The 2020 presidential candidacy race is in full (absurdly early) swing, and there is a clear and obvious internal battle currently raging for the soul of the Democratic Party. One faction is attempting to pull the party in a more populist, social-democratic direction, while another favors maintaining a neoliberal, pro-business course.
We all know the most prominent members of the first group: The likes of presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders and freshmen representatives like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib and Ayanna Pressley are constantly referred to (accurately) as representing the left of the party (e.g., New York Post, 7/9/19; New York Times, 4/10/19; New Yorker, 6/18/19), but also as a cabal of “extremist” (Atlantic, 4/3/19; The Hill, 6/17/19), “far-left” revolutionaries (CNN, 7/7/19; CNBC, 7/5/19) who have “contempt” for Americans (Fox News, 7/11/19). Given the broad overlap of their political positions with those of the public at large (FAIR.org, 1/23/19), those labels, popular as they are in the media, are pretty dubious.

The Atlantic (4/3/19) warns against the Democrats’ “leftward lurch,” as epitomized by Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
But if there is a left wing of the party, there must, logically, be a right. And it is equally obvious to those paying attention who represents that right wing: figures like Nancy Pelosi, Joe Biden and Amy Klobuchar come to mind.
The media do report on the split, but they never identify the latter as representing the right at all. In fact, the phrase “right-wing Democrat” has not appeared in the New York Times for over 30 years.
Last week, the Boston Herald (7/11/19) decried Ocasio-Cortez, Tlaib and Omar as far-left “bullies” who were undermining Pelosi, and “sowing division” at a time when the party “needs to project a unified—and more centrist—front to retain its majority and knock Donald Trump from office.” The piece did not, however, scrutinize Pelosi’s political positions—or even identify them at all.
This is a common occurrence in media, and has the effect of normalizing the right wing of the party as the default. Constantly reminders that Sanders, Ocasio-Cortez and co. are leftists prime the news consumer to be on the defensive. “You are about to hear socialist propaganda,” is the subtle message delivered. But an analogous message is not transmitted if others are not identified as on the right. Understanding the power of this technique, in 2015, nearly 90,000 Britons signed a petition asking the BBC, in the interests of even-handedness, to start describing Prime Minister David Cameron as “right-wing,” just as it constantly called Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn “left-wing.”
On the US struggle, Buzzfeed News (7/10/19) reports Pelosi has been “publicly feuding” with “left-wing members of the caucus and their staff,” while the Washington Post (7/2/19) sympathetically portrayed her has being under attack from an “open rebellion” of “hard-liners” in the party, with neither suggesting she herself holds any particular political ideology. The effect is to present the battle between left and right as one between radical revolutionaries and the “mainstream,” “normal” or “default” position.
All this despite the fact that Medicare For All and free college tuition are very popular in the US, with even a majority of Republican voters supporting the former. Meanwhile, Ocasio-Cortez’s tax hike proposal for the super rich is more popular than Trump’s tax cuts, and a plurality of Americans support her supposedly radical leftist Green New Deal. When the public, not political parties, define the left/right spectrum, the landscape appears very different.
When any position is assigned to those who have controlled the party for many decades, it is often misleading. Maureen Dowd in the New York Times (7/6/19) describes Pelosi as “trying to keep the party center left” with the goal of ousting Trump from office by appealing to the American people, only for that to be “jeopardized” by the party’s supposed “lurch” to the “far left.”

CNBC (7/5/19) labels Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez as “far left” and allows Joe Biden to identify himself as “center left.”
Another Democrat not only on the right of the party, but on the right side of the political spectrum more generally, is Joe Biden, a current frontrunner for the presidential nomination. Biden began his political career by opposing busing and maintained a very close friendship with arch-segregationist Strom Thurmond until his death, performing the eulogy at his funeral. Among the most hawkish of Democrats, he strongly supported the Iraq War and even boasted he was the true author of George W. Bush’s PATRIOT Act. He opposed immigration and suggested using troops against undocumented workers.
As a senator from Delaware, he is a friend of large finance and tech corporations, and blocked student debt forgiveness. In this election cycle, he opposes Medicare for All and claimed that billionaires were being “demonized,” assuring them that if he were president, “nothing would change” about America. “I need you very badly,” he told a group of extremely wealthy donors. He also suggests moving the party to the right by working with the GOP.
Despite this, Biden describes himself as “center-left,” as do media (e.g. Politico, 6/8/19; Real Clear Politics, 6/12/19; Wall Street Journal, 6/3/19). As the Washington Examiner (6/21/19) noted, the dilemma for the party was between picking a leftist like Sanders or steering a “center-left” course with Biden.
Successfully positioning yourself in the center is a powerful rhetorical and psychological tactic. Many people like to think of themselves as in the middle. The center is often considered (wrongly) as the default position, and therefore free of bias, as opposed to those on the extremes, which hold negative connotations.
As explored previously (FAIR.org, 3/23/19), every political organization Washington supports is presented as a moderate, centrist force. Indonesian military dictator General Suharto, who presided over genocides against ethnic Chinese and Timorese, was described as a moderate (Christian Science Monitor, 2/6/87). The New York Times (3/7/33) even described the “new moderation in the political atmosphere” in Germany as Hitler came to power, while the Philadelphia Daily Bulletin (1/30/33) praised his “indications of moderation” (cited in the Daily Beast, 12/20/15).
Even Donald Trump Jr., someone not noted for his high intellect and political wisdom, is in on this trick. Writing in The Hill (7/11/19), he “warns” us that if the Democrats undermine “centrist” “moderates” like Pelosi, allowing “radical left” “extremists” like Ocasio-Cortez to come to power, his father will be assured of winning the next election. This has to be the apotheosis of the “Inexplicable Republican Best Friend” trope (FAIR.org, 2/26/19), in which media conservatives offer supposedly good-faith advice to Democrats on how to beat them (which always entails surrendering progressive principles and embracing conservative policies).
Corporate Democrats have now begun to use the “this is why Trump won/will win” tactic on the left. The Washington Examiner (7/10/19) warns the “left-wing elites” that their single-minded charge towards is socialism will isolate and alienate them from “moderate Democrats” and the vast political center of America. Instead, they must be “pragmatic” and choose the best candidate: Joe Biden.

Amy Klobuchar (CNN, 2/18/19) explains her “pragmatic” opposition to Medicare for All. Not mentioned: the $462,000 she’s taken from the insurance industry.
“Pragmatic”—meaning adapting sensibly and adopting realistic, fact-based positions—is another newspeak word media use to describe right-wing Democrats espousing pro-corporate policies, regardless of what the facts actually are. CNN (2/18/19), for example, applauds Klobuchar for being the “pragmatic” presidential candidate. Her pragmatism, according to the positive CNN portrait, was “resisting the urge to pander to the party’s progressive wing,” as shown by her strong opposition to Medicare for All, the Green New Deal and free college—all of which, we have seen, are distinctly popular with the public (Jacobin, 8/24/18; Atlantic, 6/21/19) and could be huge vote-winners.
That “pragmatic” is usually used as a euphemistic codeword for moving towards the right can be seen by glancing at recent headlines:
- Pragmatic Pelosi Points Democratic Party Toward the Center (CBS SF Bay Area, 5/14/19)
- Pelosi’s Pragmatic Approach to Balancing Democrats’ Leftward Shift (Christian Science Monitor, 2/11/19)
- Idealism vs. Pragmatism: How Style Divides the Democratic Candidates (NPR, 1/27/16)
Even explicitly anti-left organizations are not described as right-wing. On a story covering the Democratic Majority for Israel, which it notes was set up by “major donors and Washington insiders” expressly to counter left criticisms of Israel in the party, the Huffington Post (7/11/19) did not describe it as “conservative” or any similar label, but framed the debate as being between the left and the “pro-Israel” wings of the party. If wealthy donors and “Washington insiders” don’t count as the right wing of the party, no one can.
Corporate media are funded by the same sources that fund both parties and broadly share the same ideology, hence the reluctance to critique them. By refusing to position them on the political scale, or falsely identifying them as left of center, they are attempting to close the Overton window and prevent a leftward shift in US politics. But that does not mean that we as news consumers have to accept these framings.
Featured image: Wall Street Journal depiction (6/3/19) of Joe Biden.




Right this minute, I’m listening to NPR (‘Very Little Considered’) pimping for Klobuchar the right-wing democrat describing her as “center” and “moderate” and a “good comedian” (with some really lame “jokes”) but never as the Right-Wing Democrat she really is…
Total Anti-Health Care, corporate tool, etc.
At least they mentioned she’s down around 2% in the polls (thank goodness)…
It’s undeniably true that Ocasio-Cortez et alia aren’t on the “far left”.
My question is why, if that’s defined as a sincere and unwavering commitment to the realization of a life of dignity for every single person on this planet, would anyone be afraid to be labeled as such?
(Neo-)McCarthyism.
Medicare for All is the centrist position. It doesn’t matter that the media pundits tell us otherwise.
If the entire rest of the developed world utilize some variation of a not for profit universal system that means the USA’s profit driven system is the outlier, the non-centrist odd ball position. Additionally Medicare for All is favored by a majority of Americans which also means it is the centrist position. Stop with the insurance industry lies and talking points!
Tariq Ali coined a great phrase for this phenomenon: “the extreme centre”. (The Extreme Centre: A Warning, Verso 2015). But also, some guy named Karl Marx wrote a book called “The 18th Brumaire of Louis Napoleon” that already described the basic context for McLeod’s article. Marx wrote: “Every demand of the simplest bourgeois financial reform, of the most ordinary liberalism, of the most formal republicanism, of the most shallow democracy, is simultaneously castigated as an ‘attempt on society’ and stigmatized as ‘socialism.'” And yet, Marx goes on to make the following comments that are perhaps even more important:
“Whether it was a question of the right of petition or the tax on wine, freedom of the press or free trade, the clubs or the municipal charter, protection of personal liberty or regulation of the state budget, the watchword constantly recurs, the theme remains always the same, the verdict is ever ready and invariably reads: ‘Socialism!’ Even bourgeois liberalism is declared socialistic, bourgeois enlightenment socialistic, bourgeois financial reform socialistic. It was socialistic to build a railway where a canal already existed, and it was socialistic to defend oneself with a cane when one was attacked with a rapier.
“This was not merely a figure of speech, fashion, or party tactics. The bourgeoisie had a true insight into the fact that all the weapons it had forged against feudalism turned their points against itself, that all the means of education it had produced rebelled against its own civilization, that all the gods it had created had fallen away from it. It understood that all the so-called bourgeois liberties and organs of progress attacked and menaced its class rule at its social foundation and its political summit simultaneously, and had therefore become ‘socialistic.’
***
“Thus by now stigmatizing as “socialistic” what it had previously extolled as ‘liberal,’ the bourgeoisie confesses that its own interests dictate that it should be delivered from the danger of its own rule; that to restore tranquillity in the country its bourgeois parliament must, first of all, be given its quietus; that to preserve its social power intact its political power must be broken; that the individual bourgeois can continue to exploit the other classes and to enjoy undisturbed property, family, religion, and order only on condition that their class be condemned along with the other classes to like political nullity; that in order to save its purse it must forfeit the crown, and the sword that is to safeguard it must at the same time be hung over its own head as a sword of Damocles.”
While the USA does not have a historic aristocracy like France did, the basic insights here are spot on and show how a class-based dialectical analysis of politics and journalism worked over a century and a half ago and still work today.
CNN, MSNBC and FOX are propaganda tools to create the illusion that we have a “left” and “right” balance. These sites are more “right” and “far-right”. The DLC + Clintons have moved the Democratic party to the right.
Move left or wrap yourself in the stagnation of the status quo or worse. Appealing to Republicans has NEVER helped win elections… just the opposite. Ask “Single-payer will never, EVER come to pass” President Hillary.
Great stuff. The CNN excerpt about Klobuchar’s “pragmatism” reminds me of Alain Badiou’s statement about people maintaining “silent acceptance of . . . external corruption under the cover of of practical ‘realism’” (preface to “St. Paul: A Screenplay” by Pier Paolo Pasolini, Verso 2014).
I love to read the truth and it is HERE!
Another fine piece of work by FAIR! Exceedingly important stuff.
One reason people are for Medicare for All and Free College is because Bernie Sanders has been talking about it for 8 years. Unfortunately, no one has pointed out that there is not enough money to pay for these programs, nor enough doctors and hospitals. Our colleges already have too many students who aren’t qualified – have reading and math problems and end up quitting school so any money they’ve borrowed or their parents spend is wasted. I’m sure the taxpayers wouldn’t want their money wasted like that. They’ve been passed through middle and high school whether or not they could read well!
I attended a medical forum in Toronto over 20 years ago, and all the doctors did was complain about their medical system. People had to wait years for operations whether or not they needed them, and those who could afford it, came to America for their operations, including the doctors.
You like to make “stuff” up, don’t you.
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Interestingly I made this same observation regarding an article posted by “The Hill”, however my comment was immediately deleted. Twice!