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Quote of the Day: Howard Dean and His Supporters “Blind Spot” on Health Care Reform?

Our political Quote of the Day comes from The Atlantic’s Ronald Brownstein, who has always been a great political analyist, including back in the days when he wrote some of the best stuff ever for the Los Angeles Times. He looks at what he says is former DNC Chairman Howard Dean’s “blind spot” on health care reform — and sheds light on why Dean and some other progressives are now calling for health care reform to be defeated:

Maybe one reason former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean and so much of the digital Left can so casually dismiss the Senate health care reform bill is that they operate in an environment where so few people need to worry about access to insurance.

The 2004 presidential campaign that propelled Dean to national prominence was fueled predominantly by “wine track” Democratic activists-generally college-educated white liberals. (In the virtually all-white 2004 Iowa caucus, for instance, exit polls showed that two-thirds of Dean’s votes came from voters with a college degree.) Those are the same folks, all evidence suggests, who provide the core support for online activist groups like MoveOn.org or Dean’s Democracy for America and congregate most enthusiastically on liberal websites. (According to studies by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, college graduates are more than twice as likely as those with only a high-school degree to communicate about politics online.) Along with Dean, those digital Democratic activists are generating the loudest demands to derail the Senate bill.

Some individuals in these overlapping political networks undoubtedly face challenges with access to health care, but as a group college-educated whites are much less likely than any other segment of the population to lack health insurance.

Brownstein then supplies some stats and ends with this:

No president has ever come as close as Barack Obama is today to moving the nation toward universal health coverage; no universal coverage bill had ever before passed the House, nor has one ever advanced as far in the Senate as the bill now under debate. For Dean to insist that Senate Democrats start over after that grueling struggle is a little like suggesting that American troops on the outskirts of Berlin in 1945 should have retreated back to France because D-Day wasn’t choreographed just right.

The broad mass of college-educated white voters are an increasingly central component of the Democratic coalition. But it remains a challenge for the party to manage the expectations of that community’s most liberal segments because they tend to see politics less as a means of tangibly improving their own lives than as an opportunity to make a statement about the kind of society they want America to be. That is not a perspective that encourages compromise or pragmatism. It may be easier for Dean, and the activists cheering him on, to view the Senate bill as an affront to their values precisely because so few of their interests are directly at stake in the fierce fight over this imperfect but landmark legislation.


Read it in full.

Some observations from this independent voter:

  • The Democratic party made great strides in past years to have the face of a party that was a bigger tent than the increasingly more ideologically defined GOP. Dean’s call and the call by some now to defeat a bill that is the product of quite ugly but still authentic compromise will turn off some voters.
  • Early on in Obama’s administration it was clear that centrists did not raise smiles of welcome among the GOP right or the Democratic party left. “Centrist” is actuallly a broad category (except for those who seek to exclude centrists who don’t think totally like them): in reality centrists can be center right or center left or vary on specific issues. True, there are some (like Joe Lieberman) who some feel give centrists a bad name. But, more than ever, America’s polarization into not just partisan camps but ideological camps (You’re either on our side or you are the enemy) has never been more apparent.
  • Early on it became clear that some key GOPers including Bill Kristol felt that if the Republicans could kill health care reform they could politically disembowel Barack Obama so, like Bill Clinton who also took over the Oval Office amid great hopes for substantive change, Obama would be short-circuited. Whoever thought that in the end it would be Obama’s own political party that moved to political disembowel him?
  • The narrative for some time has been how Republicans shot themselves in the foot and frittered away major control of all branches of the government. It’s quite possible that the new narrative will be the Democrats frittering away their 2008 victory because one wing of the party wants to teach the White House and party leaders a lesson — and in doing so makes the GOP Principal of the schools in 2010 and perhaps 2012 where the lessons are taught?
  • Dean has been attractive to the Democratic party’s left. But there are some Democrats and independent voters who were never sold on him and would not have voted for the party if he had gotten the nomination. When he seemingly fell from grace due to his scream, it wasn’t the scream alone: a scream would not have done it. To many voters he was damaged goods then and, as Brownstein notes, it seems as if he is poised to damage his party now. And there will be an irony to some non-Dean Democrats who are up for-re-election: This guy wants to kill health care reform which could doom our party and he was once head of the DNC.
  • The Dean-White House tensions point out a MAJOR failing of the Obama political team. With Dean’s medical background he should have been brought in to have become part of the administration. Rather, i due to reported ire over his performance as DNC chair when Obama was running against Hilllary Clinton, he remained marginalized by the Obama administration. On this and several other political matters, instead of being the slick political operatives as many in the press have suggested, the Obama White House increasingly seems to have a political tin ear — and how they are paying for it with Dean. Don’t compare them to JFK’s or FDR’s team. They are not on the same level. In some ways, they flunk PoliSci 101.
  • This raises another shattering of the conventional wisdom. When Obama won, some thought the Democrats were in a new era where they could outmaneuver and outfox the Republicans. Instead, the White House and Democrats now clearly seem to be on the defensive so all old conventional wisdom about the GOP and its chances need to be put on hold.


  • 5 Responses to “Quote of the Day: Howard Dean and His Supporters “Blind Spot” on Health Care Reform?”

    1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by TMV, The DC Meme. The DC Meme said: [The Moderate Voice] Quote of the Day: Howard Dean and His Supporters "Blind Spot" on Health Care Reform? – http://bit.ly/8CGbVx [...]

    2. mikkel says:

      I'm glad you mentioned what the piece completely failed to: Dean has an extensive medical background and has been working on this issue for years. Regardless of the politics, no one I've talked to on the inside believes the bill will fix anything: I've talked to doctors, medical researchers and insiders on the supply side (medical devices and insurance). They all agree that the bill is just a very expensive and temporary (5-10 years at most) patch.

    3. [...] Quote of the Day: Howard Dean and His Supporters “Blind Spot” on – The Moderate VoiceOur political Quote of the Day comes from The Atlantic’s Ronald Brownstein , who has always been a great political analyist, including back in the days when he wrote some of the best stuff ever for the Los Angeles Times. He looks at what he says is [...]

    4. dduck12 says:

      Shh, don't let the Dems hear that… They don't want reality, only a phony reality show: “Survival, Wash., DC”.

    5. apparently rahm doesnt' need the votes next year: rahm: a lot of ding dong

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