"That is to say, expect any calls for re-regulation to be preceded by lip service about the power and benefits of trade and markets. It may not be sincerely meant, but it's nice that the Democrats feel compelled to offer it. Obama's rhetoric about fiscal responsibility and making the rich pay their fair share has been balanced by a reality about how an economy works. During an endorsement interview I attended early this year, he spoke about how his path had brought him into circles of wealthy people, and acknowledged that overburdening the rich diminishes opportunities for the poor.
The New Democrats are finished. In their place there appears to be a new breed of Democrat, less driven by a vision of dumping leftist junk from the party's agenda, but benefiting from a nearly two-decade period in which the benefits of free markets have become conventional wisdom. That's a change, but it will take more than a good speech to make it one we can all believe in."
I disagree. I believe that most Democrats now acknowledge the power and benefits of free markets. In other words, everyone basically does believe in it. There are differences about the role of government in those markets, but I doubt many really advance any form of socialism today. Nevertheless, Cavanaugh is correct about it being conventional wisdom, and that change is one reason not to despair of a libertarian Democratic option. Free markets are a good base to build on, but, from a libertarian Democrat point of view, just the base. There is a role for government and regulation in those markets, although the details have to be debated.
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