Tim Cavanaugh | October 26, 2004
Brian Doherty looks at the election as a Hatfield-McCoy thing.
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Uh, did I miss something or does it seem that a very similar article could be written about the Democrats "supporting" Kerry...!?
I think he's overlooking something critical: The criteria for
winning and the criteria for successfully
governing are completely different.
It's quite easy to surpress internal dissent on issues long enough
to win. All you do, really, is blame the "other party" (or the
French, or the Russians, or whomever) for lack of progress, and
explain that you'll "get right to work on those issues once those
obstructionist bastards are dealt with".
You don't have to actually legislate anything. And it's
remarkably good at getting out the vote.
Tell the Religious Right that you can't overturn Roe versus Wade
because of "obstructionist judges and Democrats", and let them know
that only control of the Senate can fix it. Pass a few
"partial-birth" abortion laws, remembering to cull out any "health
of the mother" exceptions so the courts strike it down, and then go
whine to the pro-life people. They'll back you 100%.
Go tell the fiscal conservatives you TRIED to cut taxes more, but
of course the Democrats held out. Then tell them those nasty Dems
were even WORSE about cutting budgets, and actually managed to
increase spending despite all you could do. Boom! Instant credit
for cutting taxes, and the fiscal conservatives know that
you'd have cut spending if it wasn't for those darn Democrats. So
better turn out next time around.
It all works really well unless you manage to snag control
of the House, the Senate and the Presidency. Oh, you still blame
the Democrats for problems, and throw a lion's share of
the blame to "activist liberal judges" but your base doesn't cut
you as much slack anymore. You're controlling the levers.
They want results. And that's when the tensions
inside the party cause real problems. Up until that point, you can
ignore the more volatile issues and blame lack of progress on the
other side. You can pass whatever there is consensus on (hint: Tax
cuts. And little else) and for the rest, well...just votes to
highlight how much better you are than those naughty
Democrats.
Not that this doesn't work both ways, of course, but the Dems seem
to handle inter-party issues a lot better.
Buchanan says elections are a kind of feud, and you vote for the
party you belong too. That is a strong argument against joining a
political party.
When I joined the Libertarian Party - in 1972 - I did not agree to
always support the candidate.
But perhaps Pat is engaging in a subtle move to ensure the defeat
of Bush. Everyone knows that Reagan won because of "Reagan
Democrats" many of whom share Buchanan's views on trade and social
issues. Perhaps his editorial is a subtle message to Reagan
Democrats to return home and vote for John Kerry.
Gene,
I don't think so. If you watch the McLaughlin Group regularly, Pat
makes it pretty clear that while he disagrees with Bush on a lot of
issues, he disagrees with Kerry on every issue. He wants Bush to
win.
"Uh, did I miss something or does it seem that a very similar
article could be written about the Democrats "supporting"
Kerry...!?"
What's also missing in the litanty of conservative gripes about
Bush is the either/or calculation that all conservatives must
make.
The President is either going to be Bush or Kerry - one or the
other - period. That is the only realistic choice conservatives
have.
Conservatives may not be happy about Bush but I can't see how any
of them would think Kerry would be a better alternative.
There are good reasons for a conservative to think that a Kerry
Presidency with a traditional Republican congress might be
preferable.
By a conservative, of course, I mean a tax cutting, budget busting,
free trade, pragmatic foreign policy conservative; you know, like
the ones that were in power during the Reagan and Bush the Elder
Administrations and like the ones who came to power in the House
during the Clinton Administration too.
"Uh, did I miss something or does it seem that a very similar
article could be written about the Democrats "supporting"
Kerry...!?"
I think that while there is some similarity, this is a somewhat
different thing. Since both houses and the presidency are held by
the GOP, Kerry hasn't really been able to annoy his base with
unpopular decisions and policies. And if he wins, he may end up
fairly popular with his base because none of his ridiculous
proposals will get past the GOP congress. So he can blame them for
all failures. Remember Clinton only became popular after he lost
congress to the GOP.
It all works really well unless you manage to snag control
of the House, the Senate and the Presidency. Oh, you still blame
the Democrats for problems, and throw a lion's share of the blame
to "activist liberal judges" but your base doesn't cut you as much
slack anymore. You're controlling the levers.
Bush deserves all the crap flung at him for never vetoing anything,
no matter how porcine, that emerges from Congress. I guess it was
too much for voters to realize that in his term-and-a-half as
Governor of Texas, he cohabited, as the French say, with a
Democratic Lt. Gov. and got along famously with him. I don't think
he was ready to deal with the likes of Jumpin' Jim Jeffords, or Tom
Daschle's agressive and novel uses of the filibuster. "Controlling
the levers" in the Senate now means being able to depend on 60
votes, whenever the minority gets serious about fighting the
majority.
W, a feeble attempt at recess appointments aside, sat on his
political capital, rather than spend it, only to see it evaporate.
He forgot the "use it or lose it" rule.
Kevin
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