Are the Parties Over?
by Gary Hart, AlterNet.org
Political parties as we know them are disintegrating. But what happens next?
…Except
for the ideologically devout, voters likewise are shaking loose the
bonds of party loyalty and more and more joining the third party, the
independents, either figuratively or literally. To a degree, the
process becomes self-fulfilling. As voters less and less need the party
to tell them what to think and whom to vote for, the parties more and
more retreat to their hardcore ideological bases, thus further
alienating mainstream voters who are less doctrinaire partisans and
more eclectic individuals.
Finally,
the information revolution disintegrates old media and political
structures. Virtually anyone in America today can organize his or her
own individual information network tailored to his or her increasingly
individual concerns. Nothing symbolizes this stunning fact more than
the explosion of personal blog sites. Now everyone has opinions and a
forum, the Internet, for expressing them. We are all consumers and
producers of opinions if not also “news.” You can choose to focus your
attention on defense and foreign policy, or fiscal and monetary policy,
or health care and education, or the environment, or anyone of hundreds
of individual areas of interest, or any collection of them. You don't
have to adopt an entire party platform, in any case a kind of 19th
Century exercise that has become basically meaningless. You can write
your own platform. You can be a party of one. And that is increasingly
what millions of Americans are becoming.
Out of
power, the watchword among Democrats, and many independents, is: “I
don't know what the Democrats stands for.” That's because the Party's
old coalition — traditional liberals, labor, minorities, women,
environmentalists, and internationalists — is in the process of
disappearing and a new one has yet to be formed. Millions of people
wait to hear what the 21st Century Democratic Party stands for, and
Democratic Party “leaders” are not saying until they see what the new
coalition is going to look like. They are afraid of taking principled
stands for fear of alienating some group they think they need. So there
is a kind of stand-off. Voters afloat want to hear what the Party has
to say, and the Party is trying to find out what they want to hear.
But many
traditional Republicans don't know what their Party stands for either.
It used to stand for balanced budgets, resistance to foreign
entanglement, laissez faire economics, smaller government, and
individual freedom. Not any more. That old coalition has disappeared as
well. The new Republican Party stands for big government, huge
deficits, pre-emptive warfare, massive nation-building, neo-imperialism
in the Middle East, intrusion on your privacy, and a semi-official
state religion dictated by fundamentalist ministers.
(Click here to read the complete article.)
Submitted by Mark Brooks in Carlisle, Iowa.