During his 2008 campaign, Barack Obama noted that President Ronald Reagan had “changed the trajectory of America”—and said he intended for his own presidency to do the same.
Reagan’s tenure ushered in a quarter-century of Republican dominance in American politics, and helped nurture a generation of party activists and candidates—from Karl Rove to Grover Norquist to Paul Ryan—who spearheaded the conservative movement long after the Gipper himself was back in Bel-Air. As Obama goes into his second term, does he look likely to leave his party in equally strong shape?
The answer could matter not just for the fate of progressive priorities beyond 2016, but also for protecting Obama’s own accomplishments. If Republicans gain power in 2016, everything from Obamacare to financial reform to ending the Bush tax cuts for the richest could yet be in danger. As Howard Dean told msnbc.com: “The president’s legacy is going to be partly determined by what happens after he leaves.”
By some measures, the Democratic Party appears better placed than it has been since LBJ. Polls consistently show the party with higher approval ratings than the GOP, and Hillary Clinton leads most presidential polling for 2016. The Democratic candidate has won the popular vote in five of the last six presidential elections.
More important, political scientists say the 2012 election made clear that broad demographic and cultural trends—essentially, the electorate’s growing racial diversity and cultural liberalism—have fundamentally transformed electoral politics in Democrats’ favor. One marker of the change: when Bill Clinton first ran for president in 1992, non-whites made up 13% of the electorate. Last year, they were more than twice that—28%—and Obama got 80% of their vote. That made it possible for him to win re-election comfortably despite receiving just 38% of the white vote.
Obama capitalized on those shifts by explicitly appealing to these key constituencies. But by and large, he was doing little more than “reaping the demographic dividend,” said Ruy Teixeira of the Center for American Progress, who was among the first to spot the political implications of these demographic shifts in his 2002 book The Emerging Democratic Majority (co-written with John Judis).
And these changes are likely to advantage Democrats—especially at the presidential level—for years to come. “Barack Obama was the first Democratic president to clearly benefit from those trends, but he almost certainly will not be the last one,” Alan Abramowitz, a political science professor at Emory University and an expert on political demographics, wrote in a paper delivered earlier this month at a conference of political scientists, which he provided to msnbc.com.
Indeed, Abramowitz said, demographic changes make the future look so bleak for Republicans—at least at the presidential level—that they’re looking for ways to subvert the process to their advantage. “They’re increasingly desperate,” he told msnbc.com. “In 2012, it was looking for ways to block minority voters. That didn’t work, so let’s try to rig the Electoral College. I think they understand that the situation facing them is very difficult, getting more difficult.”
But politics is more than demographics. For one thing, those demographic shifts have less impact, for now at least, in midterm elections, where the electorate tends to be older and whiter than in presidential years. For consistent success, a strong party organization that can elect Democrats and advance progressive goals into the future will be crucial. And here, the legacy Obama leaves appears more mixed.
By registering 1.8 million new voters in battleground states, Obama for America—the president’s sophisticated and much-praised campaign apparatus—expanded the Democratic electorate.
And the small-donor fundraising operation that was perfected by the Obama campaign will have lasting benefits for Democrats, said Paul Tewes, a veteran Democratic field organizer who served as the Obama campaign’s state director for the Iowa caucuses in 2007-08. “That small donor that gave $50 to Obama, now they sit on a list somewhere that the party can reactivate,” Tewes told msnbc.com. “So on the donor side, it’s light-years ahead” of where it was a decade ago. More broadly, Obama for America will likely end up changing Democratic organizing for good—in part through the power of example, according to Tewes. “That’s the biggest thing Obama’s done, is he’s taught his party how to organize, and how to empower,” Tewes said.
But some Democrats say the focus on Obama for America took resources away from the Democratic National Committee’s party-building mission.
“It’s all about Obama,” Dean told msnbcs Melissa Harris-Perry earlier this month. Dean said that’s par for the course for both the D.N.C. and R.N.C. when there’s an incumbent president of the same party. Still, he said, “we’ve got to see beyond 2012 … This is not about the president, this is about changing the country in a way that can make this country vibrant and whole again.”









