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Dismal Democrats: Republicans will remain in control even if John Kerry wins
Prospect Magazine (U.K.) ^ | May 2004 | Robert Reich

Posted on 05/08/2004 2:36:57 PM PDT by Stoat

Even if John Kerry wins in November, the right will remain in control of America. Democrats have almost no chance of winning back the house or Senate. Most state governorships and legislatures are also in the hands of Republicans, which gives them power to draw the lines of future congressional districts and thereby keep hold of congress. Right-wing conservatives now claim most of America's airwaves - they are in full command of "talk radio" and "yell television." They run most Washington think tanks. They inhabit some of the most influential positions on Wall Street and in American corporate boardrooms. Radical conservatives are, in short, America's new governing elite.

A little over a decade ago, it looked as if Bill Clinton's New Democrats - the forerunners to Tony Blair's third wayers - were in control. Although Clinton was elected on a minority of votes cast (Ross Perot took votes away from the first George Bush), once in office he appeared to enhance his standing as a "new kind of Democrat" by eschewing stands associated with the traditional left. He signed Nafta, embraced fiscal austerity and deficit reduction, and called for an end to the dole. It seemed as if a new Democratic era had begun. Democrats controlled both houses of congress. The country seemed solidly behind us.

But within two years, Clinton's ambitious healthcare plan went down to defeat. In the autumn of 1994, Republicans took over congress. Clinton was re-elected in 1996, but his second term was mired in scandal, and the country appeared to veer to the right. In 2000, with the US enjoying unparalleled prosperity, George W Bush won the presidency. What happened?

We failed because we failed to build a political movement behind us. America's newly ascendant radical conservatives do have such a movement, which explains their success. They have developed dedicated sources of money and legions of ground troops who not only get out the vote, but also spend the time between elections persuading others to join their ranks. They have devised frames of reference that are used repeatedly in policy debates (among them are: it's your money, tax and spend, political correctness, class warfare). They have a system for recruiting and electing officials nationwide who share the same worldview and who vote accordingly. And they have a coherent ideology uniting evangelical Christians, blue-collar whites in the south and west, and big business.

Democrats have built no analogous movement. Instead, every four years party loyalists throw themselves behind a presidential candidate who they believe will deliver them from the rising conservative tide. After the election, they go back to whatever they were doing before. Other Democrats involve themselves in single-issue politics but these battles have failed to build a movement. Issues rise and fall, depending on the interests at stake.

As a result, Democrats have been undisciplined, intimidated or just silent. They have few dedicated sources of money, and almost no troops. The religious left is disconnected from the political struggle. One hears few liberal Democratic phrases that are repeated with any regularity. In addition, there is no consistent Democratic ideology. Most congressional Democrats raise their own money, do their own polls and vote every which way. Democrats have little or no clear identity except by reference to what conservatives say about them.

Democratic centrists, like the Democratic leadership council, attribute the party's difficulties to a failure to respond to an electorate grown more conservative, affluent and suburban. This is nonsense. The biggest losses for Democrats since 1980 have not been among suburban voters but among America's giant middle and working classes - especially white workers without four-year college degrees, once part of the old Democratic base. These are the same people who have lost the most economic ground over the last quarter-century.

Democrats could have responded with bold plans on jobs, schools, healthcare and retirement security. They could have delivered a strong message about the responsibility of corporations to help their employees in all these respects, and of wealthy elites not to corrupt politics with money. In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, the Democratic party could have used the threat of terrorism to inspire the same sort of sacrifice and social solidarity as Democrats did in the second world war - including higher taxes on the wealthy to pay for what needs doing. In short, they could have turned themselves into a populist movement to take back democracy from increasingly concentrated wealth and power.

But Democrats did none of this. So conservatives stepped into the void, claiming the populist mantle and blaming liberal elites for everything.

The rush by many Democrats in recent years to the so-called centre has been a substitute for candid talk about what the nation needs to do and for fuelling a movement based on liberal values. In truth, America has no consistent political centre. Polls mostly reflect reflexive responses to what people have just heard about an issue. Meanwhile, the so-called centre has continued to shift to the right because conservative Republicans stay put while Democrats keep meeting them halfway.

Democrats who eschew movement politics point to Bill Clinton's success in repositioning the party in the centre during the 1990s. Clinton is a gifted politician who accomplished something no Democrat since Roosevelt had done: he got re-elected. But his effect on the party was to blur what Democrats stand for. He neither started nor sustained a political movement.

In 1994, when battling for his healthcare proposal, Clinton had no movement behind him. Even though polls showed support among a majority of Americans, it wasn't enough to overcome the conservative effort on the other side. By contrast, George W Bush got his tax cuts through congress, even though Americans were ambivalent about them. President Bush had a political movement behind him.

In the months leading up to the 1996 election, Clinton famously triangulated - finding positions equidistant between Democrats and Republicans - and ran for re-election on tiny issues like V-chips in television sets and school uniforms. But it was a pyrrhic victory. Had Clinton told Americans the truth - that when the economic boom went bust they would still have to face the challenges of a country concentrating more wealth and power in fewer hands - he could have built a long-term mandate for change. By the late 1990s the nation finally had the wherewithal to expand prosperity by investing in people, especially their education and health. But because Clinton was re-elected without a mandate, the nation was confused about what needed to be accomplished and easily distracted by conservative fulminations against a president who lied about sex.

As we head into the 2004 election, Democrats should pay close attention to what Republicans have learned about winning elections over the long run - lessons that may be useful for New Labour as well. First, it is crucial to build a political movement that will endure after elections. Second, any movement derives its durability from the clarity of its convictions.

A fierce battle for the White House may be exactly what the Democrats need to mobilise a movement behind them. It may also be what America needs to restore a two-party system and a clear understanding of the choices we face as a nation.

Robert Reich was secretary of labour under President Clinton


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; election; johnkerry; politics; president; republicanmajority; republicans; robertreich
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Robert Reich was secretary of labor under President Clinton
1 posted on 05/08/2004 2:36:58 PM PDT by Stoat
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To: Stoat
actually pretty good.

I lied this part: "The religious left is disconnected from the political struggle"

First liberal ive evere heard to admit there is a relgious left.
2 posted on 05/08/2004 2:42:47 PM PDT by boxsmith13
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To: All
In 2000, with the US enjoying unparalleled prosperity, George W Bush won the presidency. What happened?

If you have to ask that question Mr. Reich, I can only conclude that you slept completely through the previous eight years.

3 posted on 05/08/2004 2:43:33 PM PDT by SamKeck
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To: Stoat
Robert Reich was secretary of labour under President Clinton

I didnt see his name as I started reading, but I couldnt help thinking, "Bill, is that you?"

4 posted on 05/08/2004 2:44:33 PM PDT by cardinal4 (Terrence Maculiffe-Ariolimax columbianus (hint- its a gastropod.....)
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To: Stoat
There's a religious left? Who knew?
5 posted on 05/08/2004 2:46:58 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: Stoat
What a pack of lies.

Right-wing conservatives now claim most of America's airwaves - they are in full command of "talk radio" and "yell television." They run most Washington think tanks."

Conservative talk shows are a drop in the bucket compared to the overwhelming majority of the media. Think tanks are nothing compared to the dominance that the left has of our universities.

They inhabit some of the most influential positions on Wall Street and in American corporate boardrooms. Radical conservatives are, in short, America's new governing elite.

Hey third reich! If the Republicans in our government are so radical? How come they have never pushed to reduce gov't spending? How come the gov't has grown tremendously since 1994? Why do we still have Social Security? Why did Bush just sign a monstrous prescription drug giveaway? Sounds very much like a "radical conservative" to me.

Democratic centrists, like the Democratic leadership council, attribute the party's difficulties to a failure to respond to an electorate grown more conservative, affluent and suburban. This is nonsense. The biggest losses for Democrats since 1980 have not been among suburban voters but among America's giant middle and working classes - especially white workers without four-year college degrees, once part of the old Democratic base. These are the same people who have lost the most economic ground over the last quarter-century.

This loss is because the Democrats ARE elitist! The people who run it today are the former potheads of yesteryear who delighted in tearing up their college campuses but making sure their graduate school applications were still in. Now that they've gotten older (grown up isn't the right word), they are in control of many of the upper-middle class jobs that people with post-graduate degrees get.

The reason they've lost the votes of normal, average Americans is that they've embraced truly radical social propositions, things that would have repelled even Vladimir Lenin: abortion, homosexuality, pedophilia, hating their country, women in combat, gender-bending, etc. No normal person will ever support these things the way the freakish Democrats do. Until they wise up and stop promoting the destruction of their own society, Democrats will continue to lose.

6 posted on 05/08/2004 2:47:51 PM PDT by GulliverSwift (Until Dems stop promoting the destruction of civil society, they'll continue to lose)
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To: Stoat
WAHHHHHH! We're victems, we only have all the free network tv on our side, only 99.9% of the print media, all but one of the cable networks, all the union foot soldiers getting out the vote and those mean old republicans are taking advantage of us.
7 posted on 05/08/2004 2:50:03 PM PDT by McGavin999 (If Kerry can't deal with the "Republican Attack Machine" how is he going to deal with Al Qaeda)
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To: Stoat
By the late 1990s the nation finally had the wherewithal to expand prosperity by investing in people, especially their education and health. But because Clinton was re-elected without a mandate, the nation was confused about what needed to be accomplished

And to think this guy was SecLab.

Babble, babble.
8 posted on 05/08/2004 2:50:36 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: tet68
There's a religious left? Who knew?

Sure you have. You know, all that gay clergy, if it feels good do it group.

9 posted on 05/08/2004 2:52:04 PM PDT by McGavin999 (If Kerry can't deal with the "Republican Attack Machine" how is he going to deal with Al Qaeda)
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To: Stoat
This sounds like a bunch of whining from over at DU.
10 posted on 05/08/2004 2:52:31 PM PDT by CzarNicky (The problem with bad ideas is that they seemed like good ideas at the time.)
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To: boxsmith13
"The biggest losses for Democrats since 1980 have not been among suburban voters but among America's giant middle and working classes - especially white workers..."


Pathetic little twerp. I wonder where, does he think, these middle class voters live if not in the suburbs? Inner city tenements? Talk about the religious left being disconnected. This wretched socialist dwarf is lost in the 1930's.
11 posted on 05/08/2004 2:53:34 PM PDT by SavoyyTruffle
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To: Clemenza; nutmeg; firebrand; PARodrig; rmlew
ping
12 posted on 05/08/2004 2:55:54 PM PDT by Cacique
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To: Stoat
Not that I want it to happen, but it would be kinda fun to see a Republican Congress shoving stuff down Kerry's throat....except the RINOs will cave in
13 posted on 05/08/2004 2:56:17 PM PDT by stboz
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To: Stoat
Reich is trying to remind us of a time when we thought it was a good idea to split power between Republicans and Democrats. If it ever was, it's no longer a good idea. I'd be happy if the Democrats ended up in the same situation as Canada's Progressive Conservatives a few years ago, reduced to 3 seats.
14 posted on 05/08/2004 2:56:49 PM PDT by AZLiberty (Of course, you realize this means war! -- Bugs Bunny, borrowing from Groucho Marx)
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To: Stoat
"Even if John Kerry wins in November, ......."

That's just not going to happen!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I would vote to Nuke ourselves before that could happen!
15 posted on 05/08/2004 2:59:59 PM PDT by Gator113
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To: Stoat
I want to know who the heck hired Robert Reich away from his job as copyboy? He must have mastered the copy machine and it was a waste of resources to retrain someone else for his position!
16 posted on 05/08/2004 3:00:24 PM PDT by JoeSixPack1
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To: Stoat
This article is one giant spin. If Reich actually believes this twaddle, he's living somewhere in a parallel universe.
17 posted on 05/08/2004 3:00:37 PM PDT by DakotaGator (To be a Democrat is to practice self-deception daily.)
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Now all we have to do is get the presstitues in the mainstream media to see the light...+
18 posted on 05/08/2004 3:03:24 PM PDT by Mr. K (ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,this is like liberal logic,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø))
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To: DakotaGator
Yeah, I liked the innuendo about "yell television", as if that method of discussion wasn't pioneered by his buddies Carville and Begala so that they could demagogue rather than talk facts in debate.
19 posted on 05/08/2004 3:04:40 PM PDT by thoughtomator (yesterday Kabul, today Baghdad, tomorrow Damascus)
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To: Stoat
A micro-Clintonista bad-mouthing the USA in an ultra-lefting Euro Rag. Wish this mini-rat would stay in Europe.
20 posted on 05/08/2004 3:05:29 PM PDT by FormerACLUmember
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