This
movement's goal is the reversal of the 20th century social-welfare state, true.
And that is the reason for its being; it's the glint in its eye, or more
accurately, the very twinkle in its monocle. Without the dream of a
"free market" the party is reduced to the ideology of a permanent
minority: the lesser of two evil status with which it ambled through the
1950s and 60s. A fate its ideologues and funders will not accept.
Lind
argues that “No doubt some Reaganite conservatives will continue to fight
the old battles, like the Japanese soldiers who hid on Pacific islands for
decades, fighting a war that had long before been lost. But as a formula
for achieving a governing majority in the United States, Reaganism is finished.” I am not so optimistic. With the financial
and political power of the corporations and its useful instruments in the media
(as well as the continuing disappearance of unions from below) I see no
organized opposition to movement conservatism, regardless of its current
unpopularity. When Tea Party Republicans were elected in 2010 they ran on
fiscal issues, "debt reduction," but spent most of their time passing
legislation to restrict abortion and slow down the Affordable Care Act.
And as they are elected in the future, they will use their influence to
chip away at the earned benefit programs they call "entitlements" as
sure as they will lie their way into office. Free- marketeers will also
engineer new crises--as was done in Rhode Island by Ms. Raimondo--and force
through necessary, immediate, critical 'reforms.' And while a
market-based Medicare or 401K Social Security plan may not be on the schedule
now, working state programs are enduring reminders of good-government and
consequently can never be off the table for the ideologists of the right.
The party's method of pushing reforms might look less like Bush's
feckless 2005 attempt to privatize Social Security and more like the travesty
of Medicare part D, the health industry giveaway jackhammered through Congress.
Also, "Reaganism"
cannot be "finished," as Lind argues, when the very policy of the
doddering old fool was regulatory capture: turning over the state umpires
to corporate players. Does anyone think that if, say, Paul Ryan or Rick
Santorum are elected in 2016 they will not follow Ron's sinister and cynical
policy of handing over the car lots to the carjackers? Is there any
indicator that Reagan's famous denial of science, his backing of odious
regimes, his war against agencies like OSHA and unions would not continue in
the next Republican administration? With the right vessel, whose to say a
double victory ala Reagan--cuts and all--could not be on the agenda once
more?
Lind argued in 2004 that the
Democrats were no longer a national party, two years before they won back
Congress, four years before Obama's landslide, and eight years before a mighty
re-election mandate. In 2008, Lind argued that "Obama may join Washington, Lincoln and Franklin Delano
Roosevelt on the short list of American presidents who, thanks both to their
own leadership and the fortuitous timing of their elections, presided over the
refounding of the United States." This nicely overlapped with his book.
But not only is Obama a timid moderate on the domestic front, even mild
transformations Lind hopes for are delayed by the very conservative forces he
argues are ideologically irrelevant. Even now, "fiscal cliff"
looming and stung by a large defeat, austerity and the folly of a slashing
"Grand Bargain" of cuts on the welfare state are the real
conversation in Washington among the famed "consensus."
Meanwhile a jobs agenda with real regulatory reform and handcuffs for the
crooks and thieves on Wall Street is as fantastical as a New New Deal.
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