[...]
Now, I know it's customary in D.C. journalism to understand Harry Truman the way Joe Klein does: as a symbol, as a lovable, plain-spoken guy from the "heartland" largely unconnected to actual politics (sort of the way the folkies regarded Woody Guthrie, come to think of it). So maybe it's a little unfair of me to call attention to what Truman actually said. But Mr. Klein's repetitive invocation of Truman, plus a little regional pride in the man, compelled me to look up the Turnip Day speech. Having listened to a recording of it, I think Mr. Klein is right in insisting that it be regarded as a model for Democratic candidates. I can also report that what Truman said in the speech is in almost every particular the precise opposite of what Joe Klein advises contemporary Democrats to say.
Harry Truman was no centrist, and neither was he a radical. Still, listening to his ferocious ad-libs back in 1948 (which was, incidentally, not during the Great Depression), his audience could have had few doubts about what the Democratic Party stood for. Truman was explicit: "[T]he Democratic Party is the people's party, and the Republican Party is the party of special interest, and it always has been and always will be." He reveled in what Mr. Klein would call "class war," calling a Republican tax cut a "rich man's tax bill" that "helps the rich and sticks a knife into the back of the poor" and describing politics as a contest between the "common everyday man" and the "favored classes," the "privileged few." Even more astonishingly, Truman went on to talk policy in some detail, with special emphasis on Mr. Klein's hated "jobs, health-care, and blah-blah-blah": He called for the construction of public housing, an increase in the minimum wage, expansion of Social Security, a national health-care program and the repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act. And this sort of high-octane oratory propelled Truman on to win the election in a historic upset.
Joe Klein is not the only one to moan about the polarized age in which we are supposedly living these days, with all the power having gravitated to "the extremes of both left and right," to use the standard deploring formula. Everyone in pundit-land moans this way, and they can be fairly confident that their buddy the CNN host won't contradict them when they so moan. But someone needs to rub their faces in the fact that, compared to today's "polarized" Democratic Party, their lovable old Harry Truman sounds like a fire-breathing anarchist, defending positions so far to the left that we have forgotten that one of the two major parties ever held them. Maybe what ails us isn't a deficit of authenticity or the pull of the poles; maybe it's something Truman would have grasped in a Kansas City minute: the power of money, the push of the right. Maybe squishy centrism is the problem, not the solution. And maybe we could use a little more polarization of the Turnip Day variety.
full: http://www.observer.com/20060501/20060501_Thomas_Frank_culture_books.asp
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Colin Brace
Amsterdam