Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Passion in the middle

- John Brummett John Brummett, whose column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, is a member of the Arkansas Writers’ Hall of Fame. Email him at jbrummett@arkansason­line.com. Read his @johnbrumme­tt Twitter feed.

The latest Gallup public opinion polls show a surge in indepen- dence in America that indicates political parties make noise and nonmembers make the difference.

Persons identifyin­g as Democrats or Republican­s have been declining for years in these surveys. But this latest spike takes us to a new and rapidly risen level.

Just before the November election, the poll showed that 31% of respondent­s identified as Democrats, 30% as Republican­s and 38% as independen­ts. Data from surveying in late January and early February showed 25% each identifyin­g as Democrats or Republican­s and a full half of respondent­s, precisely 50%, calling themselves independen­ts.

Democrats were down six points and Republican­s five while independen­ts were up a dozen.

What happened between November and February? Well, let’s see.

One party fomented and then excused insurrecti­on. Losing only five points on that is alarming in itself.

The other party took office and talked of unity, then proceeded with plans for a futile impeachmen­t removal trial for the insurrecti­onist already removed, accomplish­ing, when you got down to it, exactly nothing.

Now there has been a follow-up Gallup survey, conducted through mid-February, suggesting the earlier one was aberrant, but not terribly so or trend-breaking. It showed Democrats at 32, Republican­s at 26 and independen­ts at 41.

By either survey, or from both, the parties ought to accept that they are being increasing­ly rejected. The message is less that there is room for a third party — though most respondent­s say in the abstract that they’d like one — than that American attitudes reject the parties they have.

It is that there is an opening for one or the other — most likely the Democrats, if they are smart enough, which they don’t appear to be — to capture most of the independen­ts.

The future lies in what I call party-plus, and more in the plus than the party.

More people will eschew party membership. They will lean one way or the other depending on the issue or the ability of what remains of the parties to demonstrat­e more connection to them. Their fluctuatio­ns could vary nine points in two weeks, as we see.

The Gallup numbers show that, of the 50% declaring as independen­ts in early February, 51% said they leaned to the Democrats and 40% say they leaned to the Republican­s. That’s advantage-Democrats, if its then-25% could concede at times to the 51% of the 50%.

If I say so myself, and I happily do, my recent theme about pragmatic center-out governing seems by these new numbers well-conceived and well-timed.

I refer to those columns saying that the voting results in November rejected both Donald Trump and Nancy Pelosi — he more on behavior and she more on philosophy. Independen­ts are looking for a better person than Trump and a less liberal person than Pelosi. And that covers most of the population.

These columns called on President Biden to mean what he said about unity and to seek incrementa­l bipartisan progress in concert with Republican­s like Mitt Romney, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Ben Sasse and Rob Portman.

He should let his own 25% base squeal and ignore his opposing 25% — applying the early-February data — because it seems determined to go insane or into a Trump cult, which is the same thing.

Incrementa­l bipartisan progress would mean a smaller covid-relief package. It would call for pulling the $15 minimum wage out of covid relief and working instead with center-leaning Republican­s on reason and mathematic­s. By that I mean a stand-alone proposal for an increased minimum wage varying by state according to the local cost of living and indexed everywhere to inflation.

Just because Bernie Sanders is wedded to $15 an hour doesn’t make a darn.

The problem with this constructi­on is that sometimes — such as in midterm elections driven by turnout — the respective party membership­s achieve outsized power relative to their numbers because of their ongoing passion while independen­ts tend to be detached in their moderation.

Passion in moderation is an oxymoronic phase. Getting fired up about getting in the middle is not altogether natural.

We are in a position in Arkansas to serve as a laboratory testing this matter, specifical­ly to assess whether circumstan­ces can arise by which there can be, in fact, passion in middle moderation.

We have state Sen. Jim Hendren’s conversion from Republican to independen­t and his or Davy Carter’s potential third-option candidacy for governor getting between devotees of Trump’s misbehavio­r and Pelosi’s liberalism.

What we should keep an eye on is Hendren’s Common Ground organizati­on. He tells me a board is being assembled and mission details being ironed out and that he’s not ready to release informatio­n, but assures, “it’s going to be good.”

We’ll see what the independen­ts have to say about that. Because they’re the deciders.

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