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A Strategy for Democrats in Very Red Districts

behind enemy lines

There are many congressional districts where Democrats have nearly zero chance of winning anytime soon. (The recent victory of the disgraced Mark Sanford in a South Carolina congressional race shows how safe a Republican seat can be.)

The difficulty of winning these seats, paradoxically, presents an important opportunity for Democrats.

In the short run, the political battle in America is over who will hold the offices where laws get made. In the long run, the battle is over shaping the public consciousness that determines to whom the people will give power.

For the latter purpose, Democrats in very red districts can make an important contribution in the battle over the country’s destiny. It’s an educational role that is especially vital because our politics are broken, and while most Americans see there’s a problem, not enough Americans see where the problem lies.

A candidate in an unwinnable race can focus on moving hearts and minds, at least incrementally, toward recognizing the paramount political truth of our times: The force that’s taken over the Republican Party acts destructively and irresponsibly.

The immediately visible problem in our politics is that nothing is getting done. Last year’s Congress accomplished less than any in memory. This year’s Congress is no better. And it’s clear why.

It is well-documented that even before President Obama took office, congressional Republicans decided that their top priority was to make him fail. If nothing can get accomplished, the Republicans figured, the people would blame the president and throw him out of office.

That approach didn’t gain the Republicans the White House in the 2012 elections, but obstruction remains the Republicans’ main political strategy. And their control of the House and the use of the filibuster in the Senate, enable them to cripple our governing process.

Helping people see that our governmental dysfunction is a deliberate choice the Republicans are making is a good starting place, building as it does on the concerns of citizens — Republicans and Democrats alike — over the stalemate in Congress. But that’s just one piece in a very big picture that Americans need to see.

• Income and wealth inequality are wider than at any time in living memory, yet Republicans are helping to widen that gap.

• The country is still devastated by the aftereffects of a financial collapse, yet Republicans are working to prevent the restoration of the kinds of regulations that kept our financial system stable for seventy years.

• 97 % of the top scientists in the climate field agree that climate disruption may pose the greatest challenge in human history, and we’re already seeing costly consequences, yet Republicans have made it party dogma that the scientists are wrong and that nothing, or little, should be done.

• Getting Americans back to work should be our top economic priority, yet Republicans block programs to add jobs while insisting on austerity policies that have thrown additional hundreds of thousands of Americans out of work.

When today’s Republicans are out of power, they try to prevent anything good from being done. But when they were in power, they gave us a presidency (2001-2009) that was perhaps the most damaging in our history:

• two wars of choice, one under false pretenses;

• officially sanctioned torture;

• more assaults on the Constitution and the rule of law than by any previous presidency (according to Bruce Fein, the conservative Reagan jurist);

• an economy in the worst shape since the Great Depression;

• the inflaming of divisions among Americans;

• hostility toward America among citizens of nations that have historically been our friends.

Clearly, something very dark has arisen on the political right, and the nation is paying a high price for its continuing power.

But that power derives from the people. If we believe in democracy, we must believe that if the people saw this destructive force for what it is they would take away that power.

Democrats in very red districts – behind enemy lines, as it were – are well-positioned to tell the truth about what the once-respectable Republican Party has become. Even while cruising to victory in their “safe” districts, party-line Republican incumbents can become the means of exposing the dishonest and destructive nature of the party they serve. Like a combination shot in pool, campaigns against such Republicans can be a means to strike at the larger force behind.

It’s not only candidates who can apply this combination-shot strategy. Ordinary citizens – with or without coordination with a Democratic candidate– can organize demonstrations that expose the destructive spirit that animates today’s Republican Party. By getting media attention, such citizens can convey this important message to the larger public.

Even if “safe” Republicans win, campaigns against them might influence toss-up races for other national or state offices and, over time, might work to dislodge some of the entrenched beliefs that have been instilled by the purveyors of the lie.

This strategy would be worthwhile in any heavily red congressional district. But if this approach were followed in these districts across the country, the combined force of many coordinated voices could press this powerful truth into the national discussion.

That’s the opportunity. Can Democrats organize to seize it?

[In a subsequent post, I will provide some thoughts on steps people could take to implement this strategy.]

3 thoughts on “A Strategy for Democrats in Very Red Districts


  1. Richard H. Randall

    Whilst I agree with Andy’s points above I have a slightly different idea here.
    I suggest that we don’t give the Red states what their elected federal representatives don’t vote for. I don’t suggest it would be easy, and it certainly wouldn’t be nice. but I don’t see things changing any other way. Don’t like social security fixes–abrogate social security in the red states, set up a fund to repay what the former eligible have paid in, and pay them that, and only that over time. When they run out…..they run out. Don’t like medicare, medicaid…..same, same. Federal money for roads of all descriptions (this is huge)….stop paying it. For Education,……, for any form of Federal monies they don’t vote for, they shouldn’t get. They don’t want taxes to pay for the things we raise taxes for, so they should get nothing from those who willingly pay taxes and see a disproportionate amount of them go to red states. Some of these states are cutting their own taxes, whilst giving huge tax breaks to corporations and the wealthy, and relying on highly regressive sales taxes which prey upon the poor.
    The results of this unlikely course of action becoming law would cause some momentary pain for the great majority of the people in these areas but I don’t see anything else getting through to the narrowness of these people.

    Reply

    1. Andrew Bard Schmookler Post author

      I can understand, Richard, the appeal of compelling people to experience directly the logical consequences of the policies they support. “Keep your government hands off my Medicare” people really should get some sort of wake up call.

      There are two problems with your proposal. One is, it’s almost certainly illegal and unconstitutional. The other is, even red states are not populated by only Republican voters. The difference between 60-40 and 40-60 may be huge in electoral terms, but even apart from the legalities involved, are we going to deprive the 40% in the red states who support the programs you’d cut them off from, while the 40% in the blue states who oppose those programs will continue to benefit from them?

      Reply

  2. Richard H. Randall

    I had not considered your second point Andy. As for the first, yes I did understand that but I had intended there to be the necessary enabling legislation in the case someone actually tried my scheme. Not that I thought there would be any attempt to do this: probably no more than a snowball’s chance in hell.
    From the Center on Budget and Budgetary Priorities CBBP today.
    A republican from Florida in the House of Representatives proposed the following amendment to the Farm Bill. “The House wisely rejected a farm bill today that included an unprecedented provision, added earlier in the day, to reward governors with large sums of unrestricted cash if they remove families from the SNAP (food stamp)program because the parents, through no fault of their own, cannot find jobs….As I explained in a blog earlier today, this extreme provision would allow states to terminate benefits to households where adults–including parents with children as young as one year old and many people with disabilities–are not working or participating in a work program at least 20 yours per week. It would not require states to make any work opportunities available and would provide no jobs and no funds for work or training programs……
    The amendment came from Steve Southerland (R-FL).
    Tomorrow I will call this asshole’s office number and ask how long he has been a satanist.
    I will let you know how it comes out.
    Richard

    Reply

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