Alan
Caruba is the only journalist that has identified himself as a
Republican. I find that he is often right. He has a good grasp of
this issue I hope he is right. We can't afford to have Hilary as our
next President.
The Struggle for the Soul of the Democrat Party
By Alan Caruba
CNSNews.com Commentary from the National Anxiety Center
August 28, 2007
What
happens when neither political party has a new idea about what is
happening in the nation and the world? You get election results so
nearly tied that a few hundred votes decide who won or lost. It is, if
you think about it, fairly astounding that the voters are so equally
divided between Democrats and Republicans.
You notice, I said
"the voters," not the people who simply identify themselves as members
or sympathetic to one party or the other. One of the Republican Party's
greatest problems right now is that it has drifted so far away from
what its base believes and wants, many are prepared to stay home, short
of candidates that offer them a compelling reason to show up at the
polls.
The Democrats are faced with another problem. Its
platform is essentially the one that won four terms for Franklin Delano
Roosevelt in the 30s and 40s. Responding to the Depression, FDR tapped
every bright lad he could to come up with something - anything -- that
might turn the economy around. In the end, it was World War II that
energized the nation and started the U.S. on its superpower trajectory.
It was helpful, too, that the homeland, other than Pearl Harbor, had
not suffered the destruction that occurred in Europe or Japan.
So
Americans ever since have had Social Security, Medicare, and a host of
other "entitlement" programs. The problem for recent administrations is
that these programs are either broke or soon will be. When the GOP
added a hugely costly prescription drug entitlement they were acting
more like Democrats, but by then the way Congress functioned there were
few members who could be clearly identified by party affiliation.
All
were drunk on "earmarks" funneling millions back to their districts.
The notion that local communities should run their schools is foreign
to them. All seemed indifferent to protecting national sovereignty,
securing the borders, or the invasion of a million aliens every year.
The
only thing with which one could definitively identify Republicans was
their support for the war in Iraq. It was, of course, the single issue
that turned control of Congress --just barely -- to the Democrats in
the 2006 elections and it is the one issue that will determine the
outcome of the 2008 elections. The only issue Democrats have is their
hatred of President Bush and their opposition to conservatives who have
a visceral contempt for abortion, gay marriage, and thuggish foreign
leaders.
In the 2008 campaign Democrats will offer national
health care, but that notion has been trotted out for a very long time
and most people are vaguely aware of what a disaster it has proven to
be in England and Canada, to name just two places. Michael Moore's
documentary, a celebration of Cuban health care, managed to overlook
the many shortages of everything needed to practice medicine there.
Most
books about politics are, by definition, partisan but a rare exception
is Matt Bai's "The Argument: Billionaires, Bloggers, and the Battle to
Remake Democratic Politics." He is such a skilled journalist, a
political writer for The New York Times magazine, that he humanizes the
individuals who are now locked in a struggle to control the Democrat
Party.
The result is, frankly, a hilarious portrait of a party
where obscenely rich people think their money can make a difference and
buy them real influence, while nobodies with little more than bad
attitudes and Internet sites like "The Daily Kos" have become movers
and shakers to whom candidates must pay heed. Sandwiched between these
groups are the party apparatchiks; those who must raise funds, the
political consultants, the pollsters, and the think tank folks, all of
whom are desperately trying to fashion a winning campaign.
About
the only thing the members of both parties agree upon is that the
members of the opposing party are just too dumb to understand the
issues!
Neither party lacks for really dumb people and this
includes those who have risen to the top. At one point, prior to the
2005-6 campaign, casting about for a new motto, Rep. Nancy Pelosi
suggested that Democrats call themselves "the people's party." Bai
notes that, "This slogan was quickly and wisely rejected, as it sounded
like a communiqu/'e9 from the party headquarters in Pyongyang."
In
the end, the Democrats concluded that policy ideas, leadership issues,
and the usual rhetoric of campaigning weren't needed, given the
collapse of support for and by Republicans. Why "offer an actual agenda
and risk the possibility that some voters might not like it?"
One
of the real issues is the war against the Islamofascists and, whether a
Democrat or Republican is elected, they will be part of a continuum of
presidents who have either tried to ignore them as did Clinton or put
troops in the field to kill them as Bush did. It doesn't matter in the
short run what people think about the current state of the war --
except for the way it influences elections -- because it is a war that
was declared against us and which we must pursue until victory whether
we want to or not.
Aside from a lack of any ideas other than
those inherited from FDR and LBJ, the Democrats will continue to suffer
from the general perception of cowardliness in the face of an enemy and
endless bleating about the poor and disadvantaged. They tend to ignore
the way America has grown famous and wealthy from people who worked
hard, took risks, and moved up the economic ladder. The other factor
working against them is the way the population has leaned to the right
ever since the days of Reagan and Goldwater.
Bush will not be a
factor in the 2008 elections except as a person on whom Democrats can
fix (and waste) their hatred. But he is not running for office.
Without
a compelling reason to vote for a Democrat candidate, voters may decide
to stay with the party that -- flawed as it may be at this point --
still believes in lower taxes, a strong military, and the magic elixir
of freedom, opportunity.
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