Mostly the "DINO" was made in jest, but also attacking the Tea Party/far conservative wing of the GOP who wage battles with good moderate elected officials just because they do not toe the line 100% of the time. At the same time, though, there are a few Dem battles (like Joe Lieberman in Conn) between the middle and the left of the party.phuqueue wrote: I don't really get what you're trying to argue here. If their political position is moderate and their party affiliation is Democrat, they are moderate Democrats. I honestly can't parse out what the "DINO" comment is supposed to be getting at. Are you trying to argue that in fact moderation is a trait of the GOP, and that any "moderate" Dems actually belong in the Republican party? Or are you complaining that "moderate" Dems only appear so insofar as they're too far right to fit with the supposedly left-wing Democratic party, and their having abandoned leftism while retaining the Dem affiliation makes them appear "moderate" when in fact they're outright conservative? Or maybe the opposite, that the Dem party should be centrist but many Dems are too far to the left and are no longer really Dems?
I would define "moderate" as being willing to make compromises and incorporate some of the other side's ideas to reach an agreement; according to that definition, there are precious few remaining moderate Republicans. On the other hand, if anything, I would say the problem with the Dems is that they're too moderate -- they don't just incorporate some of the GOP's ideas, they basically pass GOP legislation (eg ACA), which the GOP nonetheless rejects just...because. The Republican slogan at this point should be "give us an inch and we'll take a mile." Effective governance requires politicians to meet in the middle on most issues, but that doesn't mean the politicians themselves must always be centrist -- the GOP is dragging our political conversation much too far rightward and there aren't enough genuinely left wing Dems to keep the "middle" anchored in a reasonable place. Couple this with the fact that people tend to assume that when there are two sides to an argument, both are equally meritorious -- when the far right GOP clashes with the center-right Obama, it simply must be the case that both sides have staked out positions on opposite extremes, right? -- and we end up deciding there are no moderate politicians left.
Meeting in the middle is hard these days since the issues are mainly defined as for or against. Much like slavery 150 years ago there is little middle ground in wanting higher taxes or not, cutting the budget or not, abortion or not, gay marriage or not, entitlement reform or not. Immigration reform offers the best chance of some sort of bi-partisan agreement except for the issue of amnesty.
Maybe something will come from a future dinner. Lindsey Graham proposed a dinner between the President of some GOP members of the Senate and it looks like up to 12 Senators will attend.
Both sides are guilty of playing politics instead of legislating.