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Are the Democratic and Republican parties captives of their extremes?

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“I don’t think we’re intolerant, but that perception needs to be addressed,” New Hampshire Republican Chairman Wayne MacDonald said.

Solutions include changing not only the rhetoric, but also the tone. Why, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich asked, do conservatives always sound so angry?

“We can win the argument if we go back to the Republican tradition of being happy warriors,” he said.

Among Democrats, the message needs to be less about philosophy and more that “We care about people. We care about seniors, about health care,” said Texas state Rep. Senfronia Thompson.

This left-right split won’t evaporate overnight, and probably not for years. Its roots are deep.

Until the 1980s, coalitions would come and go in Washington, depending on the issue. Major civil rights legislation passed not with Democratic unanimity but with the support of moderate Republicans. Foreign policy matters were bipartisan, and many Republicans were open to tax increases.

Today, though, Washington politicians are on one side or the other, reflecting their strong constituencies.

African-Americans became solid Democrats in the 1960s, rallying behind the party’s commitment to civil rights. Die-hard conservatives made their causes the Republicans’ causes starting around the same time, and by the 1980s, the party was on the record opposed to abortion and the Equal Rights Amendment and in support of school prayer.

Obama’s inaugural speech Jan. 21 helped inflame partisan passions. The meeting the next day of the Democratic National Committee, the party’s governing body, was a celebration of his promises on global warming, equal rights and near-universal health care.

“The president has laid out our vision. We must give him the tools to succeed,” declared party Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida congresswoman.

Liberals cheered.

“I saw Obama as a moderate, but he’s doing good by coming out for those programs,” said Kimberly Metcalfe, a Democratic Party committeewoman from Juneau, Alaska. “How can I be against what I’m for?”

The talk was more circumspect in more conservative areas. Jean Lemire Dahlman laughed as she said that her Montana ranch was the only Democratic outpost for 100 miles, and people out there routinely think that Washington is trying to control their lives.

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