“The Allure of Reform and A Modest Proposal”

Bauer:

Matt Grossman and David A Hopkins have pronounced many decades of liberal reform to be a failure. In a new book, they argue that the 1970s reform program did not lead to the success of liberal policies but may have been primarily advantageous to “ideological Republicans.” For a party that is “a coalition of social groups, each with pragmatic policy concerns,” the Democrats wound up undermining the transactional politics among various interests that would produce their preferred policy outcomes. Making matters worse was a shift of voter sentiment against government-driven solutions. The Republicans, happy to oblige the popular sentiment by blocking legislation, fared better than Democrats actually interested in passing it. Grossman and Hopkins conclude that in the future, Democrats “should assess whether each potential change is likely to benefit the Democratic coalition or the more ideological Republicans.”

The problem always is the hazards of predicting the partisan or policy impact of any reform measure. To the extent that Grossman and Hopkins are urging Democrats to guess, they are necessarily allowing for the fairly large possibility that they will guess wrong. And even the ways in which they may be wrong are not anticipated all that reliably. In other words, both the benefits and the costs–the shape of success and the look of failure–will be very hard to judge. The mistakes made can be costly.

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