The Signal

1972 Moment for Democrats?

- David M. SHRIBMAN David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. His commentary is distribute­d by Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n.

The most important political tweet last week came on Veterans Day. And no, it wasn’t from whom you think. It went like this: Grateful to all who have served. More than ever, today you are in our thoughts as we celebrate your sacrifice and service. Let’s spare no expense as a country to ensure that you receive the care and services you’ve earned.

The sender? Beto O’Rourke, the Democratic congressma­n who earlier this month lost a bitter and brutal Texas Senate race to Ted Cruz. And the broad political meaning of this tweet? O’Rourke is still in the game, conducting himself as if he won that contest rather than lost it, offering a comment that was remarkable because it was thoroughly unremarkab­le, sharing thoughts completely in keeping with expectatio­ns at a time when all political expectatio­ns are being shattered.

No one knows right now what O’Rourke’s plans and destiny are once his congressio­nal term ends in the first week of January. But he is not the ordinary defeated Senate candidate. His campaign produced ripples far outside the borders of Texas, and his message resonated with Democrats nationwide.

There are two potential meanings to O’Rourke’s profile.

One is that he might have won while losing. That, to be sure, is an unusual viewpoint, given that America doesn’t ordinarily fall in love with losers, except of course when they are the Brooklyn Dodgers or, until they ruined everything by becoming diamond powerhouse­s, the Boston Red Sox and the Chicago Cubs.

For O’Rourke, the precedent is Abraham Lincoln. A stretch, perhaps, and an example from the Republican Party, but Lincoln lost the 1858 Illinois Senate race to Stephen A. Douglas only to win the GOP presidenti­al nomination two years later and to enter the White House in 1861. O’Rourke is no less attractive to Democrats now than he might have been had he won that Senate race — and he surely has more time to campaign than he would have had if he were required to attend Senate committee meetings. He also will not be saddled by recorded Senate votes the way some of his putative 2020 rivals surely will be.

But there is a deeper significan­ce here, and it redounds to the stereo struggles that the two major parties are undergoing:

How far to their relative extremes do they go — the Democrats to the left as they begin to consider the massive group at the starting line of the 2020 marathon, and the Republican­s to the right as they contemplat­e how much they want their party to reflect the values, policies and impulses of Donald Trump and how much they want, in the post-Trump era, to return to their traditiona­l values and positions on issues ranging from the deficit to trade to internatio­nal engagement?

In short, are the Democrats in a 1972 moment, when they had to decide how much to embrace the George McGovern notions of a come-home-America foreign policy (accompanie­d by a reduction of about a third in military spending) and a “demogrant” domestic policy (that would have handed every American about $1,000 in tax credits to produce a national income floor)?

Meanwhile, are the Republican­s in an 1841 moment, when they were in the position of the Whigs when forced to confront the uncomforta­ble fact that they had four years of John Tyler to contend with after the sudden death of William Henry Harrison? “We have made some sacrifices, may make more, to retain him,” Henry Clay said of Tyler, a onetime Democrat congenial to states’ rights nostrums the Whigs abhorred, adding, “but the seeds of mutual distrust are, I fear, so extensivel­y sown that it will be difficult to reunite and harmonize us all again.”

In the campaign leading to this month’s midterm elections, the Republican­s embraced the president because they recognized he had a constituen­cy that was passionate and, moreover, that his base was roiled into action by the Democrats’ response to the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. None of these Republican candidates ran away from Trump, though former Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachuse­tts, running for (and winning) a Senate seat from Utah, kept his distance.

But beneath the GOP surface there remains deep unease about the president, potent as he is as a political pugilist.

And just as significan­t, beneath the Democratic surface there remains deep unease about the party’s future, with virulent anti-Trump Democrats leaning left and with others following the more soothing O’Rourke model -- pioneered by Rep. Seth Moulton of Massachuse­tts and replicated by Rep. Conor Lamb of Pennsylvan­ia, who has won two contests in seven months, the most recent against an incumbent who had glided to victory with 62 percent of the vote two years earlier in a different district.

Do the Republican­s embrace the Trump model for their future? Do the Democrats embrace the O’Rourke model — unabashedl­y liberal, to be sure, supporting gun control, a higher minimum wage, stronger antitrust measures, but not alienating to moderates — for their future?

The Democrats’ dilemma came into sharp relief last week, for within a telling 24-hour period newly elected left-leaning Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York spoke to environmen­tal activists at a sit-in at the offices of likely House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and the centrist Progressiv­e Policy Center released a survey it said showed “the surprising resilience of America’s pragmatic political center.”

A century ago, Republican­s split between the William Howard Taft pragmatist­s and the Theodore Roosevelt progressiv­es. “Parties go through this kind of thing,” said historian Patricia O’Toole, a Columbia University professor emerita. “Eventually they have to decide.”

Eventually they do.

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