Michael Hiltzik is my favorite columnist at the Los Angeles Times. In this post, he exposes the emptiness behind the “No Labels” platform. The possibility that No Labels will run a third party candidate in a Trump v. Biden race seems likely to elect Trump by drawing independent votes away from Biden. If ever there was an election where a third party is not needed, it’s 2024.
Hiltzik writes:
Presidential campaigns start earlier and earlier these days, and so too do pleas that politics in the U.S. would be so much more effective if we could, in the words of Rodney King, “all just get along.”
So here comes the purportedly centrist political group No Labels, which recently released a 72-page political manifesto entitled “Common Sense,” in an overt echo of Thomas Paine.
“Most Americans are decent, caring, reasonable, and patriotic people,” declares the document’s preamble. “Instead, we see our two major parties dominated by angry and extremist voices driven by ideology and identity politics rather than what’s best for our country.”
There’s a clue right there to the “both-sides-ism” of this fake party. Who are the “angry and extremist voices” on the Democratic side? No one like Greene, Boebert, and Gaetz.
No Labels says it may back a third-party candidate for president next year unless President Biden seems to be running well ahead of Donald Trump. That sounds more like a threat than a promise.
The politician the group has been most assiduously promoting lately is Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.). Manchin has demonstrated his centrist bonafides by doing things such as killing an expansion of the Child Tax Credit, an anti-poverty program of proven effectiveness, and blocking initiatives for renewable fuels in favor of protecting coal and other fossil fuels (he’s an investor in the coal industry).
That might tell you all you need to know about No Labels, but there’s more. The organization doesn’t disclose its donors, but Mother Jones has reported that they include private equity investors, a natural gas billionaire and real estate and insurance industry figures.
The best window into No Labels’ approach is its “Common Sense” policy document, which boasts of providing “a clear blueprint for where America’s commonsense majority wants this country to go.”
Would that were so. In the flesh, the document is an agglomeration of misinformation, platitudes and premasticated nostrums.
The document tends to make its points by listing problems and saying, in effect, “something must be done”—but doesn’t give many specifics about what that something would be. It makes assumptions about what is desired by “commonsense Americans” (whoever they are) without actually showing that its assumptions are valid.
Housing? “Building more homes in America will make housing more affordable for Americans,” says No Labels. No kidding? So what are you going to do about it? The policy document doesn’t say, beyond endorsing a couple of federal tax credit proposals in Congress that on the gonna-happen scale are a “not.”
On some issues, No Labels merely tries to split the difference between two sides, never mind that one side may be right and the other wrong. Abortion? No Labels calls for a “compromise” between the belief that “women have a right to control their own reproductive health and our society’s responsibility to protect human life.”
That word salad gets us nowhere, skating glibly over the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe vs. Wade, as played out in states where stringent antiabortion statutes have had devastating consequences for the health of pregnant women and their access to medical care. If that’s the best that No Labels can offer, why does the organization exist at all?
Social Security? No Labels calls its fiscal condition “a textbook example of how leaders kick the can down the road in a manner that makes a foreseeable problem even harder to solve for the next generation.” This is a textbook example of balderdash.
“The longer Washington waits to fix Social Security,” No Labels says, “the harder it will be to do so.” The truth, as the political geniuses behind No Labels surely understand, is just the opposite. The closer the deadline, the easier it is to come together for a solution.
No Labels bases its argument on the fact that if Congress defers a decision on shoring up the program’s finances, the solutions will require more stringent benefit cuts or tax increases than they would today. But acting now would mean reducing benefits or raising taxes long before that’s necessary, and possibly more than will be necessary.
And who would pay that price? No Labels says that “no one in retirement — or close to it — should face any benefit changes.” Why not? Why place the burden of benefit cuts only on the younger generation? If “fixing” Social Security is “a challenge that we can and must solve together,” how come those in their fifties or older get a free pass?
The real reason that Social Security may need more funding is that wealthier Americans aren’t paying their fair share of the payroll tax that funds most benefits. Removing the cap on the payroll tax, which exempts wage income over $160,200 (this year’s limit), would eliminate almost all the program’s funding deficit for the foreseeable future. But that, obviously, would hit the taxpayer class No Labels seems determined to protect….
No Labels calls for a deficit reduction commission to issue proposals for spending cuts and revenue increases that Congress would have to vote on as a unified package. The model here is the Simpson-Bowles Fiscal Responsibility Commission of 2010. No Labels calls its report “sensible and responsible, and dead on arrival.”
That’s a neat bit of historical revisionism. The reason the report went nowhere was that the commission itself was so split that it never got around to issuing recommendations at all. The co-chairs, the noxious former Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.) and the conservative Democrat Erskine Bowles, traveled the country trying to sell their snake oil, with no success.
The truth was that the commission was a front for the wealthy. The Simpson-Bowles plan was a road map for cutting services and benefits for the working and middle class — including Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid benefits and disaster relief — while preserving the tax breaks that the rich valued most highly. By taking Simpson-Bowles as a model, No Labels shows us what it’s really about.
Some of the policy document’s “ideas” are based on popular mythologies and received wisdom (or really, received misinformation). Some are self-contradictory. On crime, for example, the document says, “Americans are worried about the surge of crime,” but two paragraphs later acknowledges that violent crime is “down 44 percent since the 1990s.”
What’s the solution? To No Labels, it all boils down to putting more cops on the street. “It’s a simple equation: the more cops patrolling a given community, the less crime that community experiences.” There’s no hint there that among law enforcement experts this is a heavily disputed claim.
It’s based on dubious data and a very narrow definition of “crime” — leaving out offenses such as wage theft and air and water pollution, for instance — and overlooks numerous proven approaches to reducing street crime that don’t require more cops. Nor does it recognize that in some contexts, more police leads to morecrime. But why claim to be exploring the complexity of criminal justice, when you’re just parroting the simple-minded conclusion that more cops invariably make a community safer?
On these and many other issues, No Labels is claiming to map out a middle ground between Democrats and Republicans that doesn’t really exist. No Labels says its goal is to combat political polarization in America, but the country is not, in fact, polarized. Large majorities favor abortion rights, gun control, making the rich pay their fair share in taxes, and protecting voting rights.
No Labels tries to both-sides the GOP’s allegiance to an extremist former president and its platform of eliminating abortion rights, constricting voting rights and advancing discrimination against racial and ethnic minorities and LGBTQ+ individuals. That Democratic Party policies are the polar opposites of those hardly makes it as “extremist” as the GOP. Where’s the middle ground when one side wants to expand rights and opportunities, and the other wants to destroy them?

The smarter Republicans (note the use of the comparative) know that if Trump is their nominee again, they lose again. And so they are funding this attempt to siphon so-called centrist votes (votes against children and for polluting the air are centrist?) away from the Democrat so that Jabba the Trump has a chance of sliming his way to a victory in the Electoral College.
Why the bother when Trump is so obviously incompetent? Well, he will sign any piece of legislation, however rapacious, that the fat cats put in front of him that takes from the commons and gives to them.
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And when it comes to public education the “No Labels” solution is more charter schools and vouchers.
“Access to high-quality education has long been a foundational promise from the US government to our citizens. When the school system works, America is stronger: workers are more productive, companies are more innovative, and all of us are healthier, wealthier, and safer.
But this promise is not being kept in too many communities, especially urban ones. Take New York City, Chicago, and Los Angeles, which spend the first, fifth, and sixth most per pupil on their public-school students, but 37, 39, and 33 percent of their eighth graders respectively can’t even read at the basic level. Overall, America spends more on education per school-aged child than any country in the world, with worse results.
Because public schools are funded mostly by local property taxes, wealthier areas tend to have better schools. In fact, houses near schools with an A+ rating are four times more expensive than houses near schools rated D or worse. Meanwhile, average private school tuition is $15,650 per year for high school and $11,200 for elementary school, and voucher programs are often not enough to make these schools accessible for all families.
Prices this high give too many low-income families no choice but to send their children to a failing or underresourced local school. That’s why more governors—both Democrats and Republicans— have recently supported the expansion of education savings accounts, vouchers, and tax credit scholarships that provide parents with more choice about where to send their kids to school.
Public charter schools can also offer an alternative. Not long ago, leading Democrats and Republicans supported them, including the chancellors of big school districts in New York and Washington, DC, as well as former presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush. It’s time to rebuild this bipartisan consensus, because students in well-run charter schools—especially Black, Hispanic, and lowincome students—learn more than their peers. And traditional public schools perform better when there’s a charter school nearby—the closer the charter, the bigger the benefit.
But America’s charter schools don’t have enough room. In Texas, there are 77,000 names on wait lists for enrolling in charter schools (although some students might be listed twice). Massachusetts has 21,000, and Washington, DC, has nearly 8,000.
Despite the success of charter schools, and the clear demand for them, only 13 percent of school districts across the US have at least one charter school. On balance, America’s commonsense majority supports public schools, but we like competition too. That’s why the next president should extend a lifeline to students trapped in failing traditional public schools and commit America to the ambitious goal of opening 10,000 public charter schools across the country in the next 10 years—more than doubling the current amount.”
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One of the major founders of No Labels is Jon Huntsman. He is usually portrayed as as “centrist” Republican. However, as Governor of Utah and since, he has been anything but centrist. He signed vouchers into law, which were overturned by Utah voters. He was an early proponent of Trump and still supports him, and Huntsman has made a lot of anti-immigrant comments, among other things. He’s actually so out of step with Utah (no bastion of liberalism) that, even with his huge financial resources, he lost the Gubernatorial Republican primary quite badly four years ago
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Huntsman, Lieberman, Manchin and Thiel are slime.
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Joe Blubberman’s involvement tells all.
That fellow is like the chickenpox virus that never goes away and reappears decades later as very painful shingles.
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Thanks for the Utah perspective on Huntsman.
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He’s also a billionaire. So he props up the 1 percent.
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CNN posed the question, when Leon Black paid $158 mil. to Epstein, was it a strategy to avoid paying a billion in gift and estate taxes.
We are talking about more money than can ever be spent in a person’s lifetime. Why do men like Black, Thiel, Huntsman, etc. resist funding the government that enabled their accumulation of personal wealth?
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If people want the whole US to be run like Utah, they should follow a party headed by an Utah Republican.
Having lived under Republican rule in Utah, that proposition scares me as much as Trump.
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Yeah, it’s DAM terrifying ( sorry, had to do it). But seriously, running a government like Utah’s should NOT be a goal
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“No Labels” is simply a pro-corporatist party with Democrats who are owned by Wall Street and establishment Republicans who dream of politics like it used to be before MAGA. When one of the chief promoters is Joe Lieberman we can see that the basic culture of the organization has the spine of a wet noodle. Another of the promoters, Pat McCrory literally “worked” for Duke Power, a private predatory energy conglomerate, while serving as “part time” mayor of Charlotte, NC for eight years. His only principle is to jump as high as his donors require. It sickened me Sunday when Larry Hogan, former governor of Maryland, equated Biden’s legal challenges with Trump (For the record Trump has six scheduled appearances in court through May of next year so far, Biden? There is no prospect for indictment of any kind, and considering Pence just got off for having a few documents one would think the conclusion on Biden will be the same). In the end, the most important elections in the coming term are with Congress. Democrats have to have an overwhelming victory to begin overturning the radical over reach of the Supreme Court on the role of the administration and abortion. Strap on because the 1% are going to do everything they can to keep their money off shore.
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Thanks for this piece. “No Labels” and third parties tend to ignore the reality of American politics and our two-party system. There’s fuel for this type of flawed–or surreptitious–thinking in our continued societal criticism of “politicians” and “government” of any kind. “Not bad for government work” is an old idea or slogan from a time when “government work” was a good thing to folks who had little and needed government and its standards. Today, many people assume “government can’t do anything right” and “all politicians are crooks.” This thinking can lead to terrible consequences, as when a few thousand well-meaning folks voted for Ralph Nader–who had zero chance of winning–for President in the Florida election of 2000. That mistake gave us Bush II, followed by his disastrous war of choice in SW Asia, and various other bad policies and programs. The wise course, I believe, is to vote your favorite in the primary, but vote for the best–or lesser of evils if necessary–in the fall. The President elected in 2024 will be a Democrat or a Republican. Any other vote in the fall or ’24 will be wasted.
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Thank you, Jack.
I agree.
A vote for a third party is one less vote for your candidate.
A vote for Ralph Nader helped elect GW Bush.
A vote for Jill Stein helped elect Trump.
A vote for No Labels will help Trump return to power.
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Dissatisfaction with the centrism of the Bush and Clinton dynasties got Trump elected and almost got Bernie elected. Charter schools and trade deals just don’t sell anymore. We have all been to that bipartisanship dog and pony show. It’s no good.
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Of course, Nader cost Gore the 2000 election.
In the 2000 presidential election in Florida, George W. Bush defeated Al Gore by 537 votes. Nader received 97,421 votes in Florida (and Pat Buchanan and Harry Browne received 17,484 and 16,415 respectively).
If Nader were not in the race, Gore would have won Florida and been President. He didn’t need Tennessee. He needed Florida.
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We’re nitpicking now. Gore could have won by several scenarios, including the one you suggested and the one I suggested. But my larger point is, in fall elections we sometimes have to choose between the “lesser of two evils,” which means Democrats vs. Republicans. The Green Party of Nader had zero chance of winning the Presidential election, and anyone paying attention would know that. So a Green vote was a protest vote. I understand that protest, but had the Greens voted for Gore, we would have had an environmental President who would not have invaded Iraq, killing thousands of innocent people, destabilizing world politics and our own, and contributing to a massive world-wide immigration problem. That immigration problem, by the way, coupled with the militarization of our youth and much of America, helped create volatile timber for the Trumpian, neo-fascist fire now scorching us.
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Very wise, Jack Burgess. Anyone who refuses to vote for the lesser of two evils must be content to live with the greater evil.
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As Biden said, com[pare him to his opponent not the almighty…
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Seems to me that if Clinton and the “centrist” New Democrats hadn’t taken over the party, there wouldn’t have been a rift and voters having to decide between pragmatism and principle instead of party and other party. On that line of thinking, the only people to blame for past losing Democratic presidential campaigns are not the voters but the candidates themselves. Centrist Albert Gore is the one who lost the election, not Albert Voter. Biden has been doing a surprisingly good job of distancing himself from Manchin and the Republicans by supporting the legislation coming out of the Senate Budget Committee headed by Senator Sanders. Smart.
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Gore gave a progressive acceptance speech at the 2000 convention. His stands on the environment are consistent. His success in the Senate was also significant. All the media continued to promote was this idea that Bush and Gore weren’t that different contrary to their political histories. Green Party votes were a crucial reason Gore lost. His service to a centrist administration became an excuse for those who falsely believe that a democratic government should give them everything they want or nothing at all.
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Yes, and it’s not true that there was no difference between Clinton-Gore Democrats and Bush Republicans. Look at the historic facts: Under Clinton-Gore (though they were far from perfect) lower income Americans made significant economic gains for the first time in decades. Peace was negotiated in Ireland. Under Bush II–whom we could have defeated with a few Green Party votes in Florida–we got the massive, bloody invasion of Iraq, on a pretense, destabilizing the region and Eastern Europe with refugees. We also got a Medicare addition which provided a slender drug benefit, but prevented negotiations of prices charged for drugs. These are just two of the most obvious examples of why folks should have voted for Gore. Vote your favorite in the spring, and the best available–or lessor of evils–in the fall! Btw, I speak not only as a retired history teacher, but one who has been involved in politics since the ’50’s, and have supported mostly Democrats, but also moderate Republicans, and 3rd Party candidates–in the spring.
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I thought Gore was progressive too when I voted for him in 2000, although I was voting against Bush more than for Gore. I was also younger and pretty unread at the time. Since then, I’ve learned a few things about both Bush and Gore. In 1985, Al From was joined by Bill Clinton and Al Gore to form the Democratic Leadership Council “to expand economic opportunity not government,” a group connected to the banking industry and not too dissimilar to No Labels.
Gore, a militaristic hardliner against the Soviets, was an architect of the DLC who drafted their first official press release. Their goal was shift the party away from unions, away from the Great Society, and away from the New Deal, and shrink the government to instead use the private sector with an unregulated, free market to address social needs. When Gore ran for president in 1988, his opponent Jesse Jackson called it a struggle for the direction of the party. He was right.
In 1997, Vice President Gore started organizing meetings for Silicon Valley entrepreneurs to influence policy. The “Gore-Tech” sessions allowed John Doerr, a powerful venture capitalist and Gore’s closest advisor, to create the NewSchools Venture Fund. It was the beginning of the charter school movement. It wasn’t the Republicans. It was the New Democrats. When Bush won in 2000, he jumped on board with the New Democrats to take up NCLB.
And how about that record on environmentalism, the issue for which Al Gore is most known. He invests in greenwashing technology companies and then advocates for taxpayer subsidies of his investments. Al Gore is a philanthrocapitalist. He is not a progressive. Never was, never will be.
Gore’s acceptance speech at the 2000 DNC was progressive. Barack Obama’s speech at the 2008 DNC was progressive. — Then he hired Arne Duncan.
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Gore was not a progressive except in comparison to GW Bush
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Most who go to Washington for any period of time become compromised. The “New Democrats” were political survivalists who became addicted to corporate funding. This, of course, is what has led to the tech invasion of the public schools. I have never expected anything close to perfection from the presidency. We still call the Kennedy Administration “Camelot” although history tells us it was far from it. Yes, Gore would have been what many describe as moderate. However, the three most impactful initiatives of the Bush administration, Tax cuts, NCLB, and The Iraq War, along with his court appointments of Alito and Roberts were all precursors to this age of radical conservatism that would not have occurred under Gore. Some form of a tax cut perhaps, but not as pervasive. Biden was very much a product of these New Democrats yet his legislative accomplishments in his first two years could be the most progressive since LBJ should we keep this far from perfect Democratic Party in power. The alternative would not be pretty.
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It should be noted that one’s choices aren’t limited to the either-or of the fall elections. One could get involved earlier and help your party of choice move in the direction you want.
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My lengthy reply today went into moderation, folks.
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Thank you, Diane, yes. And my point was that Democratic politicians have only themselves to blame if they court big donors instead of working voters. You and I, dear reader, did not lose any elections in 2000 or 2016 and cannot win the election in 2024. Only President Biden can. It’s on him and his record.
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Left Coast teacher has made a case that Gore was not FDR. Right. But, as Diane points out again, he also was not Bush I or II. He was a moderate. Yes, he believes in working with industry, but that’s who we are folks–we can’t ignore big business and capital, as we try to improve the country. Here in Ross County, Ohio, as in other locales around the country, we have benefited from Gore’s efforts in environmentalism, as his organization supports our local group which has been working to make environmentalism more than just a word in our area.
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