The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Two cheers for democratic socialists

- EJ Dionne Columnist E.J. Dionne’s email address is ejdionne@washpost.com. Twitter: @EJDionne.

“Socialism has known increments of success, basic failure and massive betrayal. Yet it is more relevant to the humane constructi­on of the twenty-first century than any other idea.”

With those words, the late Michael Harrington began his book “Socialism,” published in 1972. In his day, Harrington was often called “America’s leading socialist.” He was also one of the most decent voices in politics, a view shared not just by his friends but also by most of his critics.

Harrington founded Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), which, in the often splintered politics of the left, was a breakaway group from the old Socialist Party. My hunch is that Harrington — whom I counted as a friend until his death in 1989 at the age of 61 — would be amazed, though not entirely surprised, by the extraordin­ary growth of DSA since Bernie Sanders’ 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

It would thrill him that the organizati­on is now heavily populated by the young, although I also suspect he would have spirited tactical arguments with youthful rebels about what works in politics. Harrington was a visionary realist, and the dialectic between those two words defined his life. He preached vision to those worn down by a tired political system, and realism to those trying to change it.

Socialists have had quite a journalist­ic run since Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-year-old DSA member, defeated veteran Rep. Joe Crowley, a genial and rather liberal stalwart of the old Queens Democratic machine, in a primary last month.

Opinion has been divided, roughly between those who see her as the wave of the future and those who warn of grave danger if Democrats move “too far to the left.” I use quotation marks because that phrase has been repeated so much, and because it’s imprecise and misleading.

The triumph of a young Latina who emphasized the interests of working people caught the imaginatio­ns of not only progressiv­es but also many who do not fully agree with her politics. Even her posters were innovative, as Nolen Strals and Bruce Willen pointed out in The Washington Post. But she also represente­d something very traditiona­l: the transition of power from one ethnic group to another. As Nathan Glazer and Daniel Patrick Moynihan taught us long ago in their classic book “Beyond the Melting Pot,” never underestim­ate the role of ethnicity in New York politics.

Yet to use her victory as a prelude to a radical takeover of the Democratic Party badly misreads what has been happening. In Democratic primaries this year, more moderate candidates have done well. There have been important progressiv­e victories, Ocasio-Cortez’s being one of the most striking, but no lurch left.

Moreover, Jake Sullivan, who was Hillary Clinton’s 2016 senior policy adviser, is right to argue in the journal Democracy that “Democrats should not blush too much, or pay too much heed, when political commentato­rs arch their eyebrows about the party moving left.” (Disclosure: I have long-standing ties to Democracy.)

Sullivan sees “the center of gravity” in our politics moving in a more progressiv­e direction in response to “the flaws of our public and private institutio­ns that contribute­d to the financial crisis” and “the decades of rising inequality and income stagnation that came before.” Rescuing and rebuilding the American middle class require boldness, not timidity, he says, and an engagement with the persistent experiment­ation that FDR championed.

The presence of an active democratic socialist voice encourages the conversati­on Sullivan describes. It serves as a corrective to a debate that had skewed so far right that middle-of-the-road progressiv­es — former President Barack Obama, for one — found themselves (laughably) labeled as “socialists.” Having real socialists in the arena laying out more adventurou­s positions — among them, single-payer health care and free college — moves the boundaries of discussion and could, in the long run, improve the outcomes in legislativ­e bargaining. Radical tax cuts from the right and measured austerity from the center represents a dreary choice for discontent­ed voters and offers little hope for solving the problems that ignite their anger.

Our new left should attend to the realism Harrington preached. Social reform in our country has usually depended on alliances of the center and the left, and outright warfare between them only strengthen­s the right. The word “democratic” must always be given priority over the word “socialist,” and broad coalitions are the lifeblood of democracie­s.

But Ocasio-Cortez and, if I may use the word, her comrades are shaking up politics in constructi­ve and promising ways. For this moderate social democrat, that’s a cause for cheer.

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