
The Homeless DemocratsPity the poor Clinton policy wonks who have nowhere to go.
Posted Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2001, at 3:00 AM ET
Players cut from the NBA can go play in Europe. Yesterday's hit-makers can croon in Las Vegas lounges. But what of those poor Democrats who suddenly find themselves outside the iron gates of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. looking in? Think tanks? Think again.
Instead, it is the party of limited government—the Republicans—that offers almost limitless policymaking resources to its unemployed policy wonks. The GOP's well-financed network of think tanks has sustained the conservatives in exile these past eight years, just as it laid the groundwork for the rise of Reagan himself.
Democrats failed to develop any sort of farm system for its displaced wonks because they didn't need one. With only a few interruptions over the last half-century, Democrats controlled that domed think tank up on Capitol Hill, while academia served as a reliable refuge and idea generator. But now, Democrats are without a home. Indeed, one way to explain the party's post-election drift is that the people who best understand the intersection of policy and politics—those most able to craft a Democratic response to Bush—are scattered to the wind.
Don't get me wrong. Packs of out-of-work Clintonistas aren't roving from one Washington, D.C., Starbucks to another, desperately waiting for that page from the White House Signal Operator that will never come. Many have joined the various lobby shops, PR firms, and consulting firms. But for those who don't want to throw away their years of serious governing experience, there are few options.
Take Chris Jennings, the undisputed guru of Democratic health-care policy; or Paul Weinstein, a longtime Clinton policy hand, who ended up as a senior adviser to Al Gore. Both already did time on the Hill and could easily move to the private sector. Right now, their best chance to stay in the policy game is to join a special interest advocacy group or go the free-lance consulting route.
But what these options can't offer them, or the party, is the critical mass of people that understands policy in a political way. Advocacy think tanks—the foremost being the conservative Heritage Foundation—work so well because they bring policy, political, and communications people together all under one roof. They rapidly respond to the other side's message of the day. They develop policy alternatives. And they actively sell both to the media and to allies in government.
Sound familiar? It should. It's how the Clinton White House was organized. Clinton and Gore, the first all-wonk ticket in American history, turned the White House into one large think tank. Polling, policy, and politics were intertwined into a seamless web of practical governance. It was, as one senior Clinton policy official (too modest to be quoted by name) pointed out, a "conglomerate of skills."
When Republicans lost the White House in 1992, an infrastructure was in place to house the GOP in exile and plot its return. The American Enterprise Institute (AEI) expanded to bring on five senior Bush administration officials, including Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers Michael Boskin, as well as Dick and Lynne Cheney. The Cato Institute opened its new $14 million headquarters, a gleaming glass temple to libertarianism. Meanwhile, as the established think tanks bulked up, Jack Kemp, Bill Bennett (already a Heritage fellow), Vin Weber, and Jeanne Kirkpatrick set up Empower America.
Since then, conservative think tanks have enjoyed phenomenal growth. The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy estimates that, as a group, right-wing think tanks spent more than $1 billion in the '90s, with Cato, AEI, and Heritage leading the way. Still, almost half of this growth was from scores of smaller think tanks that sprang up not just in Washington but all over the country. They fought the daily partisan battles these past eight years while preparing a new generation of conservatives, a group that's now staffing the Bush-Cheney administration.
Democrats are not without affiliated think tanks. The labor-backed Economic Policy Institute (EPI) is gearing up, and the New Democrats have welcomed Bruce Reed, Clinton's top domestic policy adviser, back to the Democratic Leadership Council and its think tank, the Progressive Policy Institute (PPI). At the same time, the venerable Brookings Institution—seen as the Democratic answer to AEI and Heritage—has tapped former Cabinet Secretaries Lawrence Summers and Donna Shalala, Clinton economic adviser Gene Sperling, welfare expert Andrea Kane, and Treasury official Michael Barr.
Yet Summers is the only one to get a permanent slot, and by design, Brookings is not built for partisan politics. Its Web address says it all: www.brookings.edu. Dot-edu, you'll notice, not dot-org. Brookings fashions itself a university without students, producing book-length studies that meet the highest standards of rigorous academic research. Indeed, it's so eager to appear nonpartisan that its current president is a Republican.
What's left for Democrats? Think tanks without the firepower to match their conservative counterparts. AEI alone has more researchers and policy experts on staff and in house than PPI, EPI, and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities combined. The annual budget of Cato could keep any one of these Democratic think tanks fully funded until 2004. More important, Republicans on the Hill actually pay attention to these think tanks, seeing them as indispensable to the GOP.
The roots of this intellectual missile gap lie not only in the Democratic loss of Congress, but also in a transformed academia that is now too professionalized and marginalized to accommodate the out-of-work governing class. First, the professionalization of academia has made a Ph.D. mandatory to get a tenure-track job and academic publishing the key to keeping it. At the same time, there are too many doctorates chasing too few jobs. Even Al Gore had to settle for a visiting professorship in Columbia University's journalism school. The graduate-degree-less Gore can pretty much forget about the presidency of Harvard.
Second, even if they could get the jobs, Clinton-Gore Democrats with real-life government experience may not find the Ivory Tower that welcoming. Being the architect of welfare reform or NAFTA expansion is more likely to get you thrown off the average left-wing college campus, while a radical deconstruction of patriarchical family units or an esoteric mathematical model of city council voting in 19th-century Philadelphia would probably get you tenure. Sadly, the academy has moved to the margins of public life.
There clearly is a market on the Hill, in the media, and in the states for Democratic policy alternatives. As 2004 gets closer, you can add a whole host of presidential candidates to the list of those who'll be hunting for a critique of the Bush administration and a policy platform.
Coming up with the cash shouldn't be a problem. Although liberal foundations are a lot more skittish than conservative ones about giving to aggressively political organizations, Democrats have proved that they can raise money like Republicans. With master fund-raiser Terry McAuliffe now at the helm of the Democratic National Committee and party stalwarts energized from the Florida recount, it shouldn't be difficult to shake a few million here and there from mega-donors like Peter Buttenweiser, Washington hostess Beth Dozoretz, and Slim-Fast's Danny Abraham.
Once existing organizations are beefed up or new think tanks are launched, they can count on a willing and able talent pool. But these wonks will move on if not tapped soon. Then, as Bush rolls forward with proposal after proposal, Democrats will discover that, indeed, minds are a terrible thing to waste.












Nine Is So Weird, You Should Probably Go See It
How Will Michael Jackson's Death Change Music?
What Jenny Sanford Wrote in Obama's Facebook News Feed
The 12 Best Cheeses To Serve at Christmas
Oops—I Forgot I Was Piloting This Plane
Can You Believe What Joe Biden Said This Week?
Reader Comments From The Fray:
[Notes from the Fray Editor: Bob V said Liberal wonks can't find a job because their idea-person ratio is dismal. But while there was little sympathy for the Homeless Dems, there were fewer party-specific insults than we expected. So a specially-warm welcome to Jim for his unique angle. And we loved Rocket Scientist who said if hangers-on can't find a political job "that is the way it's supposed to be! …Our representatives can't represent us unless they have some experience at a real job."]
Just like liberal Democrats to pale in comparison when trying to be the same as their Republican counterparts. The fact of the matter is that liberal Democrats really are not much more than Republican wannabes to start with. They want the same big house in the suburbs, SUV (aka "Urban Attack Vehicle") in the garage, and their kids in the best public or private schools they can afford. All rhetoric about those not like them is just that: rhetoric. At least the Republicans are consistent in their distain for the middle class and the poor.
Better that the Democratic Party should become the party of class jihad. Educate the middle class with the reality that they stand as much of a chance of becoming one of the rich, the wise, and the good as they do of winning the lottery. (After all, someone has to win. Someone--not just anyone and certainly not everyone--can move on up to the East Side.) Make sure that the poor and middle classes know the truth: that the others have what they have because they have stolen it from the sweat and efforts of the workers. They are not "entitled" to anything more than anyone else is "entitled" to. As Karl of blessed memory once said so well: "Workers of the world unite. You have nothing to lose but your chains."
--Jim
(To reply, click here.)
Political science departments all over America, not to mention law school faculties, queue up for defeated Democratic candidates, as both groups are pretty much composed of liberal Democrats. Surely, Harvard, Berkeley, and other hangars of the left-wing establishment would kill to get some of these people on their faculties. The AEI was really started because Republicans don't have the law-school prof or visiting lecturer in political science option. Let's say your fantasy comes true, and Scalia or Thomas resigns from the Supreme Court. Think Harvard or Yale or Stanford would hire them? Ditto on any defeated Governor or U.S. Senator or Representative who is (gasp!) a Republican.
In short, Mr. Baer, come on, you knew better than that. Surely Columbia would be happy to give you the office next to your old boss.
--Rich Mahady
(To reply, click here.)
There is a lot of talk of how Cato, Heritage, et al have scads of cash, but its not as if there are no forums for the Democrats or no ways for them to disseminate their ideas. Besides NPR and PBS (your tax dollars at work) and world class newspapers and magazines (NY Times, New Republic) there are such institutions as the titanic Ford and Rockefeller Foundations, Soros' Open Society Institute, and all the colleges and universities. Of course, as the Slate writer suggests, many of these institutions are much further left than the "New Democrats" would like, and expend all their energy on radical schemes which do not at all resonate with the public, unlike the conservative institutions, who can generally find a constituency for straightforward and traditional ideas like cutting taxes, limiting government, free trade, etc
--Mitchell Glodek
(To reply, click here.)
(2/28)