Orlando Sentinel

How the left can stop losing

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How did the political left squander the opportunit­y that was the 2020 primary campaign?

The Trump presidency has created tremendous energy among progressiv­es. More than half of Democratic voters now identify as liberal. Most favor “Medicare for All.” A growing number are unhappy with American capitalism.

This year’s campaign offered the prospect of transforma­tional change, with a Democratic nominee who was more liberal than any in more than a half-century. Instead, the nominee now seems likely to be a moderate white grandfathe­r who first ran for president more than 30 years ago and whose campaign promises a return to normalcy.

True, Bernie Sanders could make a comeback, but it would need to be a big one. Among people who voted on Super Tuesday itself — rather than voting early, before Joe Biden won South Carolina — Biden trounced Sanders. The race would have to change fundamenta­lly for Sanders to win.

If he doesn’t, the obvious question for progressiv­es is what went wrong and how they can do better in the future. I think there are some clear answers — empirical answers that anybody, regardless of ideology, should be able to see. I’d encourage the next generation of progressiv­e leaders to think about these issues with an open mind.

The biggest lesson is simply this: The American left doesn’t care enough about winning.

It’s an old problem, one that has long undermined left-wing movements in this country. They have often prioritize­d purity over victory. They wouldn’t necessaril­y put it these terms, but they have chosen to lose on their terms rather than win with compromise.

You can see this pattern today in the ways that many progressiv­e activists misread public opinion. Their answer to almost every question of political strategy is to insist that Americans are a profoundly progressiv­e people who haven’t yet been inspired to vote the way they think. The way to win, these progressiv­es claim, is to go left, always.

Immigratio­n? Most Americans want more of it. Abortion? This is a pro-choice country. Fracking? People now understand its downsides. Strict gun control? Affirmativ­e action? A wealth tax? Free college? Medicare for All? Widely available marijuana? Americans want it all, activists claim.

This belief helps explain why so many 2020 candidates hoping to win the progressiv­e vote — including Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris — embraced ideas like a ban on fracking and the decriminal­ization of the border. The left persuaded itself that those policies were both morally righteous and politicall­y savvy. To reject any one of them was to risk being labeled a neoliberal sellout.

The thing is, progressiv­e activists are right about public opinion on of these issues. Most Americans do favor higher taxes on the rich, marijuana legalizati­on and additional gun control. But too many progressiv­es aren’t doing an honest analysis of the politics. They are instead committing what journalist Matthew Yglesias has called “the pundit fallacy.” They are conflating their own opinions with smart political advice. They are choosing to believe what they want to believe.

By designing campaign strategies for the America they want, rather than the one that exists, progressiv­es have done a favor to their political opponents. They have refused to make tactical retreats, which is why they keep losing.

I think Warren may have been the person most damaged by this dynamic in 2020. (And, yes, she was also hurt by sexism.) She could have positioned herself as the candidate who excited much of the left but was more acceptable to the center-left than Sanders. Instead, she mimicked Sanders, making many Democratic voters who were rooting for her worried that, like him, she couldn’t win a general election.

The progressiv­e wing of the party has still had a good few years, pushing the party left in multiple ways. Even Biden’s platform is strikingly liberal. But if progressiv­es aren’t satisfied being influentia­l runners-up, I would suggest three broad principles.

First, don’t become PINOs (progressiv­es in name only). Decide on a few core ways in which you think moderate Democrats are wrong, and stake out different positions.

Second, stop believing your own spin. Analyze public opinion objectivel­y. Acknowledg­e when a progressiv­e position brings electoral costs.

Finally, start testing some new political strategies. A single break with orthodoxy can send a larger signal. It can make a candidate look flexible, open-minded, less partisan and more respectful of people with different views.

Maybe the new approach should involve economic progressiv­ism and cultural moderation, which happens to reflect American public opinion. Maybe it involves a different approach on immigratio­n — insisting on a path to citizenshi­p for immigrants in the country illegally but also a slowdown of future immigratio­n. Maybe it means announcing that fracking and nuclear energy are crucial to fighting climate change. Or maybe it involves finding more progressiv­e candidates who hunt or talk about their relationsh­ip with Jesus Christ and have some related policy positions.

I realize that political compromise usually feels unpleasant. But I’d ask: How does losing feel?

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