What I see is that the Democrats have shifted to the right since HW Bush.
Dems moved to the center with the "Third Way" after their long wandering in the wilderness. Since 1968 really, with a brief Jimmy Carter respite in the aftermath of Watergate. A course correction was certainly necessary.
But that was in 1992. Dems have moved decidedly to the left in the 2010s. It started even in the first half of the decade, with Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter movements. But it accelerated after Trump got elected and Resistance took hold. In 2018, we got the purge of moderates and election of the OG Squad members, led by Corporal Sandy. She was later promoted to Sergeant as the Squad got bigger in 2020 with the likes of Cori Bush and "Fire Marshal" Jamaal Bowman ousting moderate Democrats in primaries. You also had fauxgressive, soft-on-crime DAs like Chesa Boudin, George Gascon, Alvin Bragg or Mary Moriarty get elected in this period. Far-left Brandon Johnson got elected mayor of Chicago and Karen "Castrojugend" Bass of LA.
The bloom is off that leftward lunge a bit. Bush and Bowman got primaried back and are out of office. So are Boudin and Gascon. Brandon Johnson has a single digit approval rating. California rejected reinstatement of race preferences in college admissions in 2020 and rolled back some crime deforms in 2024. A big test of how much power the left-wing base still wields will be the NYC mayoral primary later this month.
Gore followed suit. He was another centrist on many things, though if you talk to TN GOP'ers they'd say he lost the plot and became quite liberal.
He was more on the left, especially on climate, which makes the Green opposition to him all the more baffling. And especially in comparison with his home state.
He lost, in part due to the weaponization of attacks against Clinton. But barely. Since then, generally centrist candidates have been coming out of the primaries because the people voted for it.
I think he made a mistake of keeping Clinton at arms length. He was still very popular despite the Impeachment.
I agree that unlike in congressional primaries, Dem presidential primaries selected more centrist candidates lately. Probably because the candidates favored by the party machine happened to be more centrist.
The party, for the last several years, in part caused by the unexpected catalyst of Sander's candidacy becoming a lot more popular than most expected, the Democrats are having some push and pull with the liberals. Clinton shifted her platform notably is in a left direction because of Sanders' unexpected success. Some on the Left want more. I'm not exactly certain what though.
Jarhyn and Politesse are very vague on the details of exactly what they want too.
I want the Democrats to move further left, but understand that with the unpredictable turnout of the far left, the Democrats have to heed more to the hearts and minds of the suburbs.
I am moderate, and thus do not want for Dems to move further left (although I would like for them to be truly liberal on social issues like legalizing consensual sex work) but we can agree on this. Any candidate must strike a balance between different parts of their coalition. The fauxgressives who demand ideological purity from Dem candidates do not understand that.
Also, with the GOP being ironically a stubborn ass since 1995, the House and Senate have made passing legislation and agendas remarkably difficult. I get that some want to rid the world of the filibuster, but that is just terribly short-sighted insanity.
I agree.