Former President Bill Clinton and Democrat political strategist James Carville have been allies for nearly forty years – but the partnership that propelled Clinton into a two-term presidency is at a crossroads as socialism gains ground in the party they helped define.
New York City’s democratic socialist mayor, Zohran Mamdani, recently endorsed three far-left candidates, and to the dismay of many Democrats, all three won their respective races. Now, the mask has slipped on party veterans like Mr. Clinton, who have embraced the party’s far-left wing despite pushback from more moderate Democrats – if you can call them that – like Mr. Carville.
Carville Pushes Back
If you ask James Carville about the state of the Democratic Party, he’ll tell you Democrats have a socialism problem. After DSA-backed candidate Darializa Avila Chevalier won the Democratic primary in New York’s 13th congressional district, Carville didn’t hold back:
“I don’t think that the congressional Democrats should seat her as a member of the Democratic Party. She actually describes herself as a democratic socialist. I don’t have anything in common with someone that says that they’re against interracial dating or doesn’t want to have any incarceration for convicted felons.”
Chevalier’s past comments have not exactly helped her case. In one tweet, she wrote: “I forgot to get napkins so I just wiped my hand on the American flag behind me.” Carville acknowledged that Chevalier won her race and will likely serve at least one term in the House of Representatives, but the experienced political strategist urged Democrats to block her from joining the Democratic caucus. He added, “I don’t have anything in common with Ms. Chevalier, and I really don’t want to be in the same party she’s in.”
Carville argued that political coalitions require some flexibility, but Chevalier’s extreme views are “a bridge too far” – and he’s not alone in that assessment. During his “Real Time” show, liberal comedian Bill Maher offered a blunt warning about the direction of the Democratic Party:
“[Chevalier] says, ‘No more police ever, at all, ever.’ She says our veterans are war criminals. She said f–k Kamala Harris and Joe Biden’s a rapist. If this is where the Democratic Party is going — this obsession with Israel, with the Jew-hating, they don’t believe in capitalism, no prisons. If this is where they’re going, my vote is in play.”
Carville insisted many Democrats “feel the same way” he does about the Democratic Party’s radical socialist wing – but President Clinton would beg to differ.
Clinton Embraces Socialist Candidates
Unlike Carville, who appeared to be in a bit of a panic over what he considers the Democrats’ socialist problem, Bill Clinton suggested the Democratic Party was on the right path heading into the midterms.
“I think we’re in good shape for the fall,” Clinton told Fox News Digital in the wake of New York’s primaries.
While Carville was mostly focused on Chevalier’s future among congressional Democrats, two other Mamdani-backed winners – Brad Lander and Claire Valdez – have contributed to the growing divide in the Democratic Party.
Clinton’s apparent approval of democratic-socialism marks a dramatic shift from where he stood politically during his first term in the White House. In his 1996 State of the Union address, Clinton famously declared that “the era of big government is over” – but now, it seems, he’s ready for big government to make a comeback. The question is whether the rest of the Democratic Party, and the majority of Americans, are ready for it, too.
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