Since the Great Depression, there has been a strong national political consensus supporting policies that help middle-class families cope with the multiple risks in our market economy. These include the risks of illness, destitution in old age, hazards from defective products, polluted natural resources, industrial accidents, corporate frauds, high unemployment, and other assaults largely beyond […]
Special Report
Forward March
When the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled on November 18 that gay and lesbian couples have a right to marriage under the state constitution, the predominant mood among liberals was not jubilation, as one might have expected, but a sense of foreboding that George W. Bush, the Republican Party, and the spin doctors of the […]
Queer and Present Danger?
On May 17, gays and lesbians in Massachusetts will gain the right to marry, thanks to a 4-3 ruling by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. In July, the Democratic presidential nominee, presumably John Kerry of Massachusetts, will triumphantly accept his party’s nomination, also in Massachusetts. Seemingly, it would be hard to contrive a better symbol […]
Speech Impediments
For a lesson in how the right uses language to shape political perceptions, consider the television ad that the archconservative Club for Growth ran during the Iowa caucuses. An announcer asks a middle-aged couple leaving a barbershop what they think of “Howard Dean’s plans to raise taxes on families by $1,900 a year.” The man […]
The E-Word
One of the most revealing passages in the late Paul Wellstone’s political memoir, The Conscience of a Liberal, is his criticism of the decision that he made during his first year in the Senate to hold a press conference on his opposition to the Gulf War within sight of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. “I wanted […]
On God and Democrats
Shortly before the 2000 presidential race started, Gertrude Himmelfarb, the aging Athena of neoconservatism, found herself struggling to express what she felt were the core values differences between Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives. What she came up with was that America had become “one nation, two cultures.” “One is religious, puritanical, family-centered, and somewhat […]
The New Case for Marriage
Marriage is undeniably a changed institution, because wedlock is no longer obligatory on the old patriarchal terms. For women this has been a hard-won, historic victory. Divorce became easier starting with the first wave of feminism in the early 1900s, and the second wave, beginning in the 1960s, obtained for women more kinds of work, […]
Contesting Values
In his State of the Union address, President Bush told a rapt nation and the assembled government of the United States that our nation faces grave threats and must live up to its “great responsibilities,” which include defending the “pillars of our civilization”: our “families and schools and religious congregations.” What is more, he warned, […]
Aiming High
An undisclosed location, Va. — From the outside, the headquarters of the Bush-Cheney re-election campaign is completely unremarkable — so unremarkable that passersby have no way of knowing it’s even there. Through the tinted windows of the Arlington office tower where the headquarters is lodged, people shuffling papers can be glimpsed as through a glass […]
The Verdict on Vouchers
Observers marveling at President George W. Bush’s ability to push a radical agenda through a closely divided Congress have tended to attribute the administration’s success to the impressive party discipline within the Republican congressional caucus. And impressive it is — both historically and, especially, in comparison to the anarchic behavior of the Democrats during the […]

