
The Question Progressives Refuse to Answer
As Democrats became the party of proceduralism, they sidestepped a crucial debate.
The Question Progressives Refuse to Answer - The Atlantic
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By Marc J. DunkelmanApril 2, 2025, 6 AM ET
The Question Progressives Refuse to Answer
A gavel pulling the strings on a pointing hand emerging from a fraction of a suit jacket
Illustration by Ben Kothe / The Atlantic. Sources: Getty.
In President Donald Trump’s second administration, the key political battles so far have turned on the question of who should decide big, important things: which immigrants are deported, which funds are distributed, which bureaucrats are fired, which vaccines are approved. The new administration’s answer to nearly all of these questions is that Trump should decide. This has left many Democrats incensed. Trump is not a monarch, they charge. Our constitutional system precludes him from making these changes unilaterally. Executive authority needs to be curtailed.
But just last year, when the Supreme Court overturned a Reagan-era decision requiring federal judges to defer to bureaucratic expertise, progressives were singing a different tune. They were aghast at the prospect of legislators and judges impinging on executive-branch decisions. They wanted to protect Biden-administration prerogatives. Democrats may not want Trump’s lackeys wielding authority, but set the personnel aside and they’re still fundamentally at odds with themselves about which institutions should make important calls.
For Trump’s detractors, this is an enormous, if underappreciated, problem. Democrats are, at root, the party of government—they believe that public authority is key to improving people’s lives. Yet government, according to most Americans, simply doesn’t work today. Every big public decision seems to get mired in endless wrangling and legal complications. We’re not building infrastructure, or harnessing clean energy, or keeping up with housing demand. Given that reality, Trump’s reelection is not hard to understand. In the face of a failing system, voters were eager to empower someone to shake things up—and that’s exactly what Trump promised to do.
To beat the Trumpian zeitgeist, Democrats will need a plan for making government work. But to make that notion plausible, they will need to wrestle with the core contradiction that bedevils their governing ideology. Progressivism today wants at once to allow government to make big decisions efficiently and to ensure that no one gets snowed in the process. To that end, they decided decades ago to throw their lot in with a notion that procedure can replace discretion. Today, we are all living with the consequences of that mistake.
From progressivism’s founding in the late 19th century into the 1960s, the movement offered a simple answer to the question of who should decide. Scientifically driven expertise was, to the progressive mind, the key to good public policy. That meant authorizing expert public officials—the establishment—to stand up holistic solutions to big challenges. Let the engineers design good sewer systems. Let the social workers design proper social-safety nets. Let the medical professionals design the health-care system.
New Deal Democrats extolled the “wise men” and “city fathers” wielding broad tranches of public authority. The establishment produced New York’s Port Authority, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Social Security Administration, the Marshall Plan, and the Federal Highway Administration. On issues of great public import, progressives agreed that big bureaucracy might not be beautiful, but it got the job done.
By Jimmy Carter’s presidency, however, progressives had lost that faith. Urban renewal robbed Americans of their confidence in municipal government. Vietnam had taken away the progressive reverence for the military. The civil-rights movement had exposed the bigotry within the governing class. And Watergate had revealed just how sick and self-serving the power elite really were.
But progressivism’s sudden turn against the establishment left reformers in a quandary. If they couldn’t trust the experts to exercise authority, who would make important decisions in their stead? Who would decide where to build the new bridge crossing the river, or which neighborhoods were going to be compelled to accommodate new housing projects? The answer seemed obvious—the people would decide.
But amid the rush to decapitate the establishment—to end the war, to snuff out racial discrimination, to speak truth to power, to “put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels”—the question of just how the people would decide was left hanging. The problem, to the progressive mind, was that fallible bureaucrats and elected officials had been imbued with too much discretion. To counter unconstrained discretion, progressives would seek to impose process.
Having witnessed the abuse of authority, reformers resolved to provide the victims of the system with the means of protecting themselves. The people would be given seats at the table, voices in the deliberation, and opportunities to appeal when bureaucrats tried to bowl them over. They would lean on the courts’ authority to stop the executive branch in its tracks. Discretion, after all, was primarily the province of the executive and legislative branches. Progressivism’s new project was to move power from those two branches and into the third—which, if nothing else, had the power to say no.
If progressives a generation earlier would have been shocked to witness the movement’s turn against the establishment, they would have been gobsmacked to see reformers lionize the courts. For most of the movement’s early history, judges had been cast as the villains. They’d shielded trusts and monopolists from prosecution. They’d eviscerated minimum wage and maximum-hour statutes. They’d upended various elements of the early New Deal. Franklin Roosevelt had complained that judges wanted to take the country back to the “horse and buggy days.” Now progressives changed their tune: It was the executive and legislative branches that were suspect and veto-wielding judges who were knights in shining armor.
Drastic as this turn may have been, it was catalyzed by a novel political reality. The judiciary, which had so frustrated Roosevelt, had taken on a very different character by the time Richard Nixon haunted the West Wing. The conservative justices who had upended elements of the New Deal had been replaced by the likes of Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan. The progressive Judges Skelly Wright and David Bazelon, meanwhile, served on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. But if the old conservatives had championed laissez-faire, and the new crowd embraced what critics would call “judicial activism,” the two sets shared something profound: a deep skepticism of the elected branches. And by the late 1960s, progressives everywhere shared that same mindset.
During the three decades when first Earl Warren and then Warren Burger served as chief justice, the Supreme Court operated as a bulwark against the abuses of elected officials and bureaucrats alike. The Court told local governments that they had to desegregate their schools, that police officers could no longer coerce unsuspecting citizens into self-incrimination, that politicians could no longer prevent journalists from publishing unflattering articles, and that policy makers could no longer prevent women from making their own health-care decisions.
But the impulse to curb the establishment’s power also extended into other realms. By the 1970s, ordinary people were tired of highway engineers imperiously disrupting neighborhoods in their zeal to construct expressways. They were tired of developers razing whole neighborhoods in the name of utopian schemes for glittering high-rises. They were tired of utility executives colluding with public officials to license smog-inducing power plants.