Democratic
base needs anger management
July 2, 2003
Are Democrats too angry
(and too liberal) to win back the presidency in 2004? As my old
8-ball used to divine, "Signs point to yes."
I cite the recent successes
of far-left candidate Howard Dean in his quest for the nomination,
which many originally dismissed as quixotic. Dean handily won
an online primary conducted by MoveOn.org with nearly 44 percent
of the vote, and even more ultra-liberal Congressman Dennis Kucinich
garnered almost 24 percent.
Dismiss this if you
choose as an unscientific sampling, but then how do you explain
Dean's raising over $6 million in the second quarter of this year,
$2.8 million of which came in during the last eight days of the
quarter? We are talking here, folks, about the Sean Penn/Alec
Baldwin/Susan Sarandon wing of the party -- and it is obviously
energized by Dr. Dean's message.
What is his message?
Well, it's certainly not that he can lead us better in the war
on terror than President Bush. It's not that he can provide better
homeland security for the American people. It's not that he can
restore a healthier level of growth to the economy.
It's not even that
Bush is incompetent and that he can do better. No, his rallying
cry is that Bush is a crooked, power-mad, unilateralist, neoconservative
imperialist bent on manipulating the country into supporting his
globalist designs. This preposterous mantra is what ignites the
party's liberal base -- and boy, is it liberal. So liberal that
it can't see past its own passions to rein itself into contention.
So consumed is the
base by its hatred for Bush that it is fabricating WMD conspiracy
theories to discredit him and even believes its own lies.
"Ah, yes, Limbaugh,"
you say, "but you have no room to talk. Look at the political
right's animosity toward Clinton." Touche! However, I'm not
playing the blame game here, merely analyzing the situation on
the ground, as they say. Were I headed in that direction I would
tell you that at least the right's revulsion toward Clinton was
grounded in reality -- based on their repeated observations of
his pathological prevarication and his consummate remorselessness
about it.
But the point here
is not that Bush-bashers are worse than the Clinton-bashers were.
It's that the Bush-bashers are equally fixated and politically
self-destructive, which makes the Democrats' already formidable
task of unseating Bush that much more difficult.
Is the Democrats' plight
not reminiscent of the Republican's Clinton-mania in 1992 and
1996? Think back: Did the Republicans really offer an agenda around
which its base could unite?
In 1992, President
Bush, in pursuit of a "kinder and gentler America,"
had spent too much time squandering President Reagan's legacy
of unprecedented economic prosperity to have much of a positive
message. He couldn't credibly run as a supply-sider after having
broken his no-new-taxes pledge. Plus, the Cold War was over, and
Saddam was not yet seen as representing an ongoing threat. Besides,
he was too busy trying to counter Clinton's distortions about
"the worst economy in 50 years" to offer up his own
agenda.
In 1996, it was even
worse. Despite Clinton's vulnerabilities, Republicans could serve
up no better challenger than Bob Dole, who was anointed based
on years of service to the party rather than a triumph of his
ideas.
Now in 2003, the Democrats
are getting no traction with economic issues. This is partly because
the economy is not as bad as Democrats have portrayed it. But
also, the electorate knows that the economy has been strained
and the deficits increased by the terrorist attacks, homeland
security efforts and the war, and because economic issues are
overshadowed by those of national security.
And Democrats are going
to have about as much credibility impeaching President Bush's
foreign policy and national security record as Dole did attacking
Clinton for the prosperity we were enjoying in 1996.
That dog just won't
hunt, because people know Bush is not a liar and has been an exemplary
commander-in-chief. Which brings me back to the original point.
It doesn't seem to
matter to the mad-dog liberal base of the Democratic Party that
Bush is unimpeachable (so-to-speak) in this area. The far left
controlling the party will nevertheless force all the Democratic
contenders to scramble to the westward-most end of the ideological
spectrum to curry their favor.
It's a formula guaranteed
for defeat, but they are too blinded by their unspent rage beginning
with frustrations over their failed hijacking of the 2000 election
and continuing through their failed prophecies of doom in Iraq
to change course.
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