Speaking recently in Berlin, former President Barack Obama said he worries about "a certain kind of rigidity" among progressives. He cautioned against creating a circular firing squad in which "you start shooting at your allies because one of them is straying from purity on the issues." The risk, he said, is that "the overall effort and movement weakens."
Next month Democrats will begin head-to-head debates, with 17 candidates already qualified to take part under the party's ground rules. How will they manage to stand out? And what direction will moderators from NBC News take to aid that process?
Is it reasonable to ask Elizabeth Warren about her Native American roots? Joe Biden about age? Bernie Sanders about becoming a millionaire? Amy Klobuchar about being tough with her staff? Pete Buttigieg about his sexuality?
Each of these questions has been asked numerous times on the campaign trail. Yet many people, myself among them, believe they are not appropriate in a national debate that should focus on issues directly affecting our future.
One such issue is climate. If, for instance, moderators ask about the Green New Deal, they invite general agreement about the problem and vagueness about solutions. Perhaps they should be more specific, by asking about, say, nuclear power, which remains a controversial part of the climate debate. But if candidates agree there is a climate crisis yet differ on nuclear are they eating their own?
What about reparations? Every candidate wants to do something, even if it's just having a committee study the matter. So is it appropriate to demand greater specificity—such as making one-time cash payments to all black Americans?
On immigration, there are only so many ways Democrats can say, "strengthen the border without a wall and also create a path to citizenship for 11 million undocumented people already living here." In separating 17 well-intentioned candidates, there's no there there.
Bernie Sanders cooked up a tasty opportunity for Democrats to eat their own when he spoke recently about allowing prison inmates to vote. Most progressives are sympathetic on that issue, but Sanders was cornered at a CNN town hall when asked if he would allow the Boston Marathon bomber to vote. Determined to stand on principle, he said "yes." Other Democrats later distanced themselves from Sanders, but the topic is not one that would move the needle in a debate.
As next month's event is likely to show, the 2020 Democratic candidates have strikingly similar views on most major issues. But if voters conclude that this bumper crop of candidates is essentially all the same, what's left? Women supporting women? Blacks supporting blacks? Midwesterners supporting Midwesterners?
Democrats have no choice but to drill down to find meaningful policy disagreements. They should do it respectfully. And, lest they devour their own, they should ignore distinctions without a difference.
(c) Peter Funt. Distributed by Cagle syndicate.
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