Punchbowl reports:
Multiple House Democrats complained to us that their leadership isn’t providing sufficient guidance on key issues. This situation reared its head on Tuesday, when moderate Democrats were surprised – and dismayed – at the tone and scale of their colleagues’ protests....Omigod! Everyone's talking about how the Democrats conducted themselves! And so what? The implication is that Green's outburst might cost Democrats the midterms twenty months from now (assuming we even have midterms).
“The bottom line is a lot of people are upset, and they expressed they’re being upset,” said Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.), who won back a swing Long Island district for Democrats last year:“But as a strategic matter, it was a bad idea. Instead of talking about things we disagreed with in the president’s speech, everybody’s talking about how the Democrats conducted themselves. And I think it was a big mistake.”
But let me remind you what happened after the outburst that began the modern era of heckling at presidential speeches. Surely you remember:
A Republican congressman is under fire for shouting "You lie" during Barack Obama's speech to Congress on healthcare reform.That was in September 2009 -- fourteen months before the midterms. Did it spell doom for Republicans in 2010?
In an extraordinary breach of political protocol, Joe Wilson, a Republican representative for South Carolina, shouted at Obama as the president told the joint sitting that his plan for a universal healthcare system would not cover illegal immigrants.
Obama looked in the direction of the shout, said "It's not true" and went on with his speech. But the outburst stunned both Democrats and Republicans and drew condemnation from the public. Republicans froze, with several looking in Wilson's direction.
Hardly:
Republicans gained seven seats in the Senate (including a special election held in January 2010).... In the House of Representatives, Republicans won a net gain of 63 seats, the largest shift in seats since the 1948 elections. In state elections, Republicans won a net gain of six gubernatorial seats and flipped control of twenty state legislative chambers, giving them a substantial advantage in the redistricting that occurred following the 2010 United States census. The election was widely characterized as a "Republican wave" election.Brian Beutler writes:
Even after Tuesday’s spectacle, many in the liberal elite and the Democratic leadership still believe studied submissiveness is the best form of resistance. A “dignified presence,” as Hakeem Jeffries put it.The center "abhors showy antics and partisan rancor" -- and yet four months ago the center voted for Donald Trump in sufficient numbers to give him both a popular-vote win and an Electoral College win. How do scared Democrats explain that?
They theorize that defeating Trump requires capturing the center, which abhors showy antics and partisan rancor.
"Showy antics and partisan rancor" alienate the center? Do Democrats remember what Republicans did nine days before the 2024 election?
Donald Trump hosted a rally featuring crude and racist insults at New York’s Madison Square Garden....Can we all agree that this rally was a tad worse than Al Green shaking a cane at the president? Yet it didn't hurt Trump and Republicans at all.
“I don’t know if you guys know this, but there’s literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now. I think it’s called Puerto Rico,” said Tony Hinchcliffe, a stand-up comic whose set also included lewd and racist comments about Latinos, Jews and Black people....
Trump’s childhood friend David Rem referred to Harris as “the Antichrist” and “the devil.” Businessman Grant Cardone told the crowd that Harris ”and her pimp handlers will destroy our country.”
But perhaps Democrats believe that gestures of resistance are pointless and all that matters is what you do in Congress as legislators. In that case, surely they're going to take advatage of their one point of leverage -- the need for sixty votes in the Senate to pass a continuing resolution in order to prevent a government shutdown. Right? Leveraging that is their plan, isn't it?
Nahhh. Axios reports:
Senate Democrats are indicating they won't tank a short-term government funding package....What are Democrats afraid of? They think they'll be blamed for the shutdown. They're probably right. But so what?
A truly clean funding bill will make life easier for Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer....
Schumer has been clear that he wants to avoid a shutdown. Even talking about wanting one is a big no-no.
If the GOP can get a clean continuing resolution (CR) through the House, and avoid multiple GOP defectors in the Senate, it should be doable to get enough Dems on board to reach 60 votes, multiple sources tell Axios.
Does anyone remember 2013? Republicans shut down the government for seventeen days. So what happened in the next election cycle?
This is what happened:
Elections were held in the United States on November 4, 2014....D.C. Democrats believe that boldness and aggression will doom them, even though boldness and aggression never doom Republicans. They believe overt partisanship -- merely taking their own side in an argument, rather than incessantly saying, "We want to work with Republicans in areas where we agree" -- alienates voters in the middle, even though Republicans and the right-wing media have railed against the alleged evils of "the Democrat Party" every single day for decades, and not only hasn't it alienated middle-of-the-road Democrats, it's helped make states such as Ohio, Iowa, Missouri, and Florida red where they were once purple.
Republicans won a net gain of nine Senate seats, the largest Senate gain for either party since the 1980 United States elections. In the House, Republicans won a net gain of thirteen seats, giving them their largest majority since the 1928 elections. In state elections, Republicans won a net gain of two gubernatorial seats and flipped control of ten legislative chambers.
I know that many people believe Democrats don't fight because they're actually a wing of America's "uniparty" and secretly want Republicans to win. But nothing prevents them from actually joining the GOP, especially the ones in swing states and districts. If they chose to, they could flee the Democratic Party en masse. They don't.
They fail to fight because, like many battered spouses, they've come to believe that their batterer might be right to abuse them and they're the ones at fault. They think they'll survive if they're meek and conciliatory, or if they praise their abuser on the rare occasion when the abuser is nice to them. (Notice how much praise Kamala Harris lavished on Liz Cheney. Notice the praise for Ronald Reagan in Elissa Slotkin's Democratic rebuttal speech Tuesday night.) Or they hope someone else will save them. (That's the James Carville play dead and wait for Republicans to collapse strategy.)
So their belief that docility and outreach are winning strategies comes from motivated reasoning. They want to believe these things work. They're afraid to reality-test their theory because they've been beaten down and the thought of standing up for themselves scares them, while they've survived thus far being meek and mild.
I don't mean this as a criticism of battered spouses. Abuse is horrible. If you're being abused, it's not your fault if you choose a coping strategy that disempowers yourself. You need to survive. If that seems like a way of surviving, you can't be blamed.
But I do blame Democrats for adopting this strategy. For them, the abuse is figurative, not literal. They could stand up for themselves at any time.
Democrats are alienating their base, in pursuit of swing voters who frequently elude them. They think that's a shrewd strategy -- after all, where else can the base go on Election Day? But as Michael Podhorzer noted a couple of months ago, base voters can just stay home:
... the results [of the 2024 election] are best understood as a vote of no confidence in Democrats, not an embrace of Trump or MAGA....Democrats need to give their base something to vote for. The leadership seems to have made a choice not to do that.
The popular vote result was almost entirely a collapse in support for Harris and Democrats, not an increase in support for Trump and MAGA. Trump was no more popular this year than four years ago, while Harris significantly underperformed Biden 2020....
A key to Biden’s victory was high turnout from less-engaged voters who believed they had something to lose under Trump. In 2024, however, about 15 million fewer votes were cast “against” Trump than in 2020.
One final point: I think many Democrats are conflating passion and progressive ideology. Here are a couple of quotes from that Punchbowl story -- first from an Ohio Democrat:
Rep. Greg Landsman (D-Ohio) expressed a desire to move on from “all of the grievance crap and the cultural war nonsense — whether it’s screaming and shouting from Republicans or paddle signs from Democrats.”Then from Ro Khanna of California:
“My view is we push back on Trump by going to voters in red areas, making the case for our vision, and sharing the firings of veterans and cuts in Medicaid that will impact their lives,” Khanna said.But even if you don't want Democrats to engage in what you consider "culture war nonsense" -- even if you think "Defund the Police" was a bad message, or think that progressive Democrats are further to the left than the American public on immigration, trans rights, or Gaza, you can still be passionate about areas of Democratic agreement. You can get angry about firing veterans and cutting Medicaid. You can be a passionate left-centrist. Progressives will agree with you on these kitchen-table issues, and you can bring middle-of-the-road voters along.
Don't be meek, Democrats. Show some fight. You're not really a battered spouse. Nothing terrible will happen to you.