In a recent op-ed in the Washington Post, progressive Democratic Party operative Steve Rosenthal argues that Americans are becoming more progressive:
Not too long ago, everyone was declaring American politics a lost cause for progressives. The religious right supposedly had a stranglehold on elections. Then it was the tea party that had the political establishment — initially Democrats and Republicans — quaking. The media and the general public took hold of a narrative parroted by conservative candidates and opinion leaders: The United States was a “center-right†nation.
But after two consecutive elections in which the Democratic candidate for president garnered more than 50 percent of the vote — a one-two punch last achieved by Franklin Roosevelt — it is worth questioning that assumption. The country is getting more diverse, and as the proportion of white voters shrinks, so, too, does the conservative base. As demographics shift, so do political preferences — in this case, toward the left. A close examination of U.S. attitudes in the past decade-plus reveals that the United States is steadily becoming more progressive.
He continues by considering Americans’ views of immigration, marijuana, and big business.
Now, I don’t honestly know whether Americans are becoming more progressive, more conservative, or what. However, I don’t think you can arrive at that conclusion using the methods Mr. Rosenthal is using and moreover I think the question itself is meaningless.
For every issue on which Americans’ views have shifted in a direction that Mr. Rosenthal characterizes as “more liberal”, another issue could be identified on which Americans’ views have shifted in a way that he, presumably, would not think of that way. For example, Americans now believe that government is the biggest problem facing us (a problem not easily solved by the application of more government, which I think most would agree is the progressives’ preferred strategy); Americans’ approval of labor unions is weaker than it was five years ago, five years ago it was weaker than it was ten years ago, ten years ago it was weaker than it was twenty years ago and so on; and the role of religion remains strong in American life, something that distinguishes the United States from the more left-leaning states of Europe.
Additionally, because Americans’ views on immigration have changed since 2006 does not necessarily mean that they’ve become more liberal. More likely, it means that circumstances have changed. In 2006 we were in the midst of an up-tick in immigration. Over the last couple of years that has declined or even reversed. Thinking that reducing immigration is now less important than finding a practical and just way of dealing with the illegals already here isn’t ideological. It’s practical.
That’s what I believe about Americans’ political views. For good or ill unlike Mr. Rosenthal and unlike most in Congress a majority of Americans aren’t particularly ideological one way or another. You might characterize their views as eclectic, incoherent, or pragmatic depending on your own point-of-view but not ideological.