Another Centrist Project Offers Mushy Technocracy To Soothe a Divided Country
Andrew Yang's rebooted Forward Party glosses over Americans’ conflicting values and preferences.

Almost as common as recognition that America's two dominant political parties represent complementary threats to the republic are bloodless appeals to the mushy middle as an alternative. Like clockwork, smart political figures propose tepid, middle-of-the-road policies that, for some reason, they think will appeal to an impassioned and divided electorate. The latest such effort is the merger of three organizations into a rebooted version of Andrew Yang's centrist Forward Party, a movement based on the dubious premise that "every problem has a solution most Americans can support (really)."
"The United States badly needs a new political party—one that reflects the moderate, common-sense majority," one-time Democratic presidential hopeful Yang, former Governor Christine Todd Whitman (R–N.J.), and former Rep. David Jolly (R–Fla.) wrote in The Washington Post last week. "Today's outdated parties have failed by catering to the fringes. As a result, most Americans feel they aren't represented."
Whitman, it should be noted, was (and may still be; the moribund organization still has a website) on the board of directors of Americans Elect, another such centrist effort to challenge the major parties. That organization achieved the difficult task of getting on the ballot in a majority of states for the 2012 presidential election before its byzantine nomination process failed to pick a candidate.
Since then, satisfaction with the country's path has declined even as polarization increased. Political violence is now a real part of American life. In this fractured environment, Forward Party backers see opportunity to create a new broad-based, non-ideological political party.
"Most third parties in U.S. history failed to take off, either because they were ideologically too narrow or the population was uninterested," Yang, Whitman, and Jolly wrote in the Post. "But voters are calling for a new party now more than ever."
In fact, Gallup finds that a bare-bones 13 percent of Americans are happy with the country's direction, and a record 62 percent of respondents want to see a third party challenge Republicans and Democrats. Yang, Whitman, and Jolly approvingly cite this support across partisan identifications for another party as evidence that America is ready for their moderate alternative. But, when you dig deeper and ask people what they want of their political representation, the data, like the country, is fragmented.
"The survey asked Republicans and Republican-leaning independents what direction they would like to see the party move in the future. A 40 percent plurality want the party to become more conservative, while 34 percent want it to stay the same and 24 percent to become more moderate," Gallup added. "Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents are evenly divided on the direction their party should go—34 percent want it to become more liberal, 34 percent more moderate, and 31 percent to stay where it is."
That potentially represents support for a centrist alternative, but not as the overwhelming preference that Forward Party supporters envision. If that party could be built into a viable organization that wins ballot access and actually nominates candidates (unlike Americans Elect), it might have a constituency if it can motivate voters with split-the-difference takes on the few issues party leaders mention.
"On guns, for instance, most Americans don't agree with calls from the far left to confiscate all guns and repeal the Second Amendment, but they're also rightfully worried by the far right's insistence on eliminating gun laws," Yang, Whitman, and Jolly argue. "On climate change, most Americans don't agree with calls from the far left to completely upend our economy and way of life, but they also reject the far right's denial that there is even a problem. On abortion, most Americans don't agree with the far left's extreme views on late-term abortions, but they also are alarmed by the far right's quest to make a woman's choice a criminal offense."
These positions all represent vague, meh-style compromises on matters about which many people are passionate. The United States may end up adopting some variation of such policies (really, it already has), but the energy is entirely with the activists who really care about issues, not with those who throw up their hands and default to a middle road. And that doesn't mean the debate stops; the argument continues so long as people care.
The Forward Party also vows to advocate for political process changes including ranked-choice ballots, open primaries, and easier voting. These may or may not be good ideas (Reason's Scott Shackford has pointed out that ranked-choice voting isn't as big a game-changer as its fans suggest). But these proposals are the stuff of wonkery, unlikely to build a passionate constituency.
Supporters of the Libertarian Party, Green Party, and other established but not especially successful third parties could certainly tell Forward Party organizers that enthusiasm isn't enough. But it's certainly necessary for establishing political organizations and keeping them going through long years of effort and frustration. Lukewarm commitment to the mushy middle is unlikely to unleash such energy.
Interestingly, while Yang, Whitman, and Jolly approvingly cite Gallup polls supporting an ill-defined third party, they ignore polling that offers a more-promising path than technocratic moderation. Americans consistently voice growing distrust in the federal government, greater faith in local government, and an increasing preference that states take the lead over D.C. in setting policy. At a time when people are at each other's throats over politics, decentralizing decision-making (preferably to the individual) and easing escape from unwelcome policies by moving to the next town or state—what George Mason University's Ilya Somin calls "foot voting"—might reduce tensions. That is, reviving federalism and localism could be more appealing to voters than yet another empty assertion that, deep down, we all favor "commonsense solutions" that strike many people as nothing of the sort.
In interviews with Reason and elsewhere, Andrew Yang, the most recently prominent of the Forward Party organizers, comes off as a sincere, solutions-oriented guy. But it's not obvious that he recognizes that Americans of conflicting values and preferences want to live in different ways and by divergent rules. That blindness is apparent in the claim that "Every problem has a solution most Americans can support (really)." What if we can't even agree on what constitutes a problem? What happens when the solutions embraced by some repulse others?
Like most centrist technocrats, the organizers of the Forward Party mistake governance for an engineering problem that requires a few tweaks to get it properly running. But governing involves messy moral arguments over the use of coercive force. Political debate assumes ongoing disagreement, and if people are sufficiently at-odds, there may be no easy solutions, let alone "commonsense" ones.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Way back in 1995, a different REASON magazine, Virginia Postrel (who was a different person than the one she is today) had a piece titled "The Lethal Center." https://reason.com/1995/08/01/the-lethal-center/
I made $30,030 in just 5 weeks working part-time right from my apartment. When I lost my last business I got tired right away and luckily I found this job online and with that I am able to start reaping lots right through my house. Anyone can achieve this top level career and make more money online by:-
Reading this article:>>>> https://extradollars3.blogspot.com/
"Foot voting" is a lot harder than Prof. Somin and others make it. Even in these days of telework, it's hard for, say, a welder, to just pick up and move to another state that's more politically amenable to their views, what with varying housing prices, availability of work, licensing, school quality, etc. You'd have to be pretty disgusted with the politics where you live to take such a major step into the unknown.
Then again, if you're, say, pro-choice and pro 2nd Amendment, it's going to be difficult to find a spot where you fit.
"...make it seem."
Too bad Reason commenters can't "foot vote" to a comments section with an "edit" function.
Or notifications of people replying to you via email.
Inertia is always the path of least resistance. That doesn't mean that picking up and moving is hugely hard, just that staying put is almost always easier.
In fact, picking up and moving is probably easier than it's ever been, with the internet to power job and housing searches.
Back in '08 I was laid off with my new wife 4 months pregnant, and no job opportunities within a plausible commuting distance. I purely hated having to leave the place I had in the country, (I'd lived there since my teens, and had it just the way I wanted it, I'd planned to live my entire life there.) but the actual process of picking up and moving was relatively easy, in the middle of a recession. It was letting go of what I had that was the hard part.
You must not live in the South. For the past 20 years plus, people have been migrating here. First for jobs and lower cost of living (if they lived near a major city before), but more now it's people who are fed up with high taxation and the shutdowns.
If you’re pro-choice and pro-2A, Alaska and Montana could be good places for you, at least for now their state constitutions guarantee right to abortion and they are in no hurry to grab guns.
But don’t be surprised if you find bears or wolves in your front yard. You aren’t likely to be carjacked, but hitting a deer and wrecking your car is a real problem there. Everyone is armed, so if you are moving to either state from CA, NY, etc, make sure that you change your plates as soon as you can, else the locals use them for target practice. Except for Missoula, of course.
That said, the thing that MT needs desperately right now are tradesmen - plumbers, electricians, carpenters, etc. Maybe not out in the plains to the Far East, but definitely west of the Continental Divide. N ID population is exploding, and people are being forced east into W MT. But the migration, so far at least, seems to be weighted towards the retired, soon to be retired, or those able to work remotely. Building houses has turned into a multi year process with the shortage of tradesmen.
Oh, and if you like to hunt, both states are great. Know a guy here in NW MT whose wife takes her elk every year from her kitchen table. He just has to remove the screen as one of his fall honey dos. In reality, the wolves stay high up on one ridge, and the brown bears on the other one. The bears that amble by and occasionally hang out are invariably black bears, who aren’t that bad to live with. Just don’t feed them, and that includes never leaving food or garbage out. The real danger are the pre-venisons, stupid animals jumping out in front of you as you drive down the road. But it is still nice having them hang out in your front yard in the heat of the day.
Let me add that, outside of Missoula again, these states have much more of a live and let live attitude than most of the others. We have religiously conservative communities where the females are dressed from neck to ankle in dresses and, occasionally, skirts, mixed with those showing a lot of tattoos. A lot of people living off the grid - well, septic, solar, and propane generator as a backup is common. The recently deceased Randy Weaver, after his wife and son were murdered by the Feds outside his cabin in N ID, moved up by Kallispell to get even further away from society. MT is a huge state, and if you removed the big cities, the population density would compete with WY or second least densely populated, after Alaska, of course.
Let me add that, outside of Missoula again, these states have much more of a live and let live attitude than most of the others.
That and Bozeman, which is a shitlib haven for the Hollywood crowd.
Despite the somewhat limited success of the Free State Project, New Hampshire is one of the few remaining choices for those who strongly support gun rights (including constitutional carry) and abortion rights (up to the 24th week). It also has a strong economy and no state income tax or sales tax (though property taxes are high). And it's pretty cold (though not as cold as Alaska).
You know what moderate party I'd like? A libertarian party that supports individual property rights, individual privacy rights and tells non-individual individuals (.gov .corp) to Fuck Right Off.
In my radical opinion any 'limited liability' entity should have the Bill Of Rights incorporated (heh) against it. You want to elude personal / financial obligations? You must not infringe on free speech, the gun rights, unreasonable search and seizure, no penalty with due process.
You want to ban ideas, people, what have you? Become a sole proprietorship.
The problem is too much government intruding too far into too many lives, so much so that people lose control of their own lives to the government monster and conclude, rightly, that they are better off trying to control government than reduce it. Better to sic the wolves on your neighbors before your neighbors sic them on you.
There is no solution. Government grows by its very nature. It can't grow forever, of course; it gradually runs out of other people's money, growth slows as it approaches the top of the curve, and it settles into being a huge wobbly indecisive blob with no mission, no goal, and unsteerable.
So will this fantasy pull more votes out of the democrats or the republicans?
Looking at this clown show, it's giving off incredibly strong odors of 2000s-era Jon Stewart faux-centrism--"Both sides are so dysfunctional, but Republicans, amirite?"
Whenever liberals complain about "divisiveness," it's always--ALWAYS--because the right is actually resisting their agenda with something approaching actual vigor.
The only way to fix things is to get rid of the left. The left is the problem.
But it's not obvious that he recognizes that Americans of conflicting values and preferences want to live in different ways and by divergent rules.
That's sounds like insurrection talk there, bud.
White-supremacist too.
This "centrist" project is a former Dem (Yang) and two neocons trying to pump more air back into the UBI concept in an effort to try to get it back into the mainstream political discourse.
Just two years ago, two of the top three Forward Party members were endorsing Biden's presidential run and the other one (Jolly) was making a paycheck at MSNBC.
Of the two that endorsed Biden, they either did so in strong alignment with his politics and thus the politics of their new Forward Party are virtually the same; or they realized very recently that Biden's policies are a disaster in practice and they have a habit of not thinking things through and jumping wildly from one viewpoint to the next leaving a trail of destruction in the wake of their misguided political whims.
They are "centrist" only in the sense of "if you want more government, you can have more government".
It's like Bolsheviks and Mensheviks arguing over who were the true Marxists.
They are "centrist" only in the sense of "if you want more government, you can have more government".
To be more specific, "If you want MOAR FREE SHIT, you can have MOAR FREE SHIT." Tuccille's observation that this is just a technocratic mental masturbation session is spot on, because these people are fanatically dedicated to figuring out how to get an upper-middle class or upper class lifestyle without lifting a finger to do so.
At least the original New Dealers thought people should do some real, actual work to get money from the government.
Damn the Internet, with its too-easily-available historical data. But just give it a few more years; we'll fix it so it'll never again contradict our narrative. We have always been at war with Eastasia!
Freedom is supposed to be annoying, scary, and risky. In any collection of people who are not mindless clones, we will not agree.
People who seek "solutions" in the middle really do not offer anything better than more extremist options, when intended to apply to everybody. At least half the population will resist compliance with any comprehensive plan. Does it matter how that half is distributed across the political spectrum?
I suppose that people inclined towards politics are more apt to think in terms of solutions, and tech thinking might always lean towards top-down disruption and optimization. None of these tendencies support freedom.
Calling yang a centrist is why the Comme tees rightly call reason a leftist rag. Just because the left has moved to the lest of Mao that doesn't make someone with all leftist views the center
Where does he fall on the Nolan chart? There's more to politics than some line labeled left, center and middle.
Falling on the Nolan chart requires having some kind of basic understanding of different ideologies and some consistent policy ideas. Yang has none of those. So, he simply doesn't appear on the chart.
I got news for you. The Nolan Chart is a joke.
It may be true that a majority of Americans want a strong third party to challenge the Dems and the Reps, unfortunately half of them would prefer the Khmer Rouge Party.
"every problem has a solution most Americans can support (really)."
"there is always a well-known solution to every human problem—neat, plausible, and wrong." -- H. L. Mencken
But there is such a solution -- individual choice! Let everyone find their own solution.
Let me rephrase that quote:
"There is always a collectivist solution to every human problem -- bloody, implausible, and coerced." -- individualists everywhere.
Should call themselves the 'Contrarian' party and just do the opposite of the Libertarian Party e.g. open borders - closed borders and then figure out what should be written on the 1 or 2 pages of exceptions to the rule of closed borders. Ditto for language and culture.
A few islands of permissions in a sea of mandates. Sounds about right for a statist. Go Yang yourself.
Andrew Yang:
'Not to worry, that hand in your pocket isn't really trying to take your wallet. Trust me.'
not saying anything about it being good or bad, but american politics is a two party system. third parties will only ever succeed on the fringe down ballot. no third party will ever ascend to offices like president. just never going to happen.
For a group calling themselves "Forward," they're doing a great impression of 90s-00s left-liberals.
At that time, everyone was complaining that the two parties were too similar. I remember several friends complaining that Bush and Gore both equally sucked and they couldn’t really tell the difference.
They're just offering the warm, comfortable womb of center-left politics while pretending that the main part of the Democratic party has crashed through the Overton window and gone running naked into the woods.
Hasn't*
Either way, the Democrats need to deal with it's racism and marxism problem before they completely self-destruct.
You'd think so, but . . .
You're right about Democrats, of course. But these issues did not suddenly appear since the last election. There were perfectly in evidence in November 2020. So, what happened?
It would appear that millions of Americans don't mind the racism and the Marxism. Nuts...
Could happen if we had a parliamentary system, which we won’t.
when Lincoln was elected, the republican party was the third party....
How about we simply divide the divided country?
I mean what's the point of keeping red and blue areas together in a single nation at this point?
Both red and blue areas don't even want people from the other side to move in.
If we divided the country, would there be a border for the more liberal states? Would there be voter ID, or could those in the conservative states just cross the boarder and mail in a ballot? Could I have a job in a conservative state and get unemployment in a liberal state?
If this happens, my plan is to move to a conservative state at high elevation and then support heavy use of carbon emissions that will in turn raise sea level and flood out the liberal coastal states.
The question is would you rather be ruled by those who participated in Jan 6th, or the fat ugly ladies who want to parade their aborted fetuses through the streets (if they could find anyone to impregnate them) and/or make up the climate apocalypse movement?
If they ever let me know the truth about January 6, I'd probably prefer that crowd over the fat ugly ladies and the left wing media.
I can see decentralization being very popular. Live and let live.
The problem is people want to be "right" rather than happy. They won't stop until everyone does it their way.
I am a big believer in "live & let live." I know a lot of people like me. None of them are Democrats though. (And I'm pretty sure these supposed "centrists" don't believe in it either.)
I guess the hope is that the left and right are getting extreme enough that the disaffected but complacent "middle" will rise up and slap down both sides. I'm certainly coming to agree with that idea. I would vote for just about any bland, centrist personality over Biden and Trump.
Biden was elected as a bland, boring old white guy who could unify the country with his "centrist" ideas and ability to reach across the isle. How's that working out?
Might have been better if he actually was bland and centrist. Instead, it turns out that the center Joe Biden represents is that of the Democratic Party itself, whose membership has mostly, "crashed through the Overton window and gone running naked into the woods."
For the left, Biden is like a senile relative who will gladly hand you the keys to her caddy along with credit cards and deed to her house.
"crashed through the Overton window and gone running naked into the
woodschools."Even a good part of The (old) Moral Majority didn't care too much if you were naked in the middle of the woods with no one around.
Biden was advertised as being bland and centrist.
It was easy to believe that when his major primary opponents were all you had to compare him to.
I'm trying to imagine what Trump would've had to do to match Biden's ("progressive" (and, of course, negative)) impact on the country. I am having a hard time.
"Better than Joe Biden" isn't a high enough bar. With 330M people running around surely we can do better than another 80 year old has-been.
It probably isn’t going to work very well, given the Constitutional Republic form of our government. The Presidency is an all or nothing proposition, and there is no mechanism to change Presidents mid term, if they screw up too badly. There have been two parties for almost all of our existence. Sure, there are two “Independent” Senators, but they invariably caucus with the Democrats. They probably have to - it is likely that they only win election because the Democrats let them. If one of them switched to caucusing with the Republicans (they won’t), the Republicans would take control of the Senate, and the whole political dynamic of the country would shift.
I can understand not filling a new party with some charismatic leader but Yang and Whitman? They make watching bread dough rising exciting.
On abortion, most Americans don't agree with the far left's extreme views on late-term abortions, but they also are alarmed by the far right's quest to make a woman's choice a criminal offense."
This is true. But as a recent poll Reason printed showed, the percentage on the far right that want to make it a criminal offense in all cases was much smaller than the percentage on the far left that think it's A-ok to stick an icepick in a fully formed baby's head as it crowns during the birthing procedure.
In interviews with Reason and elsewhere, Andrew Yang, the most recently prominent of the Forward Party organizers, comes off as a sincere, solutions-oriented guy.
He is, but if this were the 1990s and the primary issues in the country were how many fractions of a percentage point to tweak the federal income tax or whether or not we should ban cheap handguns, then maybe it would be his time. But it's not his time.
"There are two sides to every issue: one side is right and the other is wrong, but the middle is always evil." (Ayn Rand)
former Governor Christine Todd Whitman (R–N.J.)
For all you non-Jerseyans out there, Whitman borrowed lots of money via bond issues, spent it like a drunken sailor, and is responsible for a large part on NJ's deficit.
She also cut the requirements of DMV inspections, so at least there's that.
Jersey girls don't pump gas...that pretty much summarizes what is wrong with Jersey..
I'm going to try to keep this post short, but here's my problem with Yang... and the Yang type approach.
Yang presents himself as a candidate who's above the divisive politics of our day. And on that very narrow point, he may be correct. But his approach fails to take into account a very real problem in the county (and the West in general) that is now baked into our zeitgeist. There's a divisiveness that has taken hold of all of our institutions that is now (to repeat) baked into our systems of governance and even the private institutions which we must deal with to navigate public life.
We need someone who will confront these 'baked in' issues, not someone who sidesteps them or ignores them. Yes, one may argue that by electing people like Yang, we are putting people in charge who are not "divisive". But Yang is one person, one office, one long shot. We need to confront divisiveness with Reason and Western enlightenment, and that means you're going to get your knuckles bloodied. Saying "No, the American Police are not engaging in Genocide against black people" is not divisive, it's fighting divisiveness with statistics and facts. It's not divisive to say, "No, the working class guy who throws a steak on the grill on Saturday afternoon, and takes his family car camping in his SUV once or twice during the summer is not 'killing the planet'". Saying that "No, whiteness is not the core problem with America and therefore needs to be eradicated" is not divisive, it's pushing back against divisiveness. The problem with Yangism (if I may) is that Yang sidesteps or ignores these weightier culture war issues, almost as if they don't really exist. And if Yang ever got any traction towards the presidency, he'd realize very quickly that he would be under tremendous pressure to limit his cabinet picks to tiny fractions of the population who carry specific superficial traits, and unfortunately, Yang doesn't seem like the kind of principled executive who would push back against that. So why would I have any faith that a Yang administration would be more competent in any way than our current crop of diversity hires running things now?
To drive this point home, Yang is the guy discussing how we might better tweak interest rates and fudge the way the Fed tracks inflation and buys back treasury bonds. Meanwhile, THIS is what the fed is talking about:
Yang is an idiot who wants everyone on the dole. Quit giving him attention.
-jcr
Andrew Yang has some good ideas but having them and implementing them is different. Can this new party get a win? I think if they started with some reasonably obtainable goals, they might have success. They will likely set high goals like the Presidency and fail. Better to find a state amenable to their goals and win some state level seats.
As long as he splits the democrat vote I’m for his stupid bullshit.
Andrew Yang gets less impressive every time he opens his mouth.
Ridiculing Yang and "centrism" as new evils, or incompetent clunky machines of one type or another, misses the point entirely. This nation needs a new, fear-free, reasonable political APPROACH to solving problems. Does that sound so terrible?
Will it be perfect? Impossible. Will it make most people happy? Who the hell knows? Given our attention is twisted and polluted daily by news and social media fabrications of all kinds, predicting any future state of being becomes problematic. However, to pretend that the application of reason and knowledge for the purpose of pursuing more sensible legal and political policy nationwide cannot possibly be a better path than white-phobic-abolish-the-police far left extremism or no-more-birth-control-Jewish-space-laser conservatism is to side with the ongoing insanity promoted daily by both groups.
Of course, we can pick fault with Yang all day (he's not strong enough, not a real leader, blah blah), find real or alleged examples of "centrism" failing over the decades, yes, but again, that endless meteor fall of "it will never work" misses the bigger point. No amount of anti-Yangisms and nitpicking will negate the groundswell of dissatisfaction with the two party system. Simply screwing the lid on tighter by attacking those who lead the fight for change only rewards those who benefit from the mentally ill status quo.
No one has all the answers. But if we can simply begin to rationally approach problems from a basis other than that of extremism, and at the same time, value the art of compromise as a vital ingredient of true democracy, then at least there is a chance of achieving productive results across a wide spectrum of issues. "A chance" is all we can ask for.
Keep in mind also that non-extremists from both sides achieving alliance in a new party will also make it far, far easier for them to meet and debate issues without fearing retaliations from within.
I also believe that an intellectual organization like Reason can help lead the way, not via insults and attacks, but by realistic evaluations of results.
Thank you for the opportunity to comment.
MCN
Keep in mind also that non-extremists from both sides achieving alliance in a new party will also make it far, far easier for them to meet and debate issues without fearing retaliations from within.
This is a pretense that isn't borne out by history. It's always the "extremist" wings that drive party policy, because that's where the energy and activism comes from. The "small government" ideology that dominated Republican politics for over 50 years was espoused by a guy the Democrats said would start a nuclear war if he became President, and who said, "Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice." The Goldwater wing was a populist, western, non-centrist response to the party's northeastern wing and the Rockefeller Republicans.
The "middle" are wildly conflict-averse and will simply job out to whomever they think will allow them to keep consoooooooooooming in peace.
Government governs best when it governs least and it governs least when it's most divided. I like gridlock in Congress. It means the rate at which I'm getting screwed over is slightly slower than usual. The places where the two sides seem to find common ground most often is in starting and perpetuating wars and permitting us to go into greater debt. Other big moments of bipartisanship in recent memory are when squishy Republicans vote alongside every single Democrat to pass more infringements on the rights codified in the Second Amendment.
Coming together to "solve problems" just for the sake of saying it was bipartisan is no great virtue.
This nation needs a new, fear-free, reasonable political APPROACH to solving problems. Does that sound so terrible?
No, it's perfectly reasonable, but I will not accept any Yang administration that does not make it their #1 priority to bring in lesbian women of color at every level of their administration. All other considerations are secondary.
Just get rid of the left.
There's so much not to like about this, but let's start with the name. "Forward" was an Obama slogan, and also has had a long history as a Communist slogan.
http://hackwilson.blogspot.com/2012/04/forward-communist-slogan-now-adopted-by.html
At least it fits Yang’s plan.
Forget the "Forward" party. I want to join the "Mind Your Own Beeswax" party. Just leave me and my community alone to live the life our way. You do that, and I'll do the same for you. Then we'll both be happy.
The fact that we're forcing everyone and everything to fit through the same, square hole is driving us crazy, and driving us apart. The US has had tremendous success in bringing different groups together under one nation because this place was large enough for everyone to have a piece they could call their own. We need that back.
"Crumudgeon" Party sounds like the best party in town.
To break the two party Duopoly of political power we probably need 5 parties with a significant following. If you are a Libertarian cheer on the Forward party and the Green Party because only the two of those (or similar replacement parties) can help take away the voters the 2 big parties are ignoring with policy but still gets votes. The more different voices the better our democracy will perform.
Have they come up with a single policy proposal yet? Or is this just another Russian op to divide Democrats?
Oddly, the CNN article that KMW insists everyone should read isn't in the list of links contained in the story.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/01/politics/kyrsten-sinema-democrats-big-week-for-biden-presidency/index.html
You're welcome.
Whoops, posted that to the wrong story!