Charleston, S.C.
Former Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., argued that Democrats need to pay far more attention to rural America if they ever want to take back the Senate. Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., urged his party to be more open to people of faith. Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-Va., spoke for new members of Congress from swing districts in insisting that โthe loudest voicesโ are not representative of voters โworking two or three jobs.โ
And Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M., had this advice: โDonโt keep reacting to (President Donald) Trump. Show there are things we can run on and win on.โ
Thus went the counsel of the Democratic pragmatists of Third Way, a leading middle-of-the-road think tank, at a meeting here this week that was, in part, a running critique of the baleful influence of Twitter on the political debate. Jim Kessler and Lanae Erickson, senior officials of the group, devoted separate presentations to showing that Democratic voters who use Twitter regularly are much more left-wing than the partyโs primary electorate as a whole.
Democrats, in Third Wayโs view, could tweet themselves into oblivion.
Jon Cowan, the groupโs president, brought the point home by warning that outside โcobalt blue districts and states, we canโt afford a strategy aimed mainly at the furthest-left Democrats. โฆ The danger is that we pursue an approach that runs up the score in blue places, but falls short everywhere else.โ
This is broadly what you might expect from a group that has long battled the partyโs democratic socialist wing and, in particular, supporters of Bernie Sanders. The Vermont senatorโs loyalists return the favor, denouncing Third Wayers as a coterie of corporate Democrats โ especially, of course, on Twitter.
But what came later in Cowanโs speech may have been the more important revelation: that the group is not offering โa warmed-over 1990s centrism.โ Cowanโs critique of what were, after all, the years of Bill Clintonโs presidency, was not hedged: โBack then,โ he said, โwe placed too much trust in the marketโs ability to provide a reliable and realistic path to prosperity for most Americans. In the last 30 years, we have seen the impact of globalization and automation on our workers. And it is clear that a rising tide will not lift all boats.โ
Those sentences speak to a quiet revolution in the thinking of Democrats across the board since the 2008 economic downturn, and especially since Trumpโs election. It can fairly be described as a leftward movement in the entire party. Sanders is often credited with moving the party left, and his proposals such as โMedicare for Allโ and free college (which came under sharp criticism here this week) have entered the mainstream conversation. But the language of โleftโ and โcenterโ is imperfect in capturing the change. The new attitude toward the economyโs shortcomings is as much about the realities on the ground as it is about any ideological awakening.
โAfter 2016, it was imperative for everyone in the party to sit back and ask: What have we done wrong?โ Matt Bennett, Third Wayโs executive vice president for public affairs and a veteran of the Clinton administration, told me. He vigorously defended both the Clinton and Obama presidencies, dismissing as โpreposterousโ the idea that they were failures.
Nonetheless, he added: โWe have to own some of the mistakes of the New Democratsโ of the Clinton era. Among them, he said, was underestimating the impact of trade liberalization on a significant number of blue-collar workers and โthe speed and ferocity with which technology would decimate certain sectors of the American workforce.โ A particularly negative effect of this was the โconcentration of opportunityโ in certain regions as large parts of the country were left behind.
โWe need to be working to tame capitalism at this moment because it is not functioning well,โ he concluded. โWe need to do in this century what the progressives and New Dealers did in the last century.โ No wonder that Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., is getting far better reviews from Third Wayers these days than she did a few years ago.
As some of the sharp-edged comments from Cowan and others about the dangers of an inward-looking (and Twitter-inspired) Democratic debate suggested, the partyโs ideological tensions have not been miraculously healed. Most here still leaned toward presidential candidates other than Warren and, especially, Sanders.
But Bennettโs mea culpa pointed toward a new, implicit party consensus: You donโt have to be a democratic socialist to believe that todayโs capitalism needs a spell in the repair shop.
You can follow E.J. Dionne Jr. on Twitter: @EJDionne.
