Wednesday, November 5, 2008

"Fifty-nine percent of voters call themselves “fiscally conservative and socially liberal"

David Boaz is one of my favorite people, as is Greg Mankiw. He also says some interesting things:

"Lots of independents — as well as voters who identify with one of the major parties — hold broadly libertarian, or “fiscally conservative and socially liberal,” views. A lot of those voters moved from voting Republican to voting Democratic between 2000 and 2006, and it looks like they did so again this year."

So why is being a libertarian Democrat so strange a concept?

"If Obama governs as a centrist, he may make it very difficult for the Republicans to recover. But a candidate in either party who presented himself as a product of the social freedom of the Sixties and the economic freedom of the Eighties would be tapping into a market that both parties have yet to nail down.'

I suppose that I believe that this is where President Obama will be going, as well as the Democratic Party.

Here's an important difference between David and Greg and myself:

I don't feel that Paul Krugman, Robert Kuttner, Robert Reich, Lawrence Summers, Alan Blinder, are wildly different than me on economics. I believe that, even in cases that they disagree with me, they would listen to me, and understand my points. That's enough to be in a party that on all other issues, I generally agree with, and am often more "leftist", in some cases, than the average Democrat.

There's a realignment going on, and I think that more people with libertarian leanings will be joining me, without ever knowing about me, of course.

No comments: