The main stream seems to be taking a hard look at some of the more radical ideas of the right wing. Over the past week or so, we have seen a number of signs that the mainstream is beginning to push back against the constant bullying by the right-wing on such issues as women’s reproductive rights, tax policy, global warming and gun control:
- The latest Economist reports that the Heartland Institute, a think tank that promotes skepticism about global warming, lost an estimated $825,000 in contributions after it posted a billboard in which Unabomber Ted Kaczynski says ”I still believe in global warming. Do you?,” which followed the revelation that it had been planning on sending teaching materials denouncing global warming to American primary schools. That sent PepsiCo, BB&T Bank, Eli Lily and other donors out the doors.
- Today’s Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports that 15 Pennsylvania state legislators have cut ties with the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), joining hundreds of legislators nationwide and such large corporations as The Coca Cola Company, PepsiCo, McDonald’s Corp. and software giant Intuit.
- Over the weekend, Washington Post reported that an increasing number of Republicans running for Congress are declining to sign the Norquist pledge not to raise taxes. Of the 25 candidates this year promoted by the National Republican Congressional Committee as "Young Guns" and "Contenders" at least a third are saying they won’t sign the pledge.
- A few weeks back, when one of the
wealthiest men in the world, Joe Ricketts, agreed to finance a scurrilous
series of ads against President Obama built on the fact that he went to a
church whose pastor made a number of outrageous statements, the outrage in the
mainstream was immediate and thunderous.
Because most of these instances of mainstreamers coming to their senses come as a reaction to truly obnoxious events, there is no telling if these are signs of a sea change in American politics, a movement by the mainstream back towards the progressivism of 1930-1976. We do see the limits of the right-wing finally, but those limits have less to do with what is being advocated as it does with how it is advocated. Call someone a slut and you’re going to lose your sponsors. Tell outright lies to children, and even purveyors of consumer illusions will desert you.