The Overton Window: How the Left turns the unthinkable into the uncontroversial
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is prepared to go to the mat to prevent the construction of a wall on our southern border
writes
Benny Huang on Front Page.
The senator from New York is threatening to use all available options,
including a government shut-down, to forestall three key provisions in
the new budget: a deportation force, a border wall, and the defunding of
Planned Parenthood.
Well, it’s good to know where Schumer
draws his line in the sand. Anything that impedes the endless flow of
undocumented Democrats he considers to be an act of war.
But I’m old enough to remember when Chuck Schumer supported at least one of these budget items. In 2006, he and 25 other Democratic senators
voted for the Secure Fence Act which would have built a double-layered
fence on the US-Mexico border. The bill passed, by the way, and
President Bush signed it into law. It wasn’t a close vote because it
wasn’t particularly controversial.
Now I’m sure that a
persnickety liberal like Chuck Schumer would split hairs on this one. He
voted for a fence, not a wall! That argument is a non-starter. Walls
and fences are both barriers intended to keep people out so let’s not
pretend that the difference between then and now is the type of barrier.
What’s changed is that Chuck Schumer now supports endless and unlimited
immigration with no distinction made between those who enter the county
legally and those who don’t. He has likely learned that his party’s
best interests are best served by diluting the voice of their actual
constituents.
There is perhaps no better example than Chuck
Schumer of how much this country has changed since the Bush years.
Positions once held by a proud New York liberal are now considered
reactionary. What happened? In short, the Overton Window has moved
quickly and decisively leftward.
The Overton Window? What’s that?
Glad you asked. I’m not talking about Glenn Beck’s boring novel but
rather about its namesake: the handy mental model formulated by
political scientist Joseph P. Overton. His window represents the breadth
of ideas that the public considers acceptable discourse superimposed
over a spectrum ranging from far left to far right. At both ends of the
spectrum lurk ideas that are literally “unthinkable.” As we inch closer
to the Overton Window we find ideas that are merely “radical.” The first
category contained within the Overton Window is “acceptable,” followed
by “sensible,” then “popular,” and finally “policy.”
The goal
of most progressive strategists has been to move that window so that
previously unthinkable ideas become conceivable and eventually
uncontroversial. People who don’t adopt the newly mainstreamed idea
quickly enough are usually shamed into silence. If they refuse to keep
quiet they are shunned by polite society and often lose their
livelihoods because their old ideas have been pushed into “radical” and
“unthinkable” territory.
This is perhaps one reason the Left so despises the
slippery slope argument—except when they employ it against their
adversaries, of course. They want people to concentrate only on the
issue as they narrowly define it without considering the principles at
stake or the long-term ramifications. Who could have imagined, for
example, that a little sensitivity toward racial issues would eventually
lead to the stifling environment we find on college campuses today, in
which it’s now considered a microaggression
to say something as harmless as “I just believe the most qualified
person should get the job”? That’s against the rules at the University
of California, the largest university system in the country and a state
school with an obligation to protects students’ free speech. Certainly
no one foresaw this in the 1960s. We just thought we were telling
racists—genuine racists—to shut up. What’s the next forbidden
phrase? The Left doesn’t want you to ask. If people knew where this
crazy train is going they’d demand to be let off.
But we should
ask. What radical ideas will the Left be pushing in ten years? What
unthinkable ideas will they champion in twenty? You can bet that they
won’t admit to any of them now because the time isn’t right. That’s how
this game is played.
For another example of the sliding Overton Window, consider Barack
Obama and Bernie Sanders, both Democrats who sought the presidential
nomination of their party, one successfully and the other
unsuccessfully. When conservatives called Obama a socialist throughout
his presidency, the Left balked. “Don’t be ridiculous!” they said. “He’s no socialist.” This protégé of the radical anti-American CPUSA member Frank Marshall Davis, who openly bragged of hanging out with the Marxist professors on his college campus, who praised a Soviet-backed communist
terrorist like Nelson Mandela, was absolutely the furthest thing from a
socialist a person could possibly be—or so we were told.
But
then along came Bernie Sanders who didn’t even bother to hide his
socialism. Of course, he made the highly dubious claim that he preferred
the Danish variety of socialism to the Latin American brand he championed earlier in his political career, but at least he was honest enough to use the “S” word. And suddenly there really was nothing wrong
with being a socialist. Who knew that after eight years of fervently
denying Obama’s socialism—as if it were a bad thing—that the party’s
next rising star would be a self-described socialist?
Sanders
might even have won the nomination of the Democratic Party if Hillary
Clinton hadn’t stacked the deck against him. His loss can be attributed
to a number of factors but an aversion to socialism among Democratic
voters isn’t one of them. Six in ten
Democratic primary voters think socialism “has a positive impact” on
society. That’s because the Democratic Party is really just America’s
socialist party by another name.
The Left has been
particularly successful in radically shifting the frame of acceptable
discourse for three reasons. First, they have the media on their side to
give them top cover. Second, they are masters of emotion-laden
propaganda. And third, they recognize golden opportunities when they see
them.
When Barack Obama came to power he recognized that an
unpopular war and an economic collapse had left the American people
stumbling and woozy. It was an opportune moment to remake society. “You
never let a serious crisis go to waste,” said Obama’s Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel. “And what I mean by that is it's an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before.”
Emanuel’s maxim has been the Left’s unarticulated strategy for a long
time. They recognize that in times of national tumult the electorate
often grants to progressives plenty of latitude to enact their policy
wish lists. Obama benefited from one of these moments when he entered
the White House in 2009 with a cooperative Democratic Congress to work
with. The road was wide open and Obama went pedal to the metal into
territory that most Americans would have considered too far afield just a
few years before.
Few presidents have changed the nation
as fundamentally as Barack Obama—and not in a good way. Within his first
two years he had made the ideas of Saul Alinsky look all-American. I
would argue that only Franklin Roosevelt spearheaded a more complete
American transformation and he had twelve years to do it. Now there
was a man who knew how to move the Overton Window. FDR’s New Deal was
considered radical when he proposed it and would have been unthinkable a
generation before.
But there was still work to be done.
Thirty years later, President Lyndon Johnson exploited America’s
national grief over the Kennedy Assassination to push through the
atrocious Great Society agenda. President Carter pushed the window
further to the left in those disorienting days after Watergate and the
Vietnam War.
We conservatives never really push it back,
often because we’re afraid we’ll be accused of “turning back the clock.”
We need to get over our fear of moving the Overton Window in the other
direction for a change. With both houses of Congress and the White House
now in conservative hands, there is no excuse not to reverse most of
the horrid policies of the Obama years. While they’re at it, they ought
to reverse the policies of the Carter, Johnson, and Roosevelt years too.
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