@50, I'd also be curious where you have determined the right has gone just far as the left. I asked twice earlier in thread when someone made a similar comment. But what policies have been enacted, or even proposed, from Republicans, that are well out of the mainstream of the party's history?
The left has proposed taking over energy, healthcare, education, cancelling debt, aborting children through entire pregnancy, full health coverage for illegal immigrants, decriminilizing the boarder, actual confiscation of guns from law abiding citizens, the green new deal - which i won't even bother rehashing the insanity, and so on so forth
It seems to me one party has completely raced to socialism. The other has stayed put... the only thing I would say the right has actually done outside of their norm is spend money like a leftist.
Curious if you could elaborate
Sorry I didn't check in yesterday. I think one has to take the long view and I realize you guys are younger so you haven't lived through it. Many books have been written about the movement of the Republican party further to the right and I won't be writing a tome here, but I'll start by saying Post-WWII there was an American consensus built by what has been termed the "Greatest" or "Hero" generation. There were a lot of reasons for that consensus. Clearly part of it dealt with providing opportunities for economic expansion which included government outlays for purposes related to that goal. Think GI bill and Interstate Highway system. The consensus during the Eisenhower era didn't really include women or minorities expressly, but there was movement on civil rights in the 1950s in which the progress of the 1960s was built. The key here is that Eisenhower did not roll back programs associated with The New Deal and that did raise the ire of the more conservative wing of the Republican party.
The American consensus pretty much held until Reagan. Obviously Johnson' Great Society (and simultaneous investments in the Vietnam War) really jacked up the deficit, but Nixon actually built on The Great Society with a number of programs aimed at revitalizing urban centers. Nixon's descent to ignominy clearly energized the more conservative elements of the party, which culminated in Reagan's election in 1980. Part of Reagan's ascent was fueled by a proliferation of conservative think tanks--ALEC, CPAC, Heritage Foundation--and the advent of a "the market is always right" way of thinking.
Reagan broke a lot of the consensus. He dismantled a lot of individual programs and lumped them into block grants that went to the states, often turning those aid programs into slush funds for state legislatures. His tax cuts added to the deficit, but he increased Social Security taxes aiming to keep that program solvent. Bush 41 and Dole were nominees that tipped back toward the old consensus, but the election of Bush 43 moved the party to where it is now. I'll admit it's difficult to know which party started chasing moderates out first (and the chasing often dealt more with social issues than budget/policy issues more closely associated with government), but--and I have witnessed this personally--both parties started shedding moderates post-2000.
I would say since 2000, the Democrats (at least up until recently) simply wanted government to work. There was the ACA--largely for good--but other than that, there weren't any what I would term signature programs coming from the left since 2000. Part of that was the constriction caused by the economic downturn of 2008 and the Democratic response to that was largely establishmentarian in that Geithner and company convinced Obama that was the way to go. The stimulus package had a lot of crap in it (I would have preferred the package would have done more on infrastructure and direct aid to states for very narrow purposes like they did with special education funding), but the package was decried on the left for not being big enough as much as it was on the right for being too big.
The response to the stimulus package pretty much sums up where we are today. Republicans have framed it as "Makers v. Takers" and Democrats have framed it as "Snidely Whiplash v. Dudley Do-Right." The division only gets more stark by all the pronouncements coming from both the left and right through their various media outlets.
Anyway, I've digressed badly. As far as policy measures go, I think the conservatives have moved away from progressive taxation as dogma. There is an argument over how high taxes should be, but little attention is paid to how they are levied and the right has moved toward more regressive means of collecting revenue regardless of the amount collected. I'm not saying this is an argument that shouldn't take place, but moving away from progressive taxation is clearly a move toward the right. Most of the responses on health care talk about "market-based" reform and I don't think the Republicans know what that means, but it sounds good. Entitlement reform is another policy (not racial) dog whistle that plays to the Randian Maker/Taker dichotomy. I'm not saying that entitlements shouldn't be looked at (I supported Simpson/Bowles--another consensus document rejected by both ends of the spectrum), but looking at the budgets Paul Ryan put together, I don't think he was talking that much about reform.
A lot of these things don't happen because Congress has been dysfunctional for the past two decades and one house or the other stonewalls debate. Some of that is good and some of it is bad, but the lack of interplay between the Executive and Legislative branches has given the Executive almost
carte blanche authority to do things through Executive Orders (another unfortunate outcome of recent vintage).
In closing and I'll admit I haven't given an adequate answer, I put most of the problem at the feet of the second-tier "slanted" media and commentary emanating from a lot of self-appointed grand poobahs. It is almost impossible to be a moderate these days. All the attention goes toward either the Squad on the left or the nutty offspring of Michelle Bachman on the right. That drives the selection of candidates in a lot of places and the candidate who adheres to the gospel according to (fill in the blank) ends up being the candidate.
As for the Democratic debates, I see it as similar to the Republican debates of 2012. I have worked with former Governor Pawlenty here in Minnesota. Nice guy. Took a bit of a right turn when moving from the Legislature to the Governor's mansion here (part of that has been attributed to Potomac Fever), but he worked hard during his two terms and while being a conservative, he realized that he was running a whole state and not everyone in it was a conservative. He tried a comeback in 2018 and lost in the primary to, you guessed it, someone viewed as being more purely conservative. Pawlenty had the same problem in 2012 that Klobuchar is having in 2020 in that it is difficult to be a pragmatic "get things done" public official instead of spouting off bromides that would have put you in the dustbin of history in the 1960s. So we get Herman Cains "9-9-9 Plan" in 2016 from the Republicans and every Democrat on the stage promising sperm-to-worms security for every sentient (and some non-sentient) beings in America. I agree with you it's nuts, but the sudden spasm of the push toward socialism (which is not be to confused with Pol Pot) is a reaction to the current state of affairs in the same way Reagan was a reaction to the consensus in the 1970s. We'll see how it plays out.