Judis and Teixeira offer a clear-eyed assessment of the challenges that the Democratic Party faces and offer a plausible route for the party to win broader majorities: focus on delivering for working-class Americans while offering a more inclusive message on culture. They note, for instance, the popularity of increases to the minimum wage and expansions of Medicaid subsidies even among Republican electorates.
The disruptions that the authors explore point to further complications. If Republicans and Democrats find themselves in a new political paradigm, what exactly constitutes a “right” or “left” approach to economics remains unsettled. For instance, while many Americans support efforts to reinforce the safety net, they also prize economic growth. How to synthesize those two imperatives is something for both political parties to work out. The Biden White House now
projects annual budget deficits of around 5 percent of GDP indefinitely. The precise balance of growth, budgetary reforms, and tax policies to bring the deficit down to earth will put pressures on both political coalitions.
The Great Divide has many causes, ranging from deeper cultural trends to the Internet’s disintermediation of media and commerce. But policymakers have also contributed to these divisions, and they may have a role in remedying them. Renewing the economic middle and strengthening local communities could help rebuild a civic center. A party that shows itself up to that task could reap significant political rewards—at least until the next election.