The Record (Troy, NY)

Dems courting another defeat

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The trouble with left-wing Democrats is that they lack a proper respect for right-wing demagoguer­y. Hence, at the moment, many of them extol socialism -which is to American politics what curling is to sports -- and are calling for the abolition of ICE, generously giving Donald Trump yet another opportunit­y to demagogue on immigratio­n. They will, if allowed, declaim their way to another defeat.

The recent primary election of the captivatin­g Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez has brought in a gusher of media reports on the coming socialist resurgence. If she wins the general election -- virtually a dead certainty in a district that has not voted Republican since, approximat­ely, the Continenta­l Congress -- she will not, surprising­ly, be New York’s firstever socialist member of Congress. Meyer London preceded her and, when he died in 1926, his funeral procession was witnessed by a reported 500,000 people. Still, when he went into the grave, so did socialism.

In fact, the term “American exceptiona­lism,” while it has many meanings, once referred to the antipathy workers here had to an ideology that had wide appeal to their European counterpar­ts. Following Germany’s surrender in 1945, for example, Britain unceremoni­ously gave the boot to Winston Churchill’s Conservati­ve Party and voted in Clement Attlee’s Labour Party and its socialisti­c programs. Not much remains of that but universal health care. Elsewhere on the continent, socialist parties similarly dominated.

The socialism to which Ocasio- Cortez adheres lacks the militancy of old and is supposedly attractive to young voters who have no memory of any communist associatio­n. The trouble is that young voters often don’t vote and older voters do. To the latter, the socialist label is anathema and, as far as I’m concerned, unnecessar­y. This, after all, is the avuncular socialism of Bernie Sanders -- universal Medicare and free higher education. It needs no label. Sign me up.

The socialist label combined with the demand to obliterate the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency is the nitro and the glycerin of a bomb that Trump can throw at the Democrats. It combines the bugaboo of socialism with the irrational fear of immigrant hordes rampaging through the countrysid­e.

The latter fear is not to be messed with. In Germany, it may yet bring down Angela Merkel’s government and has already made doughty Denmark mad with anti-immigrant regulation­s that reveal a nation demented by cultural paranoia. But America, too, has gone through such phases, deporting “aliens” of what a 1918 law called the “anarchisti­c and similar classes.” They were detained first on the very Ellis Island that had first welcomed some of them -- and then shipped back to Europe on a tub that made steerage seem ritzy by comparison.

The “aliens” of that era are the illegal immigrants of our own. Whatever threat they represente­d -- and some of them, like the anarchist Alexander Berkman, were convicted criminals -- their menace was greatly overstated. So, too, today. Trump has exaggerate­d the depth, breadth and importance of the MS13 gang and the alleged criminalit­y of immigrants in general. Trump has, however, uttered the one word that sums up anti-immigrant sentiment: culture. “Big mistake made all over Europe in allowing millions of people who have so strongly and violently changed their culture,” he elegantly tweeted.

The culture that Trump so ardently wants to protect is white, male, working-class and Christian. It is on the way out and that produces resentment and fury. Cultural changes are wrenching, which is why the recently referenced Denmark now requires socalled “ghetto children” -- i.e. Muslims -- to be instructed in “Danish values,” including an appreciati­on of Christmas and Easter. I’m sure in an American version Trump would add Fox News to that list.

ICE could certainly use some restraint. And some aspects of democratic socialism are welcome. But for the moment, these are peripheral issues. The overriding crisis facing America is the presidency of Donald Trump. He is wrecking the trans-Atlantic alliance, endangerin­g American democracy, encouragin­g a post-Merkel Germany and seemingly enlisting America in a worldwide authoritar­ian movement -- Russia, China, Poland, Hungary and Turkey. Anything that provides him fodder should be off the table.

Speak no more of socialism. It may no longer suggest the red flag of revolution, but in political terms, it could be the white flag of surrender.

Richard Cohen’s email address is cohenr@washpost.com.

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Richard Cohen Columnist

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