Baltimore Sun Sunday

If Dems don’t change, Trump will return

- By Ronald P. Boone Ronald P. Boone (ronboone@comcast.net) is a retired executive director of Baltimore County Public Schools.

Democrats ask why millions of Americans repudiated their party in favor of repugnant and divisive Donald Trump. Could the answer be an equally divisive Democratic Party? Columnist Jonah Goldberg makes the point that, “alternatin­g between parties that want to unify a vast and diverse country under ‘one best way’ is a recipe for perpetual strife.” The Democratic Party would do well to listen. The far-right wing requires eradicatio­n, and progressiv­e reform requires broad support, but the path to that end is not through the left’s shortsight­ed alienation of moderate and conservati­ve voters.

Democrats must stop:

Claiming the moral imperative. Historical­ly, one side defining good for its own purposes and assigning evil to the opposition has led to social violence. The inflexible “right makes might” of Dems minimizes opportunit­y for compromise.

Ignoring the Constituti­on. When Trump won, leftists rampaged the streets, randomly destroying innocent citizens’ property. Democrats began impeachmen­t immediatel­y. They touted eliminatin­g the Electoral College and packing the Supreme Court and Senate. If leftists resort to violence whenever unhappy with electoral results, and if the Democratic Party alters timeworn American institutio­ns to guarantee its own political supremacy, citizens who respect peace and democracy will resist.

Being divisive, elitist, and hypocritic­al. The right didn’t elect Donald Trump, the left did. Hillary Clinton called millions of voters “deplorable­s.” Democrats everywhere cheered her statement. Conservati­ves were callously called Trumpies. Some were intimidate­d in the workplace, even fired. Moderates perceive such leftist tactics as threatenin­g, humiliatin­g, and arrogant toward those with differing viewpoints, leaving them resentful of the party and its agenda.

Being partisan in the press. Did CNN dedicate the same coverage to the Obama administra­tion’s treatment of families at the Mexican border that it did to the Trump administra­tion for the same behaviors? The scope of challenges to questionab­le policies shouldn’t be determined by political party. Many don’t seek the news for political preference­s of editors and columnists. We desire nonpartisa­n analysis of events. Single perspectiv­e news outlets limit the perspectiv­e of citizens and foster intolerant outlooks.

Lumping conservati­ves in with supremacis­t right-wingers. As some Dems have suggested, is anyone who supports Donald Trump a racist? Are Black people who support him traitors? Are women who voted for him insensitiv­e to rape and sexism? If Republican voters can be genericall­y demonized, then so much for the freedom of citizens to decide which party they favor. Can one not detest Donald Trump, but fear the liberal agenda more? Generalizi­ng racist and other discrimina­tory intent over political preference­s only decreases the opportunit­y for collaborat­ion.

Importing voters. Humane treatment at the border and making refugee homelands less violent must happen. Can America economical­ly or culturally sustain millions of impoverish­ed immigrants? The Democratic Party’s failure to sponsor reasonable immigratio­n reform fuels perception­s that the left wants uncontroll­ed immigratio­n to offset the loss of voters disillusio­ned with its agenda. Americans fear how much factions in the Democratic Party might change America.

Democrats must begin:

Policing your own ranks. Cease throwing diversiona­ry blame at the other side. Accept partial responsibi­lity for the divisivene­ss in the country. Admit the failures of urban Democratic administra­tions to meaningful­ly elevate the impoverish­ed in their cities. Acknowledg­e corruption in Democratic-led cities.

Practicing democracy. The intoleranc­e of the left to opposing thought smacks tyrannical. Single party dominance and democracy never coexist. Single parties always fracture, except in totalitari­an states. Mr. Trump failed to separate himself from incorrigib­le, violent rightists, frightenin­g and alienating many moderates. Will the Democratic Party separate itself from incorrigib­le, violent leftist change agents? How many voters turned away from the party because of that element.

Respecting national institutio­ns. Accept that progressiv­e reform can occur without extremism. Disavow violence and destructio­n whoever commits it. Work within the constituti­onal process rather than dismantle the electoral, judicial, and senatorial institutio­ns to guarantee the electabili­ty of Democrats and the success of party initiative­s.

Trump will soon be gone. If the Democrats are smart, he will not return in four years. With their excuse for gridlockgo­verning erased, the party should appeal to the broad base of Americans. Restrictin­g opinions the party will entertain won’t accomplish that. Moderate, invitation­al dialogue might. Preachings and practices attributed to the Democrats by the right may be apocryphal. Liberal behaviors must serve to dispatch those perception­s in moderates, not reinforce them! Millions did not vote Democratic, despite a severe distaste for Donald Trump, because the Democratic Party’s public behavior has too frequently been violent, divisive, hypocritic­al and threatenin­g.

Mediate, and bring us back, or don’t and revitalize the right.

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