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2005: The Splintering of the Democratic Party
A Publius Essay | 3 February 2005 | Publius

Posted on 02/03/2005 9:04:20 AM PST by Publius

The year 2005 will mark the 72nd anniversary of the New Deal, the seminal event of the modern Democratic Party. Democratic policies and rhetoric all hail from that era of Big Government protecting the American people from Big Business. As long as the party held to its roots in economic equality, it prospered. When it marched boldly into the quicksand of social change, it alienated the Great Middle of American politics and lost its way.

Now the signs are all in place for another great Democratic debacle, but with one major difference. This time, the Democrats are headed for the ash heap of American political history.

New England is where American political parties go to die. In 1814 Alexander Hamilton, guiding light of the Federalist Party, had been dead for a decade. While Hamilton would have argued vehemently against a new war with Britain, preferring instead to resolve differences through diplomacy, he was astute enough to understand that certain arguments stop at the water’s edge. When the ragtag remnants of the Federalist Party, then holed up in New England, organized the Hartford Convention to discuss secession, Hamilton must have turned somersaults in his grave. Once Andrew Jackson routed a British invasion at New Orleans, the Federalist position smacked of treason, and the ragtag remnant was annihilated in the next election.

In the 1850's, with founder Henry Clay dead, the Whigs lost their way over slavery. While even the Great Compromiser might have found it impossible to square this particular political circle, the temporizing of the Whigs made them toothless in the face of people who were absolutely sure of what they believed. It took only a few electoral cycles for the Whigs to be replaced by the Republicans.

The Roots of the Democrats’ Dilemma

In 1964 Lyndon Johnson defeated Barry Goldwater in a popular and electoral vote blowout. One thing that can be disastrous for a political party is for it to get everything it wants. Following the election, the Democrats felt they had decisively won the argument, and Goldwater’s defeat cleared the way for the enactment of Johnson’s Great Society programs. Medicare and the war on poverty quickly became law, although poverty clearly won over time. The Democrats had achieved the goals set during the Roosevelt, Truman and Kennedy years. What was left?

In the late Sixties the Democrats made the error of turning to social change – in that era it meant race – and promptly alienated a key group of voters later to be known as Reagan Democrats. Ethnic blue collar Democrats were liberal on economic issues and had agreed that the situation in the South was intolerable, but there was no such consensus on de facto segregation in the North. When the courts went beyond the law and ordered busing to promote racial balance, the future Reagan Democrats became angry. Thanks to the rising tide of Black Nationalism and the violence of urban insurrections, sympathy with the problems of black America began to wane.

In the Seventies the Democrats invested their energy in promoting social change via the courts, this time in the area of sexual liberation. At bottom, liberals were trying to change the social attitudes of Americans by judicial fiat – to infuse them with the proper revolutionary fervor – and they failed to see that the resistance of the Great Middle was but a desire to de-politicize the affairs of daily life. As a rule, social attitudes change at their own natural speed and do not require a political party to push them along. The Democrats forgot this and ceded the Great Middle to others.

As Reagan shifted the Great Middle to the right, the Democrats spent the Eighties in a state of shock and denial. Looking at the Democratic Party, Americans saw a collective of America’s misfits and malcontents, and the result was disastrous. The Democrats had jumped on the bandwagon of social change and had forgotten the economic issues that had made them the majority party. The institutional party had become totally disorganized and obsessed with process while the nominating electorate was dominated by left-wing ideologues. Upset and bewildered, the Reagan Democrats made a new home in the Republican Party.

After the Dukakis debacle in 1988, Mark Russell posed the question, "Why do we expect our generals to be serious men and our brain surgeons to be serious men, but we expect our presidents to be game show hosts?" In 1992 the Great Game Show Host slouched onto the scene. Bill Clinton emphasized economic issues and fudged the social foolishness that had gotten his party into so much trouble in the past. Clinton’s pitch was simple: “Guys, we can take a stand for our beliefs and go down in flames, or we can go back to basics and win.”

Once elected, however, Clinton discovered that in running for office from the center, he lacked the political capital to enact any genuine liberal programs. His first major expenditure of political capital was NAFTA, a Republican initiative. A few months into his presidency, Clinton realized with horror that he had become an “Eisenhower Democrat”. Having sold the party to the lobbyists of K Street to raise enough money to compete with the Republicans, Clinton had robbed his party of its soul. The left wing ideologues took note but kept silent lest they lose the perks and privileges of power. Their day would come, they thought.

Congressional Democrats, ideologically at odds with the president, felt they had the luxury of not marching in step with Clinton and didn't fear him the way they would have feared an experienced operator like Lyndon Johnson. Thus, his health insurance initiative crashed and burned, and Republicans went in for the kill. The post-Watergate reforms had the effect of locking the Congress of 1974 in place for twenty years, but Clinton's failure to produce the promised changes brought in a Republican Congress for the first time in forty years.

Internally, the two parties are very different. The Democrats function like a federation of state parties while the Republicans have always been a top-down organization. This gives the Democrats an edge when they don't control the Executive. Republicans, without the Executive, seem lost. They need a leader to snap them to attention and send them marching in step. Newt Gingrich took that role and made his troops the force of change in the Nineties, but in provoking a government shutdown Gingrich failed to understand the role of entitlements in the American psyche. People had come to expect certain things from their government, and they didn't want anything to get between them and their government checks.

Having lurched too far to the left with “Hillary Care”, Clinton positioned himself as close to the Great Middle as he could. Unwilling to show the ruthlessness required in politics, the Republicans nominated Bob Dole even when it was obvious months before the convention that he couldn't win. Frustrated by their inability to defeat the slickest president in modern times, the Republicans grasped at a straw held in the mouth of a White House intern.

In retrospect Rush Limbaugh was right. Neither Congress nor the American people would countenance the removal of a president for offenses related to illicit sex. To most Americans in the Nineties, Bill Clinton’s behavior was not outside the mainstream. By couching the 1998 election as a referendum on impeachment, Gingrich misread the situation.

Talk to ardent partisans about the 2000 election, and you’ll get two very different versions of reality.

A Republican will tell you that the networks called Florida early and suppressed Republican turnout not only in Florida, but nationwide. Some will accuse the networks of collusion with the DNC in attempting to steal the election for Al Gore. A partisan Florida Supreme Court attempted to keep the theft in motion, but the US Supreme Court honored the Constitution and stopped it in its tracks.

A Democrat will tell you that Al Gore won the national popular vote and the vote in Florida. Bush was selected illegally by a partisan US Supreme Court when his father called in some IOU’s. The election was stolen, plain and simple. Bush lost and took up residence in Al Gore’s big white house.

But the events of September 11, 2001 changed everything.

War, Disconnection and Marginalization

The Republicans were now in power in time of war. With Afghanistan out of the way and Iraq on the table, the Democrats found themselves in a quandary.

The Democratic Party had played a key role in the creation of the United Nations, and there was a strong belief that being a responsible player on the world stage meant not engaging in unilateral action, but working through the UN to gain the support of world opinion. This is the origin of the “global test”. Had not Jack Kennedy gone to the UN first during the Cuban Missile Crisis? With most of our traditional European allies opposing regime change in Iraq, Democrats were split on whether to authorize an invasion. The initial success of that invasion coupled with the guerilla war that followed furthered splits in the party. The perception of lukewarm support of the war effort on the part of Democrats led to losses in the election of 2002, and the party’s left-wing nominating electorate was on the warpath for peace.

At the center of this difficulty is a problem unique to liberals – a willingness to accept the adversary’s viewpoint if it puts their country in a bad light. Liberals call it “being objective”, but it is really a lack of faith in America and a lack of faith in traditional American ideals. While fine in peacetime, it is deadly in war.

At their core, these ideals are not American, but “UNeesian”, to invent a word. To UNeesians, patriotism is a vice. To UNeesians, America doesn’t have the right to lead because its hands are dirty, courtesy of slavery, Vietnam or some other flaw in its past. To UNeesians, America, like Israel, is a source of evil in the world.

In time of war, social issues take a backseat. One of the key UNeesian objections to the war in the Middle East is the belief that the money should be spent on something else. Spend it on government-run health insurance, government-run schools or government-run Amtrak, but don’t spend it on war. That’s immoral. Spend it on social change. But there comes a time when people become weary of social change and want stability, particularly freedom from attack by foreign religious fanatics.

Nothing bothers UNeesians more than a muscular United States working to mold the world into a place reflective of its traditional values. To UNeesians, these traditional American values are suspect. They remember Vietnam, but not World War II. And when they root for the enemy, as many of them did in the case of Iraq, they step over the line crossed by the ragtag remnants of the Federalist Party in 1814.

Trapped by Ideology

In 2004 the Democratic Party could have run against the Republicans from the right, a technique used successfully by Jack Kennedy. This would have meant taking the war against terrorism to a new level, to include racial profiling and securing our borders. Ordinary Americans not associated with Big Business would have jumped to join a party willing to militarize and seal the borders. This would have led to a stand in favor of economic nationalism, which would have brought many of Patrick Buchanan’s troops into the party.

But the Democrats instead argued that terrorism was a nuisance and that the US should apply a “global test” to military action, thus giving Europe and the UN a veto over America’s defense. From its “Democratic wing” came a hint that America got what it deserved on September 11. Economic nationalism, racial profiling and sealing the borders went against the grain of the party’s UNessian values. Further, without that vast army of illegal immigrants in the nation’s workforce, the declining birthrate would put the sacred programs of the welfare state in actuarial jeopardy.

Socially, the Democrats pushed for a continuation of the sexual revolution when people were tired of being confronted by sex every time they turned on the TV. After forty years of sexual liberation, people wanted a break from overt sex, particularly from the same sex variety. A key issue for Democrats in 2004 was the recognition of gay marriage – by fiat via the courts – which is not a priority for the vast majority of Americans who are not gay. This has led to the beginnings of an exodus from the party by Hispanics and blacks.

For an economic program, the party has not changed its stance in forty years, arguing for programs that even Lyndon Johnson could not push through Congress. When looking at an economic platform, the Democratic Party can suggest only more socialism. They succeeded in getting a new entitlement – prescription drugs for the elderly – and they still hope for some form of government-run health insurance, but the party has failed to answer the question, “Do you want the people who run Amtrak to take out your appendix?” When it comes to economic ideas, even the Mainstream Media admitted 25 years ago that it was the Republicans who had all the good ideas.

The Future of the Democrats

The New Deal coalition has been fraying ever since George Wallace cracked the Democratic Party in 1968 over race. Failure to defend the country and manage the economy has haunted the party at each election. Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton defeated Republican incumbents only because of a failing economy.

In 2004, the Democrats nominated a New Englander who was deep in his party’s mainstream but was out of step with the rest of the country. In “reporting for duty”, John Kerry hoped to elide his party’s ideological marginalization, but since his defeat the rest of the party has stridently spoken out, raising disturbing questions:

Much of this conflict has played out in the race for the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee, soon to be Howard Dean, another New Englander. Clinton’s decision to sell his party out to the Grifters of K Street still rankles. But Dean’s belief in going directly to the people via the Internet would have credence only if the “Deaniacs” were more connected to the mainstream. Dean’s supporters on the Internet, however, are among the most radical people in the Democratic Party. This will only exacerbate the differences between the party’s factions.

Today’s Democratic Party is made up of K Street Grifters, government workers, the remnants of the union movement, UNeesians, political correctness fanatics, Greens, homosexuals, liberal women and blacks. As Michael Barone has pointed out, blacks are the glue that holds the party together. But as they join the Great Middle, make some money and move into a nicer neighborhood, black Americans start thinking like Republicans, even if they can’t say so publicly. Bill Cosby speaks for many middle class blacks who are tired of the antics of their poorer brethren in the cities.

This hodgepodge of factions is not geared to occupying the same political party.

These factions have only one thing in common – an insatiable appetite for more government, an appetite not shared by the majority of the American people.

Endgame

On occasion in American history, concepts like Left and Right become blurred, parties run out of steam and ideas, and a wing of one party wraps around a wing of the other party. Sometimes one party will even splinter. Then the two parties re-form when a new issue arises. The Nineties, like the 1850’s, represents a time when one party ran out of steam and ideas, and everybody noticed it.

The Democratic Party is now restricted to America’s cities and to the suburbs of certain states. It is almost absent from America’s heartland. Its values are out of step with the Great Middle. It has forgotten its economic roots and become lost in the swamps of social change once again, vehement in its insistence on forcing that change down the throats of a reluctant nation.

The center cannot hold.

The Democratic Party will splinter like the Whigs. Soon there will be at least three parties on the left: the Green Party, the Labor Party and the Reparations Party. The Grifters of K Street will merely change their spots, as many of them have done since the 2002 election, and switch allegiance to the Republicans now that they control the federal faucet. Americans once represented reasonably well by the old Democratic Party, like Zell Miller, will reluctantly pull up stakes and find a new political home.

It will be another twenty years before a new set of issues emerges that permits a true second party to coalesce. The Republicans may well be running the store for decades.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2005review; democrats; essay; history; kerrydefeat; lostdems; parties; publius; publiusessay; republicans; splintering
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To: Sam the Sham
Yes, but unemployment is low, per capita income is high, and housing prices are getting very expensive. Indian immigrants are paying $450K+ for houses in Edison. In many cases, they are knocking down the little "blue collah" houses to build mini-Macmansions. Even in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn (NY) the Chinese are buying little houses for the same prices from retired NYC garbagemen.

One thing you notice about places like Linden, Garbagefield, etc., is the fact that they are filled with elderly people. Why is that? Because in many cases, their children did what my dad did and went to college, which in turn allows them to move on to more prosperous lives, either in nicer towns or elsewhere in the U.S.

Those blue collar towns you mentioned are being repopulated in many cases with Asian and Latin American immigrants. Its the cycle of life, my friend. Why get nostalgic about it?

Besides, a blue collar Portuguese American living in Ironbound can sell their tiny rowhouse for $280,000 and buy an even bigger place out in Pennsylvania for less money. There's no reason to remain in such places if you're upwardly mobile.

81 posted on 02/03/2005 3:20:09 PM PST by Clemenza (I Am Here to Chew Bubblegum and Kick Ass, and I'm ALL OUT OF BUBBLEGUM!)
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To: Sam the Sham

In the case of NYC, the unemployment is due to entire generations living in the projects. Much as I despise illegal immigration, I can see why Korean deli owners are much more likely to hire Jose who shows up on time and keeps his mouth shut, as opposed to a kid from the Marcy projects who shows up late and mouths off to the customers.


82 posted on 02/03/2005 3:22:13 PM PST by Clemenza (I Am Here to Chew Bubblegum and Kick Ass, and I'm ALL OUT OF BUBBLEGUM!)
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To: Prophet in the wilderness
I am not to much of knowledge of Barry Gold water, only in, that Reagan was sort of his clone later in 1980 , is that true of Regan ? basically Reagan adopted his views and beliefs of Goldwater.

Ronald Reagan was a big supporter of Goldwater, and his speech in favor of Goldwater got him started in electoral politics. In his last years though, Goldwater was critical of the GOP's social conservatism. His wife had been involved with Planned Parenthood, and abortion and homosexuality were a part of his family tree.

83 posted on 02/03/2005 3:35:24 PM PST by x
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To: Sam the Sham
Let's not lose sight of the fact that Iraq was a mess and the absence of WMD's led to many people feeling lied to. Without these factors Bush would have won in a landslide.

Bush lost votes for those reasons. He also won votes because of 9/11 and the war. Which group was larger? And which is more likely to stay where they are and which to return to their old loyalties? I don't know. Maybe they balance out.

84 posted on 02/03/2005 3:56:11 PM PST by x
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To: Publius
Excellent piece!

In analyzing the current situation, it also seems that the Dems have been paralyzed by their cult of personality of Bush. I was amazed by the instant mythology they built around him like construction scaffolding the moment he showed up on the national scene. Bush was known as the son of Bush41, a pretty mild political figure, and as a governor who had earned huge Democrat support in Texas. Yet the Hitler-Halliburton stuff took off like wildfire before it possibly could have even were it a fraction true. It was an overnight mythology.

Now Bush has been broadly successful and popular, but the Dems cannot touch him with a 10-foot pole because they convinced so many of their supporters that to do so would be shaking hands with Satan. They are locked in to a radical position by the severity of their own rhetoric and the effectiveness of their own brainwashing efforts.

85 posted on 02/03/2005 4:21:28 PM PST by Monti Cello (We've got to move these refrigerators. We've got to move these color TV's.)
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To: Publius; LS
LS: Ping for a confirming view.

Publius: Very interesting insight...

New England is where American political parties go to die.

Upon reflection, there is a lot of truth in this. And it's not only the Federalists in early American History and the Democrats in recent history.

After all, where was the last redoubt of the Rockefeller Republicans? As late as the Eisenhower administration, Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont were all referred to as "rock-ribbed Republican states", were they not? Even Massachusetts was the preserve of the Republican Lodges.

The ascendancy of Goldwater conservatives in the Republican party eventual flushed out the Rockefeller Republicans -- a decaying breed whose only surviving members are Sens. Snowe, Collins and Chaffee, all centered in New England.

I'd never thought of it quite that way, but New England does serve as a kind of political boneyard, doesn't it?

86 posted on 02/03/2005 4:26:17 PM PST by okie01 (The Mainstream Media: IGNORANCE ON PARADE)
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To: okie01

Except the Populists were midwestern and southern; the "know-nothings" were everywhere, but not particularly in the NE; and the dixiecrats southern.


87 posted on 02/03/2005 4:33:22 PM PST by LS (CNN is the Amtrak of news (there is no c in Amtrak and no truth in MSM news))
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To: Publius
Bookmarked...
88 posted on 02/03/2005 4:34:09 PM PST by JDoutrider
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To: Clemenza
...if the "ethnic blue collar Democrats" were still a factor, we would have won New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Illinois and Wisconsin.

We did win Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, but our victory was stolen from us in Philadelphia and Milwaukee by the ballot box stuffers.

89 posted on 02/03/2005 4:35:03 PM PST by Publius (The people of a democracy choose the government they want, and they ought to get it good and hard.)
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To: Publius
"It will be another twenty years before a new set of issues emerges that permits a true second party to coalesce. The Republicans may well be running the store for decades."

And then the Republicans will become corrupt.

We must always be alert. We must hold our leaders accountable and not get complacent.

90 posted on 02/03/2005 4:39:55 PM PST by ncpatriot
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To: Publius
We did win Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, but our victory was stolen from us in Philadelphia and Milwaukee by the ballot box stuffers

And Ill never believe that boob Kerry got 48% of the vote. That crack-for-voter- registrations drive in Toledo was just the tip of the iceberg. Excellent read, BTW, it should be included in future textbooks to explain the demise of the Clinton party..

91 posted on 02/03/2005 4:39:58 PM PST by cardinal4 (George W Bush-Bringing a new democracy every term..)
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To: Publius

Tell me about it, although three members of my family who live in the Keystone state voted for Kerry (barf!) including my devout Catholic Uncle who "didn't want to see his children get drafted for an unjust war."


92 posted on 02/03/2005 4:44:12 PM PST by Clemenza (I Am Here to Chew Bubblegum and Kick Ass, and I'm ALL OUT OF BUBBLEGUM!)
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To: Sam the Sham
A little statistical evidence from the Bureau of Labor Statistics:

National Unemployment Rate: December 2004: 5.2%

New Jersey: 4.2%

What's this you were saying about unemployment in New Jersey being ABOVE the national average?

Lets look at the other states in the area:

Connecticut: 4.3%

Again, WELL below the national rate, but not as good as New Jersey's.

You may have a slight point with my home state:

New York: 5.3%. That's about the same as the national average. If we cut off upstate and the project people (aka welfare cases), its unemployment rate would compare favorably with that of New Jersey and Connecticut.

So much for a "economic suffering" in the northeast.

93 posted on 02/03/2005 4:53:46 PM PST by Clemenza (I Am Here to Chew Bubblegum and Kick Ass, and I'm ALL OUT OF BUBBLEGUM!)
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Comment #94 Removed by Moderator

To: Tribune7

ping


95 posted on 02/03/2005 5:25:13 PM PST by Temple Owl (19064)
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Comment #96 Removed by Moderator

To: Publius
Very insightful and well written!!!!!!!!!!!

Kudos, Sir!

".....One thing that can be disastrous for a political party is for it to get everything it wants......."

Lets hope the Pubbies don't over-reach.

97 posted on 02/03/2005 6:03:21 PM PST by DoctorMichael (The Fourth Estate is a Fifth Column!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
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To: Publius

Interesting read and some good reflections.

Only point I'd bring up (everybody's a critic, no?) is that Dean was initially a favorite among Democratic insiders. I think this is an important insight to the soul of those who run the party. Even after Kerry got the nod, Dem voters couldn't really gin up enthusiasm, (except for bitter jibes at Bush). Like the Dole nomination however, the insiders went with their core, despite ultimate unelectability and lack of genuine popular support.

If the Dems make another sham lurch to the center (into which the new & improved Hillary is trying to triangulate herself), it will be against their innermost beliefs. But to retain power, they'll do it.


98 posted on 02/03/2005 6:27:35 PM PST by P.O.E. (FReeping - even better than flossing.)
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To: Publius

bump for a great analysis. I think it might be true that the Democrats are a party of special interests with divergent and unpopular agendas, hardly the stuff that builds a coalition.

For the Presidential race in 2008 it will come down to the personalities as it always does, our celebrity driven society is not as discerning as it should be.


99 posted on 02/03/2005 7:14:38 PM PST by RobFromGa (Bush Needs to Stay Aggressive in Term 2)
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To: P.O.E.
If the Dems make another sham lurch to the center (into which the new & improved Hillary is trying to triangulate herself), it will be against their innermost beliefs. But to retain power, they'll do it.

This is why congressional Democrats are dancing with congressional Republicans over a constitutional amendment that would open the door for Arnold to run -- but also open the door to another Bill Clinton presidency. They've seen Hillary from the inside and know she can't win. They want more of Bill.

But my guess is that by 2008 there won't be a Democratic Party for either of them.

100 posted on 02/03/2005 7:20:38 PM PST by Publius (The people of a democracy choose the government they want, and they ought to get it good and hard.)
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