Editor's note.

AuthorGlastris, Paul

Since its first issue in 1969, The Washington Monthly has had two main aims: To explain the myriad ways in which power is wielded in Washington, for good and ill, and to be an in-house critic of liberalism, pointing out where the progressive side is wrong and how it can correct itself. The downside of this mission is that one's stories are not always appreciated by those in charge. The upside is, you're never out of work.

These days, we clearly have our work cut out for us. The Republican Party has now tightened its control of all three branches of government. And President George W. Bush has interpreted his victory as a mandate to engineer sweeping changes in the structure of government--giving more power to conservatives' corporate cronies, privatizing much of the public sector, and trying to secure total GOP rule for years to come.

Meanwhile, liberals are left with the feeling of not just having been beaten, but conquered--and by an opponent who, given his record of spectacular policy failures, should have lost. Yes, Democrats did plenty of things right. They waged a united fight, raised a lot of small-donor money, and began to build a new opposition infrastructure. And yes, there is plenty of blame to go around, from an admirable but not widely loved presidential candidate to his stunningly ineffective strategists. But at this point, it requires a willful act of self-deception not to see the deeper problem: conservatives have won the war of ideas--and have done so in part because progressives offered no compelling vision of their own.

Coming up with such a vision is not easy. But it's not that hard. Conservatives have one, whether you agree with it or not. Progressives had one in the form of the New Democratic agenda that Bill Clinton campaigned on and governed by. That agenda did not emerge from nowhere in 1992. It was the fruit of years of tough debate among reform-minded center/left politicians, citizens, scholars, and journalists--a debate carried out, among other places, in the pages of this magazine.

Now, it's time to renew that debate, and we at the Monthly aim to be at the center of it, by doing more of what we do best: uncovering the evolving ways power works in Washington, and discovering the new ideas that can drive the country forward.

In the latter category--the vision thing--we have three offerings in this month's issue. First is a roundtable conversation about the future of the Democrats ("What Now?" page 20)...

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