It’s Time for Washington Democrats to
Break the Groundhog Day Cycle
By
millennial makeover
In the 1993 movie,
Groundhog Day, self-centered TV weathercaster, Phil
Connors (Bill Murray) is doomed to continuously
repeat the events of his life. He finally ends the
never-ending cycle and wins the love of his life
only after he finds the courage to break free of the
personal limitations of his past. Like Phil Connors,
many Washington pundits and politicians act as if
they and the country are destined to keep on
reliving the battle over health care from the
Clinton era. But it’s not 1993 and it’s finally
time to break the Groundhog Day pattern of American
politics.
The United States
has moved to a new political era driven by the
emergence of America’s next civic generation,
Millennials (born 1982-2003), and marked by a new
pattern of partisan identification and changed
attitudes. Strategies that may have been useful
nearly two decades ago are not likely to be
effective now. Failure to recognize these changes by
adhering to old and worn out approaches, in fact,
will be counterproductive.One thing that has changed
since the early 1990s is that the American
electorate is no longer evenly divided between
Republicans and Democrats. In 1994, according to the
Pew Research Center, an equal number of voters
identified as or leaned to the Democrats and
Republicans (44% each). Now
Pew shows an electorate in which half of the
electorate, or slightly more call themselves or lean
to the Democrats and only a third identify as or
lean to the Republicans. Millennials identify as
Democrats over Republicans by an even larger margin
(56% vs. 30%). Moreover, the U.S. electorate is now
more open to governmental activity and economic
intervention, more positive toward government, and
less driven by moralistic fears on social issues
than it was on the eve of the Gingrich revolution in
1994.
Unfortunately, many inside the Beltway seem intent
on reliving 1993 rather than moving to the new
Millennial civic era. For Republicans and
conservatives, who see resistance to change and
derailing Obama administration initiatives as the
way back to political power, this isn’t surprising.
After all, failure to pass health care reform in the
first two years of the Clinton administration
contributed to the GOP sweep in the 1994-midterm
elections. Republicans are hoping that, as in
Groundhog Day, history will repeat itself. But for
Democrats to act like it’s 1993 is truly surprising
and distressing. The results of this behavior are
already worrisome and could soon become disastrous.
Recent Gallup Poll data suggests Obama’s job
approval rating among 18-29 year olds (primarily
Millennials) has fallen from 71% to 60%. Given the
solidly Democratic party identification and liberal
political attitudes of Millennials, this decline
most likely stems from disappointment that the
president and congressional Democrats have not yet
delivered on a campaign message built around change
and reform. Certainly the decline is not based on
the president pushing change too far or too fast.
This increased disappointment with the outcome of
the first seven months of the Obama administration
among Millennials (and other Democratically-oriented
groups) is reflected in changes in the
Daily
Kos tracking poll’s generic congressional vote.
Since June the Democratic lead over the Republicans
has declined from a high of 14-percentage points to
just 6. Almost none of this decline in the
Democratic margin has come from an increased
preference for the GOP. In fact, the overall
percentage favoring the Republicans is actually down
a point or two since May and June. Instead,
virtually all of the change has come because of a
decline in support for the Democrats and an increase
in the percentage saying they are not sure. And, in
turn, most of that is produced by increased
indecision among Democratic identifiers and within
demographic groups inclined toward the Democrats. In
all, it appears that the biggest threat facing the
Democrats is not from Republicans, but from
disenchanted and disaffected voters within the
groups that gave Barack Obama the presidency and
Democrats a large congressional majority in the last
two elections.
In the new civic era that America is entering,
suggestions by conservatives that Barack Obama and
the Democrats move to the right or appeal to seniors
rather than the rising Millennial Generation are at
best misguided and at worst dangerous. Instead, it’s
time for Washington Democrats to leave Groundhog Day
1993 behind, start acting like Democrats, and redeem
the promises that made them the majority party.
One way to do that is to pass meaningful healthcare
reform legislation. That would be a fitting memorial
to Edward M. Kennedy, the Democratic Lion of the
Senate. It would also advance the fortunes of the
party he so dearly loved.