ray245 wrote:Maybe for social issues like gay rights. But in terms of other issues like economic policies, I feel that they are leaning more towards the right.
Honestly, I expect things to swing back there too. Collapsing government services (especially on the local level) triggered by the recession is already making people in some areas seriously reconsider the wisdom of keeping taxes on an endless downward ratchet. Likewise we see a demographic shift on social issues- and there's a big overlap between social conservatism and far-right economic policies like intense opposition to welfare. The Tea Party represents a bloc that believes
all the parts of the Republican party line, by and large... and that bloc is shrinking. That's going to affect the economic consensus in the US too, not just the social consensus.
The last time the economy was this bad, the country swung considerably to the left in the aftermath. People were very unsympathetic to Wall Street and big industrial concerns after the Great Depression, and Roosevelt made a very high profile effort to fight the Depression using big-government tactics that encouraged the average citizen to think well of big government.
Obama seems to be having difficulty doing the same thing (or, less charitably, he doesn't know or doesn't care that he needs to), but even if he doesn't, I suspect someone else will. The country is only going to get worse as long as laissez-faire fundamentalists and people who use the poor as a scapegoat to pretend nothing is wrong in America are running it, and I do not believe that the far right in this country can keep lying to all of the people indefinitely without being called on it.
In 2008 I'd hoped we'd seen the turning point; now it looks like it's going to take longer, but I still expect to see it in the near future.