Robert Conquest’s Second Law of Politics states: “Any organization not explicitly right-wing sooner or later becomes left-wing.” The corollary logic is that progressive activists, being more ideologically motivated than moderates, systematically infiltrate, outlast, and eventually dominate institutions — whether universities, media organizations, NGOs, professional associations, or political parties.
Moderates hold positions transactionally; ideologues hold them permanently. Over time, the ideologues win by attrition, networking, and institutional capture. The organization’s original mission gradually becomes subordinate to, and eventually replaced by, progressive ideological imperatives.
Let us examine that transformation in detail.
THE 1956 BASELINE: A RECOGNIZABLY AMERICAN POLITICAL PARTY
The 1956 Democrat Party platform reflected a party that, whatever its limitations, operated within a broadly shared American civic framework. Several characteristics are immediately striking from today’s vantage point:
It was unapologetically nationalist and militarist. The very first priority was superior national defense and peace through strength. Democrats in 1956 criticized Republicans for weakening alliances and losing ground to communism. There was zero ambiguity about American exceptionalism, zero moral equivalence between the United States and its adversaries, and zero hesitation about military superiority as a policy goal.
It was economically populist without being redistributionist. The 1956 platform sought to grow prosperity broadly — full employment, fair wages, family farm support, equitable taxation — but framed within a growing economy, balanced budgets, and a $500 billion GDP target. The goal was expanding the pie, not redistributing it through ideological mandates.
Its civil rights commitment was real but constitutionally grounded. The 1956 platform endorsed desegregation and voting rights within a framework of law and without invoking coercive federal force — a position that, while cautious by later standards, reflected genuine moral progress within constitutional norms rather than revolutionary social transformation.
It was culturally conventional. There is not a syllable in the 1956 platform about gender ideology, sexual orientation, environmental apocalypticism, or the deconstruction of American civic institutions. The party assumed the legitimacy of the family, the farm, the union hall, and the courthouse as foundational American institutions worth strengthening — not dismantling and rebuilding according to ideological blueprint.
THE 2024 DEMOCRAT PARTY PLATFORM: CONQUEST’S LAW FULLY REALIZED
By 2024, the Conquest mechanism had completed its work. Comparing the two platforms reveals not evolution but categorical transformation — the replacement of one party’s soul with another’s (the Devil’s) entirely.
1. From National Defense to National Guilt
The 1956 Democrat Party led with military superiority and anti-communist resolve. The 2024 platform buries national security almost entirely, subsuming it under vague references to “democracy protection” that are directed primarily at domestic political opponents rather than foreign adversaries. The aggressive, unapologetic American nationalism of 1956 has been replaced by a framework in which America’s primary obligation is to atone for its historical sins — racial, environmental, colonial — rather than project its power and defend its interests. Conquest’s Law explains this precisely: the activists who captured the party’s intellectual infrastructure in universities, think tanks, and media from the 1960s onward were ideologically hostile to American power projection. Over six decades, their framework became the party’s framework.
2. From Economic Growth to Redistributionist Equity
The 1956 platform’s economic vision was growth-oriented — expand the economy, create full employment, raise all boats. The 2024 platform’s framing — “bottom up and middle out,” “fair share,” “rewarding work over wealth,” “corporate greed,” “price gouging” — is fundamentally redistributionist and adversarial toward market capitalism. The 1956 Democrats wanted a $500 billion economy. The 2024 Democrats want to restructure who gets what from the existing economy. This reflects the successful long march of academic Marxist economic frameworks — filtered through decades of university economics and sociology departments captured by the ideological left — into mainstream Democratic policy positioning.
3. From Labor Solidarity to Identity Fragmentation
The 1956 platform’s social justice framework was universal and class-based: workers, farmers, the handicapped, migratory laborers — defined by economic condition, not tribal identity. By 2024, the equity framework had fully replaced the universalist one. “Racial equity, LGBTQ+ rights, disability rights” — each constituency a discrete identity group with specific grievance claims — replaced the unified working-class solidarity of the New Deal coalition. This is Conquest’s Law operating through the academic left’s identity politics framework, which captured Democrat Party intellectual infrastructure through the 1970s–1990s and by 2024 had become the party’s organizing principle.
4. The Emergence of Reproductive Freedom as a Core Sacrament
The 1956 platform contains nothing remotely resembling abortion rights advocacy — the issue simply did not exist in Democrat politics. By 2024 it had become the party’s fourth-ranked priority and arguably its most emotionally charged organizing issue. This transformation tracks precisely with the feminist movement’s ideological capture of Democratic Party infrastructure from the 1970s onward — through NOW, EMILY’s List, academic women’s studies programs, and eventually the entire progressive nonprofit complex. What began as a fringe position within the party became, through Conquest’s mechanism of activist persistence and institutional capture, a non-negotiable party sacrament.
5. Climate as Secular Eschatology
The 1956 platform addressed natural resources conservation in practical terms — soil, water, minerals, forests, peaceful atomic energy. By 2024 this had transformed into “tackling the climate crisis” — a fifth-ranked existential priority framed in apocalyptic terms requiring comprehensive economic transformation. The mechanism was explicit: environmental activist organizations, heavily staffed by ideologically committed leftists with no transactional relationship to the party’s traditional working-class base, systematically captured the Democrat Party’s environmental policy infrastructure from the 1970s onward. By 2024, climate ideology had become so thoroughly institutionalized that the party routinely advocated positions — restricting fossil fuels, mandating electric vehicles, restructuring agriculture — directly hostile to the interests of the working-class voters the 1956 party was built to serve.
6. Gun Control: From Non-Issue to Core Identity
The 1956 platform is entirely silent on firearms because the issue had no political valence in Democrat politics and would have been considered an eccentric preoccupation. By 2024, gun violence prevention ranked eighth. This transformation reflects the capture of Democrat Party policy infrastructure by urban professional-class activists for whom gun control is a powerful cultural signifier of distinction from rural and working-class America — precisely the constituencies the 1956 party was designed to represent. Conquest’s Law again: the activists who found gun control symbolically compelling were more persistent than the union members and farmers who found it irrelevant or offensive.
7. Immigration: From Invisible to Contested
Immigration reform does not appear as a major 1956 priority — it was a minor plank about streamlining processes. By 2024 it had become a top-ten issue, and the party’s instinctive position — comprehensive reform, expanded legal pathways, humane treatment — reflected decades of pressure from Latino advocacy organizations and progressive immigration activists who had thoroughly captured the party’s immigration policy infrastructure. The result was a party whose immigration positions were consistently to the left of its own working-class base’s preferences — a classic Conquest outcome where activist priorities displaced constituent preferences.
THE CONQUEST MECHANISM: HOW IT ACTUALLY HAPPENED
The progressive transformation did not occur spontaneously. It followed Conquest’s predicted pathway through specific institutional channels:
Universities. The Democrat Party’s intellectual class is overwhelmingly university-educated. As universities shifted dramatically leftward from the late 1960s onward — through faculty hiring, curriculum transformation, and the proliferation of ideologically oriented departments — each successive generation of Democrat Party staffers, policy advisors, speechwriters, and candidates arrived pre-loaded with a more progressive framework than the last. By the 2010s, the university left and the Democrat Party left had become essentially the same intellectual community.
The Nonprofit and Foundation Complex. George Soros, the Ford Foundation, the Tides Foundation, and hundreds of allied progressive foundations systematically funded activist organizations that then provided personnel pipelines into Democrat Party policy infrastructure. These organizations — on climate, immigration, reproductive rights, racial equity, LGBTQ+ issues — were staffed by ideological true believers, not transactional political operatives. They brought their full ideological frameworks with them when they moved into party positions.
Media Capture. The mainstream media’s leftward shift — extensively documented — meant that Democrat politicians who held conventional 1956-era positions on, for example, immigration enforcement or gender ideology faced sustained negative coverage, while those who adopted progressive positions received favorable treatment. This created a powerful structural incentive for Democratic politicians to shift left regardless of their own convictions or their constituents’ preferences.
Primary Election Dynamics. Democrat primary electorates became progressively more ideologically homogeneous and more leftward as the party’s working-class base — unionized manufacturing workers, Catholic ethnics, Southern conservatives — defected to Republicans from the 1970s onward. The remaining primary electorate was increasingly urban, university-educated, and ideologically progressive. Politicians rationally positioned themselves for the electorate that actually voted in primaries, which meant positioning themselves for the activist left.
THE CASUALTIES: WHAT CONQUEST’S LAW DESTROYED
The comparison of the two platforms also reveals what was lost — constituencies and principles that defined the 1956 Democrat Party and were progressively abandoned as the Conquest mechanism ran its course:
- The white working class — the backbone of the New Deal coalition — found by 2024 that the party’s cultural agenda was alien or actively hostile to their values, and defected in historic numbers to Donald Trump.
- Family farmers — a top 1956 priority — effectively disappeared from the 2024 platform, replaced by climate and equity frameworks that frequently conflicted with agricultural interests.
- Religious observant Democrats — particularly Catholics and evangelical Protestants — found the party’s positions on abortion, gender ideology, and religious liberty increasingly incompatible with their faith commitments.
- Labor unions — the 1956 party’s institutional backbone — found their economic interests subordinated to climate mandates that threatened manufacturing jobs, and their cultural conservatism ignored or actively scorned.
- Fiscal responsibility — the 1956 Democrat platform explicitly committed to honest budget balancing. By 2024 this had become ideologically irrelevant within the Democratic mainstream.
CONCLUDING THOUGHTS
Robert Conquest’s Second Law predicted exactly what happened. The Democrat Party in 1956 was not explicitly ideologically defined — it was a coalition party of workers, farmers, ethnic minorities, Southern conservatives, and urban liberals held together by New Deal economic interests and cold war nationalism. That very non-ideological character made it vulnerable to precisely the process Conquest described.
Over seven decades, ideologically committed progressive activists — more motivated, more persistent, more institutionally strategic than the moderates they displaced — systematically captured the Democrat Party’s university allies, foundations, media relationships, policy shops, primary electorates, and eventually its platform. Each captured institution became a recruitment and training ground for the next generation of activists, who arrived more ideologically pure than the last.
By 2024, the Democrat Party of Harry Truman, Scoop Jackson, and the 1956 platform — militarily strong, economically populist, culturally conventional, fiscally responsible, and genuinely working-class — had been replaced by a progressive party whose priorities, language, and coalition would have been unrecognizable and largely incomprehensible to its 1956 self. In fact, Americans in 1956 would have recognized the communist underpinnings of the 2024 Democrat Party.
Conquest’s Law was not merely confirmed. It was confirmed at civilizational scale. As a result, America’s constitutional republic is at grave risk to a communist political insurrection in 2026.
And now you understand why the Democrat Party has obstructed every single Trump 2.0 policy (especially closing the border, deporting illegal aliens, and securing elections) while being on the wrong side of every 80-20 issue supported by most Americans.
The end.
This article originally appeared in Stu Cvrk’s Substack. Reprinted here with permission
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