After embarrassing losses in the 1980s, Al From founded the DLC to push the Democratic Party to the center. It seemed to succeed -- think Bill Clinton and welfare reform -- and for that reason the left has long seen the DLC as an enemy, turning promising politicians into mushy moderates.
But the DLC's not much of a bogeyman anymore -- even its website looks very '90s. Its home page features a months-old column by Harold Ford, who lost his campaign to represent Tennessee in the Senate in 2006. Is the DLC a victim of its own success? Or has the liberal netroots slayed a monster?
Mission Accomplished, Steven L. Taylor writes at Outside the Beltway. Clinton's election in 1992 and 1996 made the DLC "superfluous. ... As such, I am not sure that the organization has been especially relevant for almost two decades. Despite what some on the rightward side of things may think, the main Democratic Party is actually a lot more like the centrist DLC than it used to be -- much to the chagrin, in fact, of the more progressive wing of the party."
"The DLC Disappeared Because Its Work Was Over," The New Republic's Jonathan Chait writes, adding, "It's hard to remember, but the whole rise of the progressive netroots was organized around opposition to the DLC, which liberals saw as Satan incarnate."
Lieberman Was the Last Straw, Matt Yglesias writes at Think Progress. But if, as Jon Chait claims, the DLC's work is over, then why are similar organizations like Third Way thriving? "The key thing, I think," says Yglesias, "is that Al From's decision to go all-in on Joe Lieberman and the invasion of Iraq fatally weakened the institution."
It's Because Moderate Dems Are Gone, Hot Air's Allahpundit argues. "Virtually everyone in Congress who might have listened to them -- i.e., the Blue Dogs -- was wiped out in the big red tsunami in November, and the few survivors left in the South are now busily converting to the GOP to protect themselves. ... They have every incentive, in other words, to tack right on some issues without Harold Ford urging them to do so."
The DLC Won the Future, National Journal's Marc Ambinder argues. "No question: the Netroots and progressive left are at the center of gravity for the Democratic Party as an institution. There is a distinction, though, between energy and influence. And it still isn't clear how Democrats win the election without galvanizing the type of voters the DLC sought to attract. The group may be going away, but debates about its ideas will dominate politics for a long time to come."
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