Aug. 5, 2006

A Trickle Out Of The Republican Party

American Prospect: Why Some Are Opting To Run As Democrats

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The most prominent ex-Republican to run for office as a Democrat this year is Jim Webb, the nominee for Senate in Virginia. Webb, who served as the Secretary of the Navy under Ronald Reagan, had previously written articles caustically attacking Vietnam War protesters and arguing that affirmative action has created a “state-sponsored racism.” (He says he supports affirmative action for blacks, but believes poor whites should also benefit from diversity programs.) But the Johnny-come-lately quality of his switch to the Democratic Party didn’t seem to hurt him in the Virginia senate primary; he beat a long-time Democratic activist in June who outspent him nearly two to one, and now faces George Allen, a Republican with presidential aspirations — and the man whom Webb voted for only six years ago.

“I think that our primary showed that the Democratic Party is ready to welcome back moderates, independents, conservative Democrats, Reagan Democrats, libertarian Democrats — whatever label you want to put on us,” Webb told the Prospect by email.

Some voters and activists may have reservations about supporting candidates they believe can win but who may not conform to party orthodoxy. When it comes to ex-Republican candidates, the question of Democratic authenticity — not to mention ideological acceptability — becomes even more glaring. But if the party is big enough to house everyone from Baucus to Boxer, surely it can welcome Republican converts, especially in places like Kansas and Virginia where Democrats need to become more competitive if they ever hope to regain majority party status.

“The more converts you get, the bigger the party you have. Are there going to be some people inside the Democratic Party who are resentful of switchers? Yes, there are people like that,” said political analyst Stuart Rothenberg. “[But] of course it’s better for the Democrats to get those switches because it means: a) the party is attractive to people who it wasn’t attractive to in the past; and b) that’s how parties grow!”

Rothenberg noted that the fracture between moderates and conservatives in Kansas could lead to Democratic gains in 2006 in that state. Meanwhile, a July Zogby poll showed that while Webb trailed Allen by ten points, Allen's numbers continued to reside below 50 percent, indicating that he is vulnerable, and pollster John Zogby called it a competitive race.

But the implications extend beyond 2006, or even 2008. As the country witnesses the massive failure of Republican governance, coupled with the increasing isolation and elimination of the party’s moderate wing, large swaths of the electorate may be up for grabs. Webb thinks so. He says that despite his party switch, his basic beliefs haven’t changed. “I’m a realist on foreign policy, a moderate on social policy, and a populist on economic policy,” he said. “Thirty years ago, the Republican Party embraced people like me. Today, however, the Republicans’ extreme wing has pulled the party so far outside the mainstream that a lot of people who share my basic beliefs are looking for new leadership.” If he is right, and if more Americans who share Webb’s views start heading to their county election offices, the current trickle could turn into a flood — one that could carry Democrats back to power.

Benjamin Weyl is a Prospect intern.

By Benjamin Weyl
Reprinted with permission from The American Prospect, 5 Broad Street, Boston, MA 02109. All rights reserved.



The American Prospect is America's leading liberal magazine of politics, a blend of essay, criticism, investigation,commentary, and in-depth analysis.

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