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Mark Hasman's avatar

"And though policy is important, it ignores how difficult it is to build a big tent when that tent includes people who make others want to leave."

Well said.

Your comment about the paradox of tolerance reminded me of a similar and fascinating piece, "Boutique Multiculturalism" by Stanley Fish.

Josh's avatar

> And while each contained grains of truth, none seemed fully sufficient to explain the more fundamental ideological shift to the right America has seen in the last decade.

Has America shifted right ideologically in the last decade?

> Yglesias has been urging Democrats to widen their tent. When Elon Musk broke with the Trump administration, for instance, Yglesias was one of the first to suggest welcoming him into the Democratic coalition. Similarly, he tried to call attention to the bipartisan unpopularity of Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” as a way to build consensus. A noble effort.

Elon has some disagreements and some agreements. Perhaps the agreement-disagreement ratio would have been positively impacted had he been more welcomed on the left.

I think Yglesias’ idea is that the moderate members should more openly talk about their disagreements, and that having the far-left faction yell at them publicly will in fact make the moderates more popular since the median voter will see them as distinct from more extreme factions. My question is: why don’t moderate members just do that? Maybe they don’t think they can pull it off rhetorically. In the case of Biden and Kamala specifically, I’m not sure they are wrong. I think strategy starts by nominating people who can meet the minimum bar of clearly articulating themselves.

> Jeffries rightly recognizes that this kind of messaging can have negative effects on the broader coalition. The phrase is widely understood to mean, at best, a call for the destruction of the state of Israel, and at worst, an incitement to violence against Jews worldwide. In either case, Jeffries saw that such rhetoric would be unacceptable to many within the Democratic coalition.

In this case, the problem is Jeffries’. https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/04/08/how-americans-view-israel-and-the-israel-hamas-war-at-the-start-of-trumps-second-term/ Among dems, negative views of Israel are popular and increasing. Mamdani holds the more popular opinion in terms of a Dem primary electorate.

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