Some Dems echo GOP’s ‘no compromise’ demand in primaries
Liberal activists, frustrated by the absence of a potent challenger from the left to
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Democratic insiders question how far the strategy might spread in a party that generally wants government to work. But if it does expand, it could make life harder for legislative leaders in a
The
By most measures, Van Hollen’s record is mainstream liberal or progressive. Americans for Democratic Action gives him an 80 percent rating. That ranks him fourth among the seven House Democrats from
But Van Hollen isn’t ideologically pure enough for liberal groups that prefer Rep.
Van Hollen’s liberal critics include Daily Kos columnists and the group Moveon.org. The group began in response to President
Moveon.org calls Van Hollen “accomplished and capable.” But the group says “it was deeply disappointing” when Van Hollen praised the basic framework of the 2010 Bowles-Simpson deficit-reduction plan.
Obama commissioned the report but never embraced it, and it eventually fell victim to attacks from all sides. The report called for tax increases and spending cuts, saying both parties must yield hallowed political ground to make significant progress against future deficits. Neither party did.
The Bowles-Simpson plan would have slowed the projected growth of
Over time, however, key liberal groups hardened their stand against any trims to these large and growing programs. They now question whether Democrats such as Van Hollen are sufficiently liberal.
Some lawmakers blamed the collapse of Bowles-Simpson and similar bipartisan “grand bargains” on congressional Republicans who promised voters they would never compromise their conservative principles, even if Democrats gave up a lot in return. Such “don’t compromise” rhetoric is now animating at least a few Democratic primaries.
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Political analysts say the Democrats’ remarkably uncrowded presidential field — so far, anyway — is pushing liberal activism elsewhere.
“The absence of a prominent progressive in the ranks of Democratic presidential hopefuls has accelerated the quest for congressional candidates who could hold
“The only powerbroker strong enough to discourage these types of infra-party brawls is usually the president,” Schnur said. As Obama becomes increasingly seen as a lame duck, he said, “there’s no one in the party with the ability to discourage a potential spoiler.”
Polls find Democratic voters more inclined to see government as a force for good, and therefore more accepting of compromises to make divided government work. That’s why some analysts think a “no compromise” mandate won’t go far in Democratic primaries.
“Nothing like the ‘no new taxes’ pledge has been duplicated on the Democratic side,” said
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