights, on which she bet heavily, receded in importance compared to the 2022 midterm elections; because the Biden administration was seen (rightly, in my view) as having botched the two issues—inflation and immigration—whose salience rose the most relative to 2020; because her campaign did not even try to counter Trump’s “Kamala is for they/them” attack ad that served as effective synecdoche for a host of unpopular progressive stances on cultural issues; because Trump was seen as a stronger leader more likely to bring needed change and better equipped to handle a crisis; and finally, because messaging about democracy being “at risk” did not work the way her campaign expected. Some 73 percent of voters regarded democracy as “threatened,” but Trump beat Harris by 50 to 48 in this group. He did even better among the 4 in 10 voters who saw democracy as “very threatened,” carrying them by 52 to 47.

    Could Harris have overcome the multiple handicaps with which she began? The most obvious road not taken was a bold step to distinguish herself from the president she served. Those with long memories will recall that after Vice President Hubert Humphrey broke with President Lyndon Johnson on Vietnam, he nearly erased the fifteen-point edge that Richard Nixon enjoyed in late September of 1968 and almost caught him at the finish line. Would a similar break—on immigration, say—have helped Harris? We will never know…”

  • More here.

One comment on “Forum Provides Insights on Defeating Authoritarianism

  1. William Benjamin Bankston on

    Good stuff. Yet I can add a little something.

    “The New York Times editorial board recently declared that ‘moving to the center is the way to win,’ dismissing research that finds otherwise as lost in ‘statistical complexities.’ As prominent pundit Matthew Yglesias wrote in early 2025, ‘What the Democrats need . . . is not just more moderate candidates. They need a more moderate ideology.'”

    Translation to English: non-progressive Democrats have been exempted from any half-fair standard for a long time because get woke, go broke. What a convenient thesis. Never mind that the infamous Democratic presidential losers of 1968-1988 never had long enough coattails to cost their party the House and that it usually won the Senate as well. Given Trump’s substantially lesser median performance, it seems ridiculous to assert that activists or the national Democratic Party are getting in non-progressive Dems’ way now either. Ergo, their collapse absolutely speaks for itself.

    And frankly, despite their self-image of stone-cold pragmatism, I feel that the reason the likes of Matt Ygelsias and Ruy Teixeira want so many asterisks on their candidates’ modern track record is emotional and stubborn. The high likelihood that this is not a generation-spanning accident but instead the result of polarization eliminating the soft partisans who moderates relied heavily on in past centuries is something they’d much rather not even ponder. Because how do they come back from that? “They don’t” is an answer that they can’t and won’t accept.

    Reply

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