I mentioned Peter Beinart’s piece on Russ [tag]Feingold[/tag] a few weeks ago, but it’s relevant again in light of the senator’s comments yesterday on [tag]gay marriage[/tag].
As [tag]Beinart[/tag] explained, Feingold is taking chances by staking out bold positions on controversial public policies, but in the process he’s helping Dems make incremental progress.
The conventional wisdom is that, by making Democrats look radical, Feingold has shot his party in the foot, if not the head. But some radicalism is politically useful, particularly in the long run. Liberal bloggers often make this point, and they’re right: Occasionally you need to stake a position beyond what is mainstream in Washington — and take some hits — in the hope that you eventually redefine what “mainstream” is.
In the example Beinart cited, Feingold’s censure resolution made “a full, tough investigation of the surveillance program now looks sober and reasonable.” Dems could in effect say that Feingold’s move was on the fringe, but their proposal for a serious inquiry about warrantless searches was just common sense. It was, in a sense, a “compromise” between conservative inaction and liberal censure.
In a similar vein, Feingold is making gay civil unions look moderate.
Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.), a prospective 2008 presidential candidate, said yesterday that he thinks bans on same-sex marriages have no place in the nation’s laws.
Feingold said in an interview that he was motivated to state his position on one of the most divisive social issues in the country after being asked at a town hall meeting Sunday about a pending amendment to the Wisconsin state constitution to ban same-sex marriages.
Feingold called the amendment “a mean-spirited attempt” to single out gay men and lesbians for discrimination and said he would vote against it. But he went further, announcing that he favors legalizing same-sex marriages.
Now, I realize that some 2008 positioning is at play, but in referring back to Beinart’s thesis, Feingold’s position helps shift the debate.
The right wants to write bigotry into constitutional stone. The left wants gay people to be able to get married. All of a sudden, Democratic proposals for civil unions is a reasonable middle ground, whereas a few years ago, civil unions were deemed radical by conservatives. The goalposts have been moved away from discrimination.
Civil unions for same-sex couples are legally recognized relationships. Couples in civil unions, though not legally married, enjoy rights to pensions, health insurance, medical leave, bereavement leave, hospital visitation, and survivor benefits, just as married straight couples enjoy. At its core, the difference between the two is practically a semantic one, not a legal one. When the right denounces Feingold for his position, Dems can simlpy offer their “reasonable” alternative.
Beinart said Dems need “some people push the bounds of acceptable opinion while others use the specter of radicalism to make modest, incremental progress.” Sounds like a good idea to me.