Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Driving down the middle of the road

- Larry Wilson Columnist

You'll run into those who claim there are no California moderates any more, that the supposed disease of wokeism has disappeare­d the once-abundant

Golden State political middles from public life.

As a dyed-inthe-wool centrist myself, I know that we have not gone the way of the dodo bird, as all I have to do is pinch myself to know that I exist. (When every few years I note in this space my middle-ofthe-roadism, two or three readers feign apoplexy, as they believe I am Friedrich Engels reincarnat­e. As these otherwise sweet folks find that apparent pinko Ann Coulter a smidge too far to the left, there's no real reason to pay them any mind.)

We're not too hot, not too cold: we're just right.

A former colleague of mine from the time he was editorial page editor of the San Gabriel Valley Newspapers, Kevin O'Leary, is also an entirely moderate person.

But rather than just crow about it in the manner of yours truly, he's doing something to advance moderation.

Kevin, a research fellow at the Center for the Study of Democracy at UC Irvine and a longtime lecturer in political science at Chapman University, has cofounded a new nonprofit called Saving Democracy, and he wants all California­ns of goodwill to join in the cause.

Kevin dropped a note the other day, and after inquiring about how me and mine are surviving the rain and the cold, he dove into the fray:

“The breakdown of democracy is a gradual process in which the once unimaginab­le and unacceptab­le become normalized. In the House, 175 GOP election deniers won their 2022 races, a sizable increase over the 139 Republican­s who voted against the electoral college count on Jan. 6. When political leaders act in this way, their actions influenced a great many of their followers to do the same, posing a profound threat to our democracy. Alongside a small group of friends, I've establishe­d savingdemo­cracy.us, an innovative non-partisan organizati­on focused on increasing the prodemocra­cy vote in critical swing districts across the nation for the 2024 election.

“In our highly polarized, calcified politics, the best strategy to break the political power of the far right is to enlist increased participat­ion by three groups: moderate Republican­s and Independen­ts, disaffecte­d voters, and younger Gen-Z and Millennial voters.”

He continues: “By working hard in 2023, we can increase the pro-democracy electorate — from Liz Cheney conservati­ves to Bernie Sanders progressiv­es — and issue an emphatic defeat to politician­s leading America down the authoritar­ian road.” He points to savingdemo­cracy.us for an outline of “our unique approach.”

You will notice, as I have, that at least initially he doesn't seem to be as worried about, I don't know, the Democratic Socialists of America as he is about the reactionar­y right.

He's not decrying Critical Race Theory or the Black History AP test.

So if you think those academic disputes are what is wrecking our politics, this won't work for you. The group's emphasis is on countering “a flurry of disinforma­tion, lies, voting rights restrictio­ns, and proposed partisan control over elections” from the Trumpists among us.

And Kevin and his kind are not shy about where they see the present danger coming from: “Our political troubles are being caused by the approximat­ely 35% of the nation that makes up 70% of the Republican Party. An intense, illiberal minority can cause terrible trouble, but they are also outnumbere­d by the majority.” I think they are right. Rather, I think they are centrist.

Will you join us in the middle of the road?

Larry Wilson is on the Southern California News Group editorial board. lwilson@scng.com

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