Dems Need To Drop Culture Of Caution

by: Mike Lux

Fri Mar 06, 2009 at 10:00


Published this morning in POLITICO

You would think that with the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, Democrats at least would get that we need to make big, transformative changes as soon as possible.

And most of them do. Certainly President Barack Obama's economic recovery bill and budget - as well as calls for fundamental reform of health care, education and energy policy - show that he does. Certainly House Speaker Nancy Pelosi does: On Tuesday, she said in a meeting I attended that the House would pass Obama's major reform legislation in 2009. Most Democrats in the House and Senate understand that the moment for big change has arrived.

Not so much for a small minority of Democrats in the Senate. In Wednesday's POLITICO, 14 Democrats are identified as having concerns with Obama's policy plans. They're saying, "Hold on; not so fast; let's go slow; let's be cautious; Americans didn't want big change." Said Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.): "The American people and businesses are tightening their belts. I think we need to show that the government can economize, as well." Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), asked when he'd reach his breaking point, said, "Right now. I'm concerned about the amount that's being offered in [Obama's] budget."  

Mike Lux :: Dems Need To Drop Culture Of Caution
These senators are charter members of what I refer to in my new book as the culture of caution. In the 1960s and '70s, Democrats led the fight for major change in America, passing the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, Medicare, Medicaid, Head Start, the Legal Services Corp. and the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts, as well as getting us out of Vietnam and working on other great accomplishments.

In the 40 years since, Democrats have accomplished a few solid achievements - the State Children's Health Insurance Program, the Family and Medical Leave Act, the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday and the Superfund among them - but they haven't pushed for big, bold, transformative change. Too many Democrats are comfortable with the status quo and their business lobbyist friends, and they are scared to go out on a limb.

These kind of "be cautious, go slow" debates have been at the cusp of every big change moment in American history. Abraham Lincoln got a lot of advice from "go slow" Republicans not to write the Emancipation Proclamation. Teddy Roosevelt got massive pushback from corporate-allied members of both parties not to break up the big trusts. FDR got pushed by Southern Democrats and deficit hawks not to go forward with his New Deal programs, and he was even persuaded in 1937 to try balancing the budget, which caused the recession of 1937. The Kennedys and LBJ were begged by Southern Democrats and other cautious folks not to go too far with civil rights.

In each case, those cautious naysayers slowed the tide of big change but were not able to roll it back.

Unfortunately for those of us in the Clinton administration, our too-cautious message, along with the "don't do anything transformative with health care" Democrats - folks such as Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.) and Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) - slowed the Clinton health care reform effort enough that it stalled in Congress, which kept our voter base home in the 1994 elections and cost Democrats control of Congress. With our problems far worse now than they were in the '90s, I fear that these cautious Senate Democrats could damage Obama's ability to make big enough change. If that happens, voters who expected big change from Obama will be severely disappointed, and 2010 could be another 1994.

Windows for real change and real reform don't come around very often in American history - four times since our founding days (in the 1860s, early 1900s, 1930s and 1960s). These moments close fast when they do arrive. Democrats need to break out of the culture of caution and embrace Obama's transformative agenda.

Mike Lux was an adviser to President Bill Clinton and to the Obama-Biden transition team and is the author of "The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came to Be" (Wiley, 2009).


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I would say caution yes. Frozen by Fear NO! (4.00 / 3)
It's not caution, caution I think is warranted, as in proceding with caution, being aware of your surroundings, watching out for unintended consequences, but still proceding forward. Sometimes, for some things, caution does mean proceding quickly, not in slow motion.  What those Democrats are is frozen by fear of attack. Frozen into Deer in the headlights,  behind their bunkers, in their Fortress(s?) of Solitude(s),  

True enough (0.00 / 0)
Though "rash" is probably the last word that would ever be used to describe Obama. He's careful and deliberative with pretty much everything he does.

Conduct your own interview of Sarah Palin!

[ Parent ]
Exactly right Mike (4.00 / 6)
On some limited issues you can slog away year after year and finally get a piece of compromised legislation passed.

But now we are presented with a grand window of opportunity to pass a ton of tranformative legislation, and excessive caution will only waste the opportunity.

It's sort of disaster capitalism in reverse. Many things are pretty well completely broken and require more than duct tape to fix them. Dems need to seize the moment and do it right.


You can thank the following... (0.00 / 0)
Rahm Emanuel, Terry McAuliffe, Steny Hoyer and Harry Reid, to keep their Wall Street and J Street donors happy, pushed that red-state fear mongering crap until Gov. Dean and Obama blew their closet wide open.

Their biggest Senate puppet, Chuck the Schmuck Shumer, bragged about what a great tool it was to push Bush's policies through -FISA both Patriot Acts, etc ad nauseum.

And, they facilitate their continued power by keeping the oldest and most pathetic leader the Dems have ever had- Harry Reid, as ML.

And who enabled them? Obama.  The minute he joined with Harry to back Lieberman's rise to power REDUX, the bold smell of progress in the Senate shriveled to a stench.

Nationalism is not the same thing as terrorism, and an adversary is not the same thing as an enemy.


[ Parent ]
Yes, carpe diem! (4.00 / 3)
It's about time our Dem "leaders" stop cowering in fear of their own shadows. We have a unique opportunity NOW to make change happen! Take it, please take it!

Yes, Virginia, there are progressives in Nevada.

[ Parent ]
The last time the Congress threw caution to the wind (4.00 / 3)
and embraced a transformative change initiative from the Project for a New American Century Bush Whitehouse, we ended up bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan.

So, I can understand some hesitancy. I don't condone it, but I can understand it.

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


Which of these transformative change initiatives is not the same? (4.00 / 2)
The ringing bell doesn't actually make the dinner. Pavlov's dogs may not have been aware of this, or might not have seen it in their interest to care, but the Congress is better equipped to distinguish cause and effect.

Aren't they? ;-)


[ Parent ]
David's Apocalypse and Mike's Carpe Diem are one and indivisible (4.00 / 3)
Both perspectives have their merits. Myself, I fall between the two stools somewhere -- when I'm feeling at my most objective, anyway -- which could itself be a self-congratulatory illusion.

On the apocalypse side, it seems pretty clear to me that the world hammered together piece-by-piece after WWII, and extended, by one accident or another, for more than forty years, has vanished almost overnight. Like the May Day parades of its old bête noir, the Soviet Union before it, the series of ruses conjured up by a political class desperate to extend it beyond its use-by date have all finally failed. If you listen carefully, Rush Limbaugh makes that case for us as effectively as Osama bin Laden. No matter whether the deficit is small or large, whether we tax or cap-and-trade, the dance of Binyamin Netanyahu and Hillary Clinton is clearly the last dance of empire. All that's needed is a cardboard number around their necks.

On the better-to-light-one-candle-than-to-curse-the-darkness side, what my mother used to tell me is true, we're happier when we're at work, especially when we're working with other people. Solipsism, especially a solipsism tinged with presentiments of doom, is truly an awful disease. And anyway, what better things have we got to do? Race dune buggies? Join a brigade of Civil War re-enactors? Dress up as Spock and head for the next Trekkie convention?

Can we save the world? Probably not. I'm not convinced that the planet needs a species with such grandiose notions at the top of the food chain in any case. David's epiphany came in Mexico City on top of a resurrected pyramid; mine came one summer night more than forty years ago, sitting on the stone steps of a first-century amphitheater, listening to a nineteenth-century opera, surrounded by very modern Italian families with picnic baskets and bottles of wine. Europe is like that, bits and pieces of the past embedded, happily or not, in what seems a fairly ordinary present -- ordinary, that is, when not in the grip of this or that cataclysmic war.

Europeans have always mourned what they've lost, saved what they could, and gotten on with it. Buildings and illusions come and go, but the people continue. There's a lesson in that, I think. It's not that the apocalypse isn't a possibility, but much of what it will consume if it does come will be our vanity. In the meantime, we should do what we can to prevent it; the first step is to cure ourselves of our own delusions. Ballistic missile submarines and SUVs should go; universal health care and the Constitution should stay; the rest isn't really ours to decide.


Well said, Mike. (4.00 / 2)
Enough with the fear. Enough with the "oh noezzzz!" Enough with the procrastination. The Reagan-Bush Era left us with radical problems. And while I do think President Clinton's heart was in the right (er, left) place, it was frustrating to see him abandoned by so many in his own party and left to only stop the GOP from doing worse.

But now, we have no more excuses. And despite all the hot air we hear from the "Democrats" in the "Gang of 14", Americans don't want any more "centrist" caution. They want solutions, dammit!

Cautious centrist compromise won't give us universal health care, sustainable energy solutions, civil rights advances, and balanced foreign policy. We can't meet the GOP halfway inbetween center-left and radical right any longer.

Yes, Virginia, there are progressives in Nevada.


Newton's correct (4.00 / 1)
Newton's basic and simple laws of physics apply to other things.  A body at rest tends to stay at rest.  A body in motion tends to stay in motion.  Cutting the gas  and slowing up when the US economy is in motion downwards is beyond cautious.  It is stupid and suicidal.

Who do these 14 bozos represent?  Who are they, in fact.  The unemployment rate zoomed from 7.6% to 8.1% in February.  Those are seasonally adjusted numbers.  The official unadjusted figure is a staggering 8.9% (higher if you count discouraged workers, the standard method until 1986 when Reagan decided to make future unemployment figures less meaningful but consistently lower).

When the bombs started to drop in Pearl Harbor, the Senior Officer Aflot gave a quick order to start the engines and steam out of the trap.  The problem was, of course, that it took so long to get things going only 1 ship IIRC actually made some headway.  We need to get things going at this point or the momentum will drag this hige country even further downwards.  If Bayh had one half of the brains or one quarter of the guts his father had he'd be working to help the recovery and not working to disable it.


We gave them a Mandate for Change (0.00 / 0)
in 2006 and again in 2008.

Half measures will avail us nothing.


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