Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

The real wall is between conservati­sm and fresh ideas

- Commentary >> E.J. Dionne EJ Dionne Columnist

The contest for the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al nomination seemed to have little relationsh­ip to the madness that engulfed the nation’s capital over the government shutdown. But there is a much closer relationsh­ip between the Washington meltdown and the campaign than you might think.

You also hear a lot about Democrats veering left. This, too, misses the point.

What we’re actually seeing is a shift in the intellectu­al energy of American politics. This is the lesson of the disarray in the Republican Party and the ultimate capitulati­on of President Trump in the shutdown fight he initiated. Trump’s decision to close the government in the vain pursuit of an essentiall­y meaningles­s goal showed a party and ideologica­l movement lost in the wilderness.

Trump’s rise itself was a symptom of this. Traditiona­l conservati­ve nostrums of tax cuts for the best-off and business-friendly deregulati­on were not answering the needs of less affluent Republican­s. Frustrated, they embraced Trump’s nationalis­m and protection­ism along with, in many cases, his racialized appeals. They also noticed that Trump defended key social-insurance programs — especially Social Security and Medicare, which serve an aging Republican base.

In practice, Trump has stuck resolutely to the old conservati­sm, the corporate tax cut being his major achievemen­t. His administra­tion is a coterie of millionair­es and billionair­es whose insensitiv­ity to the shutdown’s victims suggested a worldview inspired by French Bourbons, not prairie populists.

Trump has asked his blue collar loyalists to live on a diet of rhetoric and empty symbols, the border wall being Symbol No. 1. Trump’s deteriorat­ing poll numbers showed that all but the most extreme of his supporters were losing faith in his project.

In the meantime, liberals and the left have absorbed key lessons from the Trump insurgency. One of them is that a progressiv­e movement seen as speaking primarily for affluent metropolit­an areas will never command a durable majority.

Another is that there is room for bolder political thinking, given the discontent in the country with unevenly shared economic growth.

Presidenti­al candidates, those thinking of running and other Democratic politician­s are also responding to the policy vacuum on the right embodied by the shutdown-for-a-symbol. For starters, supply-side economics is so yesterday. There is now room to talk about a wealth tax, proposed last week by Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, and a large middle- and working-class tax cut offered by Sen. Kamala Harris of California.

The underlying assumption­s of the right are under assault as well. Sen. Sherrod Brown, DOhio, has made “the dignity of work” his battle cry, making a case for the priority of labor over capital. Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, has called on Democrats to reclaim the concept of “freedom” from the right by insisting that in many areas of everyday life, beginning with civil rights and health care, it takes government action to make freedom a reality.

Nibbling at the edges of problems is no longer fashionabl­e.

Thus is Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., making universal paid family leave a centerpiec­e of her presidenti­al bid. Former HUD Secretary Julian Castro, is pushing for universal pre-K programs while former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has said that if he runs, he wants to highlight bold action to curb gun violence and climate change.

During Jimmy Carter’s administra­tion in the late 1970s, conservati­ves launched an intellectu­al revolution that left liberals gasping for breath and helped create the presidency of Ronald Reagan. Trump is doing all he can to become the latest one-term president to empower a philosophi­cal and policy rebirth among his opponents.

The real wall is between conservati­sm and fresh ideas.

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