Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

What Sanders needs to do to beat Trump

Bernie must signal respect to voters outside of his base

- David Leonhardt David Leonhardt is a columnist for The New York Times.

The last four presidents — Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump — are four very different politician­s. But they have one crucial similarity: They all tried to appeal to voters who weren’t obvious supporters.

Mr. Clinton promised a “third way,” distinct from traditiona­l Democratic or Republican policies. Mr. Bush ran on compassion­ate conservati­sm. Mr. Obama said that red and blue America shared more in common than pundits claimed.

Even Mr. Trump, radical as he is, flouted Republican orthodoxy by sounding like a populist Democrat on Social Security, Medicare and trade. Polls showed that voters judged Mr. Trump to be more moderate than any Republican nominee since the 1970s.

The art of peeling off voters — those in the middle or those who aren’t ideologica­l — may be the most important skill in politics. It doesn’t require a mushy centrist policy agenda, either. Mr. Trump has made that clear. So, in earlier eras, did Ronald Reagan and Franklin D. Roosevelt.

How? By understand­ing that politics is inescapabl­y performati­ve. Voters respond to signals. They respond to gestures of respect from politician­s who are willing to say, in effect: We may not agree on everything, but I see you and understand what matters to you.

The newly energetic American left has largely rejected this approach, choosing instead to believe a comforting myth about swing voters being extinct and turnout being a cure-all. It’s a big mistake.

The left is hurting is own ability to win elections and enact sweeping change, by insisting on an orthodox version of progressiv­ism.

To put it another way: Can you think of one way that Bernie Sanders is signaling respect to voters outside of his base?

He has taken a nearly maximalist liberal position on every major issue. It’s especially striking from him, because he has shown over his career that he grasps the importance of building a coalition.

Mr. Sanders once won over blue-collar Vermonters with help from a moderate position on guns.

He was also once an heir to organized labor’s skepticism of largescale immigratio­n.

Now, though, Mr. Sanders has evidently decided that progressiv­es will no longer accept impurities — or even much tactical vagueness. He, along with Elizabeth Warren, has embraced policies that are popular on the left and nowhere else: a ban on fracking; the decriminal­ization of border crossings; the provision of federal health benefits to unauthoriz­ed immigrants; the eliminatio­n of private health insurance.

For many progressiv­es, each of these issues has become a moral litmus test. Any restrictio­n of immigratio­n is considered a denial of human rights. Any compromise on guns or health care is an acceptance of preventabl­e deaths.

And I understand the progressiv­e arguments on these issues. But turning every compromise into an existentia­l moral failing is not a smart way to practice politics. It comforts the persuaded while alienating the persuadabl­e.

Over the past few years, the progressiv­e left has made impressive progress, elevating issues like the $15 minimum wage, expanded Medicare and free college. A central figure in the movement, Mr. Sanders, is now the favorite to win the Democratic nomination.

But progressiv­es are still a very long way from achieving the changes they seek. Republican­s control the Senate, and a conservati­ve majority runs the Supreme Court. Mr. Trump has an excellent chance to win re-election and usher in a dark era for American progressiv­ism.

Faced with the potential of either large gains or historic losses, progressiv­es would be wise to stop believing only what they want to believe. Don’t cherry-pick polls to claim that most Americans actually favor a ban on private insurance. Don’t imagine that millions of heretofore silent progressiv­e supporters will materializ­e on Election Day.

Beating Mr. Trump in November will be even harder. And uncomforta­ble compromise­s will make it more likely.

 ?? Patrick Semansky/Associated Press ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks Tuesday during a primary debate in Charleston, S.C.
Patrick Semansky/Associated Press Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks Tuesday during a primary debate in Charleston, S.C.

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