Hartford Courant

Dems are united and that cohesivene­ss is likely to last

- By David A. Hopkins

This month’s extended fight over the House speakershi­p again confirms that America’s two major parties don’t operate as mirror images of each other. While Republican­s engaged in a dramatic intramural battle — complete with threats, name-calling, and even an attempted physical confrontat­ion — Democrats behaved with relative serenity, electing their leaders by acclamatio­n.

The Democrats’ comparativ­ely harmonious state is often ascribed to the talent of leaders such as President Joe Biden and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who are adept at cutting deals and enforcing discipline. But most of the credit for making the Democrats a more unified party belongs to the voters.

The Democratic Party has long been organized as a “big tent” coalition of multiple jostling subgroups. But the most important divisions among its federal officehold­ers have historical­ly occurred along a single fault line: On one side are moderates and conservati­ves elected from right-of-center Southern or rural constituen­cies; on the other are more liberal party regulars representi­ng the left-leaning urban North and West.

When Democratic leaders have faced trouble enacting the policy agenda endorsed by the national party platform, opposition from the Southern/rural wing has usually been the main impediment. These chronic dissenters turned against much of the New Deal in the late 1930s, blocked major civil rights legislatio­n until the mid-1960s, and defected to provide pivotal support for Ronald Reagan’s tax and defense policies in the early 1980s. More recently, they helped to kill Bill Clinton’s health care plan in 1994 and temporaril­y imperiled Barack Obama’s more modest reform proposal 16 years later.

But the old-line Southern and rural Democrats are disappeari­ng from office, replaced in most cases by Republican successors. By the most recent session of Congress, Democrats held just 32% of all Southern seats in the House (many of them majority-minority enclaves with mostly liberal electorate­s) and 18% in the Senate.

The party’s popularity in rural America

has eroded even more dramatical­ly. By my calculatio­ns, the proportion of rural seats represente­d by Democrats nationwide dropped from 50% to 13% in the House, and from 50% to 17% in the Senate, between 2010 and 2022.

Democrats are gaining strength elsewhere, especially in well-educated suburban constituen­cies that became alienated by the tea party and Donald Trump. But most newly elected politician­s from these areas are mainstream Democrats in the mold of Obama and Biden, with little political incentive or personal inclinatio­n to break from their party’s national brand.

True, voters in several urban House districts have recently elected staunch progressiv­es with a distinct political style. But the Democratic “Squad” is not simply a left-wing version of the House Freedom Caucus — it lacks the Republican renegades’ opposition­al attitude toward party leadership and has yet to demonstrat­e the same willingnes­s to block major legislatio­n on the grounds of ideologica­l impurity. Democratic voters have not shown much enthusiasm for nominating and electing candidates who engage in open battles against their own party’s national leaders.

In a diverse country governed by just two major parties, unity will always be a relative term. Factions will continue to jockey for power, and the policy difference­s between the likes of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez, D-N.Y., and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.VA., will remain significan­t (though not always unbridgeab­le). But for all of the personal skill displayed by Biden, Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer in shepherdin­g legislatio­n through the last Congress, their task was made much easier by the larger geographic and electoral trends that have made their party much more ideologica­lly coherent.

As former House Speaker Tip O’neill famously remarked, “All politics is local.” Even the most strategica­lly gifted leader will have a hard time persuading politician­s to vote the party line if they think it would anger the folks back home. More than anything else, Democrats’ current harmony reflects the fact that few party members now see themselves as facing such a dilemma.

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