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Ain’t Nothing Centrist About Them

At this moment -- when 72 percent of the nation supports a public planoption and 14,000 people lose their healthcare every day -- the HouseBlue Dogs and conservative Democratic Senators are doing just abouteverything they can to cripple real health care reform.

So why does the media keep ceding them the label of "centrist" or"moderate" as if they are the guardians of mainstream values?

In a recent profile on reform slayer Max Baucus -- Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee and creator of his majority Republican "Coalition of the Willing" -- Washington Post reporter Dan Eggen refers to Baucus as "a longtime centrist in the Democratic caucus." Even Harold Meyerson -- who along with E.J. Dionne and Ruth Marcus keeps the WashingtonPost op-ed page from being neocon central and is one of the best inthe business at understanding the ideologies at play in Washington -- ina recent op-ed repeatedly decries the "centrist Democrats" such as the Blue Dogs who fight against taxing the richest 1 percent of Americans and promote a "can't-do" view of government.

Katrina vanden Heuvel

July 24, 2009

At this moment — when 72 percent of the nation supports a public planoption and 14,000 people lose their healthcare every day — the HouseBlue Dogs and conservative Democratic Senators are doing just abouteverything they can to cripple real health care reform.

So why does the media keep ceding them the label of “centrist” or”moderate” as if they are the guardians of mainstream values?

In a recent profile on reform slayer Max Baucus — Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee and creator of his majority Republican “Coalition of the Willing” — Washington Post reporter Dan Eggen refers to Baucus as “a longtime centrist in the Democratic caucus.” Even Harold Meyerson — who along with E.J. Dionne and Ruth Marcus keeps the WashingtonPost op-ed page from being neocon central and is one of the best inthe business at understanding the ideologies at play in Washington — ina recent op-ed repeatedly decries the “centrist Democrats” such as the Blue Dogs who fight against taxing the richest 1 percent of Americans and promote a “can’t-do” view of government.

All Things Considered host Guy Raz recently introduced a story on “forty centrist House Democrats from the so-called Blue Dog Coalition[who] are threatening to block the proposal in its current form….” Healso spoke of “Congressman Mike Ross [who] heads up the Health CareTaskforce for the centrist Blue Dog Democrats.” Want to see how”centrist” Mike Ross is? Check this out.

Even a good regional paper like Louisville’s Courier-Journal–in rightly blasting the Blue Dogs as “deplorable” for being “unable to muster the spine to pay for health care reform with even so innocuous a measure as higher taxes on the richest 1 percent of Americans”–calls them “centrist”.

The danger is that promoting the view that these conservative Democratsare somehow at the center of our politics plays into the hands of thosewho would like to marginalize progressives as far outside of themainstream. (And I have no doubt K Street is advising Republicans toconstantly refer to their Democratic allies as “moderate” and”centrist”.) It also misrepresents what most Americans want from the government in these times.

As Drew Westen, professor of psychology at Emory University, founder ofWesten Strategies, and author of the invaluable The PoliticalBrain, told me: “The average American, according to all availabledata, has largely moved slightly left of where it was in the Reaganyears, and with changing demographics, it will be far left of Reagan andBush in twenty years. So to call Democrats who are substantially right of the center of the electorate (let alone of their party), like HeathShuler, ‘moderates,’ is both to misrepresent the center of politicalgravity in the general electorate and in the Democratic Party.”

How we tell the story of this battle for health care reform matters andwill impact whether the battle is won or lost. So-called “centrists”are far from the center of this debate. They are, in fact, out of touchand out of the mainstream — like the rest of their conservativebrethren.

Katrina vanden HeuvelTwitterKatrina vanden Heuvel is editorial director and publisher of The Nation, America’s leading source of progressive politics and culture. She served as editor of the magazine from 1995 to 2019.


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