A surprisingly sober look by Wall Street Journal columnist and former Reagan 
speechwriter Peggy Noonan at the Sanders movement and the receptivity to 
“socialist” ideas of many young adults whose only experience of capitalism is 
that it “drove us into a ditch”. 

“It’s all part of the great scrambling that is happening this political 
year—the most dramatic, and perhaps most consequential, of our lifetimes.”

(Behind a paywall)

Socialism gets a second life
By Peggy Noonan
Wall Street Journal
January 29 2016

Nashua, N.H.

I was watching Bernie Sanders speak last week at a town hall in Bedford when an 
early intuition became a conviction: Take Mr. Sanders seriously. He is not just 
another antic presence in Crazy Year 2016. His rise signifies a major shift 
within the Democratic Party. 

The big room was full, 700 to 800 people, good for 5 p.m. on a Friday. The 
audience wasn’t raucous or full of cheers as at his big rallies, but thinking 
and nodding. They were young and middle-aged, with not many white-haired heads. 
There was a working-class feel to them, though Bedford is relatively affluent. 

“Let me disabuse you,” Mr. Sanders says to those who think he cannot win. He 
quotes New Hampshire polls, where he’s way ahead. He can defeat Donald Trump,he 
says. 

Then the meat. He described America as a place of broad suffering—“student 
debt,” “two-job families” with strained marriages and insufficient child care, 
“the old on fixed incomes.”

We can turn it around if we make clear to “the billionaire class” that income 
inequality “is not moral.” The economy is “rigged.” Real unemployment is not 5% 
but twice that. “Youth unemployment is off the charts.” He wants job-training 
programs for the young. The minimum wage is “a starvation wage.” Raise it to “a 
living wage—15 bucks an hour.” 

The audience is attentive, supportive. “Yeah!” some shout.

He speaks of Goldman Sachs, of “banksters” and of a Republican Party owned by 
“the oil industry, coal industry.”

“Health care is a right of all people, not a privilege.” He asks if any in the 
audience have high-insurance deductibles. They start to call out: “$4,000,” 
“5,000,” “6,000!” Someone yells: “Nothing’s covered!”

No one mentions ObamaCare, but it seems clear it hasn’t worked here. 

Mr. Sanders says people don’t go to the doctor when they’re sick because of the 
deductibles. “Same with mental-health care!” a woman calls out. “Mental-health 
care must be considered part of health care,” he responds, to applause. He is 
for “a Medicare-for-all, single-payer system.” 

How to pay for it all? “Impose a tax on Wall Street speculation,” he says, 
briefly. He does not elaborate and is not pressed to. 

Mr. Sanders’s essential message was somber, grim, even dark. It’s all 
stark—good guys and bad guys, angels and devils. But it’s also clear and easy 
to understand: We are in terrible trouble because our entire system is rigged, 
the billionaires did it, they are the beneficiaries of the biggest income 
transfer from the poor to the rich in the history of man, and we are going to 
stop it. How? Through “a political revolution.” But a soft one that will take 
place in voting booths. We will vote to go left.

As the audience left they seemed not pumped or excited, but satisfied. 

I listen to Mr. Sanders a lot, and what he says marks a departure from the ways 
the Democratic Party has been operating for at least a generation now. 

Formally, since 1992, the Democratic Party has been Clintonian in its 
economics—moderate, showing the influence of the Democratic Leadership Council. 
Free-market capitalism is something you live with and accept; the wealth it 
produces can be directed toward public programs and endeavors. The Clinton 
administration didn’t hate Wall Street, it hired Wall Street. Big government, 
big Wall Street—it all worked. It was the Great Accommodation, and it was a 
break with more-socialist approaches of the past. 

All this began to shatter in the crash of 2008, not that anyone noticed—it got 
lost in the Obama hoopla. In March 2009, when Mr. Obama told Wall Street 
bankers at the White House that his administration was the only thing standing 
between them and “the pitchforks,” he was wittingly or unwittingly 
acknowledging the Great Accommodation. 

The rise of Bernie Sanders means that accommodation is ending, and something 
new will take its place.

Surely it means something that Mr. Obama spent eight years insisting he was not 
a socialist, and Bernie Sanders is rising while saying he is one. 

It has left Hillary Clinton scrambling, unsteady. She thought she and her 
husband had cracked the code and made peace with big wealth. But her party is 
undoing it—without her permission and without her leading the way. She is 
meekly following. 

It is my guess that Mr. Sanders will win in Iowa and New Hampshire. But the 
tendency he represents—whether it succeeds this time or simply settles in and 
grows—is, I suspect, here to stay. 

A conservative of a certain age might say: “No, he’s a fad. Socialism is 
yesterday! Marx is dead, the American economic behemoth rolled over and 
flattened him. Socialism is an antique idea that rocks with age. America is 
about the future, not the past.” 

I disagree. It’s back because it’s new again. 

For so many, 2008 shattered faith in the system—in its fairness, usefulness and 
efficacy, even in its ability to endure. 

As for the young, let’s say you’re 20 or 30, meaning you’ll be voting for a 
long time. What in your formative years would have taught you about the 
excellence of free markets, low taxes, “a friendly business climate”? A teacher 
in public high school? Maybe one—the faculty-lounge eccentric who boycotted the 
union meetings. And who in our colleges teaches the virtues of capitalism?

If you are 20 or 30 you probably see capitalism in terms of two dramatic 
themes. The first was the crash of ’08, in which heedless, irresponsible 
operators in business and government kited the system and scrammed. The second 
is income inequality. Why are some people richer than the richest kings and so 
many poor as serfs? Is that what capitalism gives you? Then maybe we should 
rethink this!

And Mr. Sanders makes it sound so easy. We’re rich, he says; we can do this 
with a few taxes. It is soft Marxism. And it’s not socialism now, it’s 
“democratic socialism” like they have in Europe. You’ve been to Europe. Aside 
from its refugee crisis and some EU problems, it’s a great place—a big welfare 
state that’s wealthy! The French take three-hour lunches.

Socialism is an old idea to you if you’re over 50 but a nice new idea if you’re 
25. 

Do you know what’s old if you’re 25? The free-market capitalist system that 
drove us into a ditch. 

Polls show the generation gap. Mr. Sanders does poorly among the old. They 
remember socialism. He does well among the young, who’ve just discovered it and 
have little to no knowledge of its effects. A nationwide Marist poll in 
November showed Mr. Sanders already leading Mrs. Clinton, 58% to 35%, among 
voters under 30. She led him among all other age groups, and 69% to 21% among 
those 60 and older. By this month a CBS/New York Times poll had Mr. Sanders up 
60% to 31% among voters under 45.

Bernie Sanders is an indicator of the Democratic future. He is telling you 
where that party’s going. In time some Democrats will leave over it, and look 
for other homes.

It’s all part of the great scrambling that is happening this political year—the 
most dramatic, and perhaps most consequential, of our lifetimes.
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