Opinion What Have We Liberals Done to the West Coast? - A smidgen of self-awareness

By Nicholas Kristof
Opinion Columnist, reporting from Portland, Ore.
June 15, 2024

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Mason Trinca for The New York Times

As Democrats make their case to voters around the country this fall, one challenge is that some of the bluest parts of the country — cities on the West Coast — are a mess.

Centrist voters can reasonably ask: Why put liberals in charge nationally when the places where they have greatest control are plagued by homelessness, crime and dysfunction?

I’ll try to answer that question in a moment, but liberals like me do need to face the painful fact that something has gone badly wrong where we’re in charge, from San Diego to Seattle. I’m an Oregonian who bores people at cocktail parties by singing the praises of the West, but the truth is that too often we offer a version of progressivism that doesn’t result in progress.

We are more likely to believe that “housing is a human right” than conservatives in Florida or Texas, but less likely to actually get people housed. We accept a yawning gulf between our values and our outcomes.

Conservatives argue that the problem is simply the left. Michael Shellenberger wrote a tough book denouncing what he called “San Fransicko” with the subtitle “Why Progressives Ruin Cities.” Yet that doesn’t ring true to me.

Democratic states enjoy a life expectancy two years longer than Republican states. Per capita G.D.P. in Democratic states is 29 percent higher than in G.O.P. states, and child poverty is lower. Education is generally better in blue states, with more kids graduating from high school and college. The gulf in well-being between blue states and red states is growing wider, not narrower.

So my rejoinder to Republican critiques is: Yes, governance is flawed in some blue parts of America, but overall, liberal places have enjoyed faster economic growth and higher living standards than conservative places. That doesn’t look like failure.

So the problem isn’t with liberalism. It’s with West Coast liberalism.

The two states with the highest rates of unsheltered homelessness are California and Oregon. The three states with the lowest rates of unsheltered homelessness are all blue ones in the Northeast: Vermont, New York and Maine. Liberal Massachusetts has some of the finest public schools in the country, while liberal Washington and Oregon have below-average high school graduation rates.

Oregon ranks dead last for youth mental health services, according to Mental Health America, while Washington, D.C., and Delaware rank best.

Drug overdoses appear to have risen last year in every Democratic state on the West Coast, while they dropped last year in each Democratic state in the Northeast. The homicide rate in Portland last year was more than double that of New York City.

Why does Democratic Party governance seem less effective on the West Coast than on the East Coast?

Sometimes I wonder if the West is less serious about policy than the East and less focused on relying on the most rigorous evidence. There’s some evidence for that. But I’m not sure, for it’s also true that West Coast states have managed to innovate exceptionally well in some domains. Oregon pioneered “death with dignity” through physician-assisted suicide and led the way to vote by mail, an important step for democracy. California has some of the smartest gun safety laws in America, championed by Gov. Gavin Newsom. As a result, California has a firearms death rate 40 percent below the national average.

So my take is that the West Coast’s central problem is not so much that it’s unserious as that it’s infected with an ideological purity that is focused more on intentions than on oversight and outcomes.

I ran for governor in Oregon two years ago (I was ousted from the ballot by Oregon’s then-secretary of state, who said I didn’t meet the residency requirement). While running, I’d meet groups of liberal donors in Portland, as the city’s problems cast a shadow over all of us; we’d all be wondering nervously if our catalytic converters were in the process of being stolen. The undercurrent in such a liberal gathering would be the failures of Republicans — but Portland was one mess we couldn’t blame on Republicans, because there simply aren’t many Republicans in Portland. This was our liberal mess.

Politics always is part theater, but out West too often we settle for being performative rather than substantive.

For example, as a gesture to support trans kids, Oregon took money from the tight education budget to put tampons in boys’ restrooms in elementary schools — including boys’ restrooms in kindergartens.

“The inability of progressives, particularly in the Portland metro area, to deal with the nitty-gritty of governing and to get something done is just staggering,” Representative Earl Blumenauer, a Democrat who has been representing and championing Portland for more than half a century, told me. “People are much more interested in ideology than in actual results.”

Consider a volunteer group called the Portland Freedom Fund that was set up to pay bail for people of color. The organization raised money from well-intentioned liberal donors, and the underlying problems were real: Bail requirements hit poor people hard.

In 2022, the Portland Freedom Fund helped a Black man named Mohamed Adan who had been arrested after allegedly strangling his former girlfriend, holding a gun to her head and then — in violation of a restraining order — cutting off his G.P.S. monitor and entering her building. “He told me that he would kill me,” the former girlfriend, Rachael Abraham, warned.

The Freedom Fund paid Adan’s bail, and he walked out of jail. A week later, Adan allegedly removed his G.P.S. monitor again and entered Abraham’s home. The police found Abraham’s body drenched in blood with a large knife nearby; three children were also in the house.

Adan was charged with murder — no bail this time — and the incident prompted soul-searching in Portland. But perhaps not enough. A well-meaning effort to help people of color may have cost the life of a woman of color.

One of the passions of the left, drawing partly on Ibram X. Kendi’s book “How to Be an Antiracist,” has been that if a policy leads to racial inequity, then it’s racist even if it wasn’t meant to be. But by that standard, West Coast progressivism abounds in racism.

We in the West impeded home construction in ways that made cities unaffordable, especially for people of color. We let increasing numbers of people struggle with homelessness, particularly Black and brown people. Black people in Portland are also murdered at higher rates than in cities more notorious for violence, and Seattle and Portland have some of the greatest racial disparities in arrests in the country.

I don’t actually agree with Kendi. I think intentions and framing can matter, but it’s absolutely true that good intentions are not enough. What matters is improving opportunities and quality of life, and the best path to do that is a relentless empiricism — which clashes with the West Coast’s indifference to the laws of economics.

The basic reason for homelessness on the West Coast is an enormous shortage of housing that drives up rents. California lacks about three million housing units, in part because it’s difficult to get permission to build.

As long as there is such a vast shortage, housing is like musical chairs. Move one family into housing, and another won’t get a home.

Public sector efforts to build housing are often ruinously expensive, with “affordable housing” sometimes costing more than $1 million per unit, so the private sector is critical. Yet one element of progressive purity is suspicion of the private sector, and this hobbles efforts to make businesses part of the solution. Business owners who earn an income from their company are effectively barred from serving on the Portland City Council.

Perhaps on the West Coast we have ideological purity because there isn’t much political competition. Republicans are irrelevant in much of the Far West, so they can’t hold Democrats’ feet to the fire — leading Democrats in turn to wander unchecked farther to the left. That’s not so true in the Northeast: A Republican, Charlie Baker, was until recently governor of Massachusetts, and Republicans are competitive statewide in Maine, Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Hampshire, New York and New Jersey.

Maybe a healthy Republican Party keeps the Democratic Party healthy, and vice versa.

Without opposition party oversight, problems aren’t always fixed expeditiously. For example, some blue states have well-intentioned laws meant to protect citizens from involuntary commitment to mental institutions — but these days, with drugs and untreated mental illness interacting to produce psychosis, such laws can crush the people they’re supposed to help.

One of my school friends in my hometown, Yamhill, Ore., Stacy, struggled with alcoholism and mental illness. She became homeless and lived in a tent in a park, but it is almost impossible in such cases to move someone involuntarily into an institution. So she froze to death one winter night.

I think of Stacy suffering and dying unnecessarily, and I believe that instead of protecting her, our liberalism failed her.

One encouraging sign is that the West Coast may be self-correcting. I’ve been on a book tour in recent weeks, and in my talks in California, Oregon and Washington I’ve been struck by the way nearly everyone frankly acknowledges this gulf between our values and our outcomes, and welcomes more pragmatic approaches. California and Oregon have taken steps to boost housing supply, and Oregon ended an experiment in drug decriminalization. Homelessness seems a bit better in San Francisco and other cities, and homicides have dropped.

I’m still a believer in the West Coast. Partly it’s the physical beauty of the region and the outdoor opportunities, and partly it’s that the West has a history of reinventing itself. I remember Seattle’s struggles in the 1970s, when a billboard near the airport read, “Will the last person leaving Seattle — turn out the lights.” The West Coast has always rescued itself by seizing new ideas, from personal computers to the internet, and building on them. The Bay Area may be doing that again today with artificial intelligence.

On a visit to San Francisco in May, I took a Waymo self-driving taxi. It eerily stopped in front of me, unlocked itself and then drove me smoothly to my destination. That did feel like a futuristic journey in a futuristic city.

We need to get our act together. Less purity and more pragmatism would go a long way. But perhaps the first step must be the humility to acknowledge our failures.

Source (Archive)
 
Your peers are not liberals, OP. They're progressives. Progressives hate liberals like you.

So my take is that the West Coast’s central problem is not so much that it’s unserious as that it’s infected with an ideological purity that is focused more on intentions than on oversight and outcomes.
We need to get our act together. Less purity and more pragmatism would go a long way. But perhaps the first step must be the humility to acknowledge our failures.
There's your problem. Progressivism doesn't select for practical solutions, only commitment to the utopian vision that progressivism promises. Practical solutions require compromises that put limits on how grand the utopian vision can be. Once you start making those compromises, you start to realize that some of what progressivism promises isn't just unrealistic, but flat out impossible. And once you realize that, you might as well start carving swastikas into your forehead, because you've become what progressives hate the most: an apostate.

You are dealing with people who do not want practical solutions. They want to pat themselves on the back and score more Internet points for having the "right" opinions and the "right" values, and to worship the splendor of the progressive utopian vision that exists only in their heads. Pointing out that this is a fantasy and that progressive policies make things worse is like giving a shot of Narcan to an addict, and they do not like having their fantasy threatened.
 
liberal places have enjoyed faster economic growth
That's a fucking lie. Half of the midwest, half of the mid-atlantic, and almost all of the West Coast is having a rachitic growth, if not outright recession.

Democratic states enjoy a life expectancy two years longer than Republican states.
Two years is barely more, and taking into account that you lot are also the states where most abortions happen, I would doubt that this is honestly reported.

Per capita G.D.P. in Democratic states is 29 percent higher than in G.O.P. states
What about the cost of living? I can have a country where people earn 250% more than in the US, if the cost of living is 300% more, then that number is actually worthless.

The three states with the lowest rates of unsheltered homelessness are all blue ones in the Northeast: Vermont, New York and Maine.
Vermont and Maine are tiny states, I think neither of them breaks the one million mark when it comes to population. And all of those states have terribly cold winters, which makes it so that everyone who doesn't have a place to live and stays there is either dead before long or an idiot.

Oregon pioneered “death with dignity” through physician-assisted suicide and led the way to vote by mail, an important step for democracy.
So, "euthanasia" (because paliative care is for chumps) and a half-decent postal service? Great work there, guys, I'm sure that the druggies of Portland are thankful for that.

California has some of the smartest gun safety laws in America, championed by Gov. Gavin Newsom. As a result, California has a firearms death rate 40 percent below the national average.
What about the other death rates+the overall crime rate? Because if I have 40% less gun-related deaths and 70% more knife-related deaths, then I haven't made such a good policy, have I?

We need to get our act together. Less purity and more pragmatism would go a long way. But perhaps the first step must be the humility to acknowledge our failures.
Acknowledging failures while at the same time trying to shift the blame from the policy to the ones that execute the policy, I bet that will work
 
Democratic states enjoy a life expectancy two years longer than Republican states. Per capita G.D.P. in Democratic states is 29 percent higher than in G.O.P. states, and child poverty is lower. Education is generally better in blue states, with more kids graduating from high school and college. The gulf in well-being between blue states and red states is growing wider, not narrower.
I wonder which particular demographics that are abundant in Red states bring these numbers down...
 
CA's always been the land of the fruits and the nuts. For many years now CA, at least coastal CA, has been the world's largest open-air insane asylum. Those of us in coastal CA who are normal do all we can to live without reference to these 'progressives'.
 
What about the other death rates+the overall crime rate? Because if I have 40% less gun-related deaths and 70% more knife-related deaths, then I haven't made such a good policy, have I?
Yeah, let's ask Bongland how well banning guns worked out for them. Oh, wait, their dollar store equivalent (Poundland) quit stocking knives on account of how many people got shanked, and 18 year olds can't buy kitchen cutlery. And after people started using caustic substances, they diluted the ones you can buy in stores to the point of utter uselessness so now you can't even clean your drains.
I wonder which particular demographics that are abundant in Red states bring these numbers down...
I'm assuming you're talking about the Southern ones primarily. In which case yeah, you can guess exactly which demographic is dragging down every single stat. There's an almost 1:1 correlation between the poorest areas, the blackest areas, and the least-healthy areas.
 
This is the political equivalent of Chris Chan looking into a mirror and having a few seconds of sanity kick in.
 
Any statistic that isn't adjusted for niggers is worthless. Plus a lot of blue state wealth is due to exactly two things, finance and Silicon Valley, and neither of those happened because libs love faggots and niggers and schizos more than cons do.

Also, fun fact, California has actually been chasing the niggers out over the years by increasing the cost of living. Its total negro population has declined from 2.2m in 2000 to 2.1m in 2020, and its share of the population down from 6.4% to 5.4%.

Libs love to talk about how much they love diversity, but the states with 25%+ black populations are all in the South, and living around them has the whites voting heavily red.
 
As far as the homeless problem goes, a lot of it is just down to geography. It’s a lot easier to bum it outdoors year-round in sunny California. Try that shit in New York and you’ll probably freeze to death come wintertime.
 
The left is slowly admitting that migrants flooding in, lawlessness and homeless people camping on the street are issues that they can't just keep ignoring or claiming are actually a good thing.
 
I think in comparison to the east the west is more newly developed and so the influence of the radical leftist movements of the sixties and onward are a larger part of the overall story. This version of leftism was largely born there, has had more influence there, and is more baked into the foundation.

I think the heavy influence of entertainment and now social media industries also allows for a greater emphasis on appearances over reality, so it is harder for reality to kick the left in the nuts than it is in the East just because of more propaganda production.
 
Democratic states enjoy a life expectancy two years longer than Republican states. Per capita G.D.P. in Democratic states is 29 percent higher than in G.O.P. states, and child poverty is lower. Education is generally better in blue states, with more kids graduating from high school and college.
Isn't this just cope? "Stuff's better where we are" then why are Democrats leaving Democratic states to go to Republican ones?
So my rejoinder to Republican critiques is: Yes, governance is flawed in some blue parts of America, but overall, liberal places have enjoyed faster economic growth and higher living standards than conservative places. That doesn’t look like failure.
Again, if things were this good, Democrats wouldn't be leaving Democrat-controlled states.
Less purity and more pragmatism would go a long way. But perhaps the first step must be the humility to acknowledge our failures.
What about this: your first step should be to VOTE FOR SOMEONE ELSE. Local elections do matter, and if you're just gonna vote for the same guy who's been doing nothing about the issues you care about... then vote for another guy and tell others to do the same. But also, you know, actually care about those issues beyond shouting at people on the internet. Actually DO something in your local community to help. "Well, we should do x, y, and z" is nice, but if you never do it then you might as well have never spoken at all.

And stop acting like crime isn't also an issue on the west coast, maybe start cutting down on crime and you'll find a lot of other problems are easier to solve when you aren't staring down the barrel of a gun every day.
 
Any statistic that isn't adjusted for niggers is worthless. Plus a lot of blue state wealth is due to exactly two things, finance and Silicon Valley, and neither of those happened because libs love faggots and niggers and schizos more than cons do.

Also, fun fact, California has actually been chasing the niggers out over the years by increasing the cost of living. Its total negro population has declined from 2.2m in 2000 to 2.1m in 2020, and its share of the population down from 6.4% to 5.4%.

Libs love to talk about how much they love diversity, but the states with 25%+ black populations are all in the South, and living around them has the whites voting heavily red.

It's literally just this. Almost every pejorative statement leftists and northern elites make about the south can be attributed to niggers and spics. They're insanely racist without even realizing it.
 
It's literally just this. Almost every pejorative statement leftists and northern elites make about the south can be attributed to niggers and spics. They're insanely racist without even realizing it.
As much as they love to throw out the KKK and white trash what they're saying is "the south is where the niggers and spixs belong not in our safe tolerant white neighborhood".
 
Vermont and Maine are tiny states, I think neither of them breaks the one million mark when it comes to population. And all of those states have terribly cold winters, which makes it so that everyone who doesn't have a place to live and stays there is either dead before long or an idiot.

NYC had a "right to shelter" law for decades that gave homeless people access to shelters on a nightly basis. Eric Adams ended this as a result of the migrant crisis.
 
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