GOP zingers over ‘socialism’ don’t sting liberals anymore
When President Donald Trump invoked “alarm” in his State of the Union address over what he described as “new calls to adopt socialism in our country,” television quickly cut to Sen. Bernie Sanders. The independent, self-described “democratic socialist” from Vermont reacted with a tightlipped glare.
But TV might just as well have swung over to Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. She’s another self-proclaimed “democratic socialist,” whose rising, camera-ready star power has picked up where Sanders’ failed bid for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination left off in fueling the “alarm” on the right.
Although I would question assertions that socialism is somehow sweeping the country, I have little doubt that the right’s attempts to intimidate or silence the left by casting liberal ideas as “class warfare” or “socialism” have lost a lot of their sting.
For that, “AOC,” as she is increasingly known, can take a lot of the credit or, depending on your point of view, blame. As Republicans and other conservatives reflexively respond with “Venezuela” whenever progressive ideas arise such as “Medicare for all,” free college tuition or a tax-the-rich revenue overhaul, she has piped up with more pleasant-sounding socialist models, such as Denmark.
Against that backdrop, all eyes on Capitol Hill turned the other day to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for her reaction to a news conference by Rep. Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, co-sponsors of a “Green New Deal.”
With the guarded optimism she showed in outmaneuvering President Trump to end the recent partial government shutdown, Pelosi offered measured praise for the Green New Deal, without committing herself even to getting its label right.
She was being properly cagey. Democrats have been divided since the 1960s between their moderate and left-progressive wings. Speaker Pelosi’s task is to keep that energy going on her party’s left without alienating the party’s pragmatic establishment or the persuadable swing voters the party will need to win the general election. But AOC’s aggressive push for a “Green New Deal” now is welltimed to start conversations and help set the tone of coming primaries.
What must be particularly unsettling for President Trump is how much AOC’s rise mirrors his own: Her lack of experience and impatience with details frees her to appeal to voters on a gut level, highlighting what needs to be done in a media-savvy way without being encumbered by the mechanics of how to do it.
As for the right’s anti-socialist propaganda, Republicans and other conservatives may well have worn out that attack line through overuse, particularly among younger voters.
President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare, provides a powerful example. Battered by the right, its approval ratings nevertheless have climbed since its passage.
In the midterms, defense of the ACA’s coverage of pre-existing conditions proved so popular that many Republican House candidates promised to protect it.
No wonder the left feels encouraged. An honest debate about socialism would reveal how much we already have it in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, to name three popular programs. They face funding challenges, which can be resolved whenever Congress overcomes its current legislative gridlock. We’re not Denmark, but we are not anywhere close to being Venezuela either.