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Mary Matalin Calls Election ‘Last Gasp of Liberals’
NewsMax ^ | 11/16/06 | Ronald Kessler

Posted on 11/16/2006 12:27:19 PM PST by stm

The Democrats’ takeover of Congress is the “last gasp of liberals,” says Mary Matalin, the Republican strategist and former aide to Vice President Dick Cheney.

“I don’t even consider the election a setback,” Matalin told me, “because it’s not just the House Democrats that won as conservatives. Joe Lieberman won, and a number of Senate candidates won who are conservatives. So I see it as more of a last gasp for what we’ve come to call liberals. It is a necessary course correction.”

Story continues below...

Matalin is currently traveling through most of the country.

“I haven’t been in any region where people who are conservatives or Republicans are dispirited,” Matalin says. “I get the gripes and righteous debate that’s going on, as it always has to, in the way that Republicans do so well, circling the wagons and shooting inward. But we will come out of our soul-searching faster because we know what we did wrong and can regroup more productively than the other side is going to be able to. That’s because they have no ground — they’re standing on smoke.”

Matalin notes that voters did not vote for candidates with a liberal agenda. In fact, according to a post-election survey by the National Taxpayers Union (NTU), GOP candidates who strayed from the principles of fiscal conservatism were more likely to alienate their base and be defeated.

Moreover, Americans for Tax Reform found that most Democrats won by dressing up as Republicans. Based on what they said on their Web sites, ATR determined that nearly all the Democrats who defeated Republicans in the House did so using a conservative message of lower taxes and accountability.

Democrats Have No Wiggle Room

Having run against Bush without a positive vision of their own, the Democrats now have “no wiggle room to do what they did in the last two cycles, which is to just not put anything seriously real on the table,” Matalin notes. “They have no agenda. So the election couldn’t possibly be a mandate for anything.”

Asked how she and her husband, Democratic strategist James Carville, interacted after the election, Matalin muses, “You know, we’re professional about it. I’m not a very good loser, but as I keep telling him, ‘show me a good loser, and I’ll show you a loser.’”

Carville, on the other hand, is a gracious loser, she says.

“That’s good, because he’s had many opportunities to do it, and he’s going to have more in the future.”

While polls have shown voters favoring Democrats, “I don’t care what the polls say about people identifying as Democrats,” She says emphatically. “That is not the same as people getting elected as liberals. So we go into 2008 with a growth in acceptance of center-right philosophy. It’s completely unchartered territory. We’ve never had this kind of election in this country in modern presidential politics. Not in the information age. You haven’t had one like this for what, 50 years? So it’s a thrilling time in history, and it’s a thrilling time in politics.”

Those conservatives who say the Bush White House has abandoned the conservative principles of Ronald Reagan forget that Republicans first have to get elected, Matalin feels. By giving seniors drug prescription coverage under Medicare, for example, Republicans won votes and fulfilled Bush’s compassionate conservative approach.

“One Reaganism was you’d rather get 80 percent of a loaf than no loaf,” she says.

“But I think the whole trajectory of compassionate conservatism was overrun by events. We’re at war, and that’s a big trajectory. The philosophy I think going forward has to be going back to basics and updating it.”

Credit Where Credit Is Due

The Bush administration has gotten “credit for nothing that goes right and blame for everything that goes wrong,” she states. “You know we have not been hit for five years. We have a booming economy. Somebody deserves credit for doing something right along the way. And I think our practice of just trashing everybody on every side, and the elite media particularly, but all of us share blame in just trashing public servants and trashing politicians and ascribing to the multitude the sins of the few.”

People in most parts of the country are “just sick of being down on everything,” Matalin feels. “It’s not in our nature; it’s not in our DNA. Some proportion of this country is chronically cynical, and they tend to live in blue epicenters, but most of the country is sort of relentlessly optimistic.”

She and her husband are in basic agreement about the election.

“It could’ve been worse if Karl Rove and Ken Mehlman hadn’t done what they did [to motivate potential Republican voters],” she says. “We would have lost 12 to 15 more seats. James agrees with that and respects what they did.”

Turning to the 2008 presidential election, “The guy or gal who comes out of the box the most hopeful and optimistic, not in a corny way, but in a realistic way, in the Reaganesque kind of way, in the happy warrior way, is going to predominate over this American hating-everything-that’s-wrong-with-us kind of way,” she says.

Mitt Romney Hangs Tough

Matalin calles Mitt Romney “a spectacular candidate.” He is “methodical, and he’s definitely got the happy warrior thing,” she says. “He’s substantive, and he’s got executive skills. And he’s 21st century, too.”

Romney’s Mormon religion will turn out to be a plus, she speculates.

“I think his religion has a value component to it that is deep and true. People don’t split hairs on what is your source of strength. They like that you have a source of strength, and you are anchored like that. You know this is not 1960, and religion didn’t even work as an issue in 1960 with John F. Kennedy.”

Rudy Giuliani presumably has people lined up who are going to overcome objections to his views on social issues like abortion, Matalin says.

“Look, we know when we don’t stand together we hang separately,” she says.

Matalin thinks Sen. John McCain believes what he says and is liked by many conservatives.

“He certainly has brought out a lot of seriously smart and good people,” Matalin says. “His challenge is to go from being the insurgent maverick to the establishment front-runner.”

Newt Gingrich has a “huge and serious following, and many are holding out for him,” she sys.

If Sen. Hillary Clinton runs for president, “She will galvanize the base, or a portion of the base, that’s for sure,” Matalin says. “But as we know, it’s not pure base all base all the time. It’s base plus. You can’t go anywhere until you’ve pinned down your base. But if you only turn out your base, it’s not enough on either side. You’ve got to grow your base. That’s what Karl did in 2000, and did significantly in 2004. And so, yes, she'll galvanize our base, but we have to get more than our base. Those voters that always make the difference, which we grew in 2004, are back in play — Hispanics, Jews, women. Just because they voted one time against Republicans does not mean for all time they are lost to conservatism. It just depends on how she goes at it and what we put up against it.”

Do Not Underestimate Hillary

At the same time, she says, “I just think conservatives should not underestimate her prowess, and they should not underestimate her ability to go to the middle the way she’s been doing. They should not underestimate how strategic that team is, and her husband is, or how hungry they are to get it. All these things add up. The Democrats might be having pre-buyer’s remorse, but she’s a very sturdy utilitarian SUV for them.”

To be sure, people may think they want a sports car in a candidate, Matalin says.

“But in the end, They gotta have somebody that’s got a record, and she does have some serious substantive stuff in there. She was so scorched by going to the liberal end. She’ll have to run in the middle, and she knows how to run a campaign.”

Ronald Kessler is chief Washington correspondent of NewsMax.com. Get his dispatches FREE sent you via e-mail. Click here now.

Editor's Notes:

Mark Steyn Says the American We Know Is Disappearing. Carl Limbacher's Blockbuster 'Hillary's Scheme' — Predicted 2008. Iran: The Great Danger — Click Here. Share Ronald Reagan’s Legacy — See The Reagan Collection! Stand With Our Troops in Iraq — Get the Hat Worn by Our Troops. Before You See Your Doctor This Year, Read This Now. The Housing Bush Will Ignite a Recession, Profit From It. Do Your Really Know Condi Rice?

Matalin is currently traveling through most of the country.

“I haven’t been in any region where people who are conservatives or Republicans are dispirited,” Matalin says. “I get the gripes and righteous debate that’s going on, as it always has to, in the way that Republicans do so well, circling the wagons and shooting inward. But we will come out of our soul-searching faster because we know what we did wrong and can regroup more productively than the other side is going to be able to. That’s because they have no ground — they’re standing on smoke.”

Matalin notes that voters did not vote for candidates with a liberal agenda. In fact, according to a post-election survey by the National Taxpayers Union (NTU), GOP candidates who strayed from the principles of fiscal conservatism were more likely to alienate their base and be defeated.

Moreover, Americans for Tax Reform found that most Democrats won by dressing up as Republicans. Based on what they said on their Web sites, ATR determined that nearly all the Democrats who defeated Republicans in the House did so using a conservative message of lower taxes and accountability.

Democrats Have No Wiggle Room

Having run against Bush without a positive vision of their own, the Democrats now have “no wiggle room to do what they did in the last two cycles, which is to just not put anything seriously real on the table,” Matalin notes. “They have no agenda. So the election couldn’t possibly be a mandate for anything.”

Asked how she and her husband, Democratic strategist James Carville, interacted after the election, Matalin muses, “You know, we’re professional about it. I’m not a very good loser, but as I keep telling him, ‘show me a good loser, and I’ll show you a loser.’”

Carville, on the other hand, is a gracious loser, she says.

“That’s good, because he’s had many opportunities to do it, and he’s going to have more in the future.”

While polls have shown voters favoring Democrats, “I don’t care what the polls say about people identifying as Democrats,” She says emphatically. “That is not the same as people getting elected as liberals. So we go into 2008 with a growth in acceptance of center-right philosophy. It’s completely unchartered territory. We’ve never had this kind of election in this country in modern presidential politics. Not in the information age. You haven’t had one like this for what, 50 years? So it’s a thrilling time in history, and it’s a thrilling time in politics.”

Those conservatives who say the Bush White House has abandoned the conservative principles of Ronald Reagan forget that Republicans first have to get elected, Matalin feels. By giving seniors drug prescription coverage under Medicare, for example, Republicans won votes and fulfilled Bush’s compassionate conservative approach.

“One Reaganism was you’d rather get 80 percent of a loaf than no loaf,” she says.

“But I think the whole trajectory of compassionate conservatism was overrun by events. We’re at war, and that’s a big trajectory. The philosophy I think going forward has to be going back to basics and updating it.”

Credit Where Credit Is Due

The Bush administration has gotten “credit for nothing that goes right and blame for everything that goes wrong,” she states. “You know we have not been hit for five years. We have a booming economy. Somebody deserves credit for doing something right along the way. And I think our practice of just trashing everybody on every side, and the elite media particularly, but all of us share blame in just trashing public servants and trashing politicians and ascribing to the multitude the sins of the few.”

People in most parts of the country are “just sick of being down on everything,” Matalin feels. “It’s not in our nature; it’s not in our DNA. Some proportion of this country is chronically cynical, and they tend to live in blue epicenters, but most of the country is sort of relentlessly optimistic.”

She and her husband are in basic agreement about the election.

“It could’ve been worse if Karl Rove and Ken Mehlman hadn’t done what they did [to motivate potential Republican voters],” she says. “We would have lost 12 to 15 more seats. James agrees with that and respects what they did.”

Turning to the 2008 presidential election, “The guy or gal who comes out of the box the most hopeful and optimistic, not in a corny way, but in a realistic way, in the Reaganesque kind of way, in the happy warrior way, is going to predominate over this American hating-everything-that’s-wrong-with-us kind of way,” she says.

Mitt Romney Hangs Tough

Matalin calles Mitt Romney “a spectacular candidate.” He is “methodical, and he’s definitely got the happy warrior thing,” she says. “He’s substantive, and he’s got executive skills. And he’s 21st century, too.”

Romney’s Mormon religion will turn out to be a plus, she speculates.

“I think his religion has a value component to it that is deep and true. People don’t split hairs on what is your source of strength. They like that you have a source of strength, and you are anchored like that. You know this is not 1960, and religion didn’t even work as an issue in 1960 with John F. Kennedy.”

Rudy Giuliani presumably has people lined up who are going to overcome objections to his views on social issues like abortion, Matalin says.

“Look, we know when we don’t stand together we hang separately,” she says.

Matalin thinks Sen. John McCain believes what he says and is liked by many conservatives.

“He certainly has brought out a lot of seriously smart and good people,” Matalin says. “His challenge is to go from being the insurgent maverick to the establishment front-runner.”

Newt Gingrich has a “huge and serious following, and many are holding out for him,” she sys.

If Sen. Hillary Clinton runs for president, “She will galvanize the base, or a portion of the base, that’s for sure,” Matalin says. “But as we know, it’s not pure base all base all the time. It’s base plus. You can’t go anywhere until you’ve pinned down your base. But if you only turn out your base, it’s not enough on either side. You’ve got to grow your base. That’s what Karl did in 2000, and did significantly in 2004. And so, yes, she'll galvanize our base, but we have to get more than our base. Those voters that always make the difference, which we grew in 2004, are back in play — Hispanics, Jews, women. Just because they voted one time against Republicans does not mean for all time they are lost to conservatism. It just depends on how she goes at it and what we put up against it.”

Do Not Underestimate Hillary

At the same time, she says, “I just think conservatives should not underestimate her prowess, and they should not underestimate her ability to go to the middle the way she’s been doing. They should not underestimate how strategic that team is, and her husband is, or how hungry they are to get it. All these things add up. The Democrats might be having pre-buyer’s remorse, but she’s a very sturdy utilitarian SUV for them.”

To be sure, people may think they want a sports car in a candidate, Matalin says.

“But in the end, They gotta have somebody that’s got a record, and she does have some serious substantive stuff in there. She was so scorched by going to the liberal end. She’ll have to run in the middle, and she knows how to run a campaign.”


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1 posted on 11/16/2006 12:27:21 PM PST by stm
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To: stm

Don't trust that these are "conservatives" who won. They're less conservative than even RINOs like McCain. Have you looked at their policy platforms? They read like Lenin and Mao got together to draft them.

Yes, some are pro-life and pro-guns, but most of their economic platforms are outright socialist. Pardon me if I don't find this something to cheer about.


2 posted on 11/16/2006 12:31:00 PM PST by OldGuard1
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To: stm

and the insurgency is in its death throes.


3 posted on 11/16/2006 12:31:25 PM PST by dmz
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To: stm

I agree with Mary. This election was simply a temper-tantrum that benefitted the Democrats. If they think they won on the "merits," they're even more moonbatty than we think they are.


4 posted on 11/16/2006 12:31:46 PM PST by JennysCool
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To: stm

There's a pony in there someplace. I think her husband has turned her into a Stepford wife.


5 posted on 11/16/2006 12:32:34 PM PST by kabar
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To: stm

shutup Mary, just shutup.


6 posted on 11/16/2006 12:33:45 PM PST by oceanview
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To: OldGuard1

She's been smokin too much of the Ganja, Mahn! Anyone who would bed down with someone the likes of her husband has to have a screw loose somewhere...


7 posted on 11/16/2006 12:35:06 PM PST by Gaffer
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To: stm

I dont give much credibility to mary Matalin. She is married to the Snakehead. That doesnt say much for her .


8 posted on 11/16/2006 12:37:00 PM PST by sgtbono2002 (The fourth estate is a fifth column.)
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I've been thinking that it was a dead cat bounce.


9 posted on 11/16/2006 12:37:39 PM PST by vollmond (Sorry, Mom, the mob has spoken!)
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To: stm

Maybe it's the last gasp for the "liberals," but conservatives don't seem even to have a party.


10 posted on 11/16/2006 12:39:41 PM PST by Sam Cree (don't mix alcopops and ufo's - absolute reality)
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To: stm

Anyone who still defends the prescription drug benefit has no credibility. Bush bent over backwards to appease the Democrats and what did he get in return? A failed presidency.


11 posted on 11/16/2006 12:39:53 PM PST by MaxFlint
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To: stm

Last gasp because soon the S will HTF, and liberalism will be both banned and treated as a mental disorder, once we rise from the ashes.


12 posted on 11/16/2006 12:41:33 PM PST by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: stm

I've been thinking we have too many rats in the white house. Can't help but wonder if Mary is one of them.


13 posted on 11/16/2006 12:42:12 PM PST by trustandobey
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To: stm

I think she's right, except for the part about the Medicare drug plan winning votes. I haven't seen any evidence that it did anything except piss off fiscal conservatives. The Democrats ran against it anyway as not going far enough because those mean, special-interest-defending Republicans didn't give the government authority to negotiate drug prices. We can never take issues off the table by spending more government money, because Democrats will always outbid us.


14 posted on 11/16/2006 12:43:33 PM PST by Dems_R_Losers (The people have spoken.......the housecleaning starts NOW!!)
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To: sgtbono2002
I dont give much credibility to mary Matalin. She is married to the Snakehead. That doesnt say much for her

I agree. For our own safety, she should be kept as far away from the Republican leadership as possible.

15 posted on 11/16/2006 12:44:26 PM PST by Niteranger68 (Big winners of election 2006: Democrats, terrorists, MSM, Hollywood, anti-war protestors, etc.)
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To: stm

Let me elaborate on these "conservatives".

Claire McCaskill: Embroyonic stem cell proponent, minimum wage backer, tax hiker, opposes ID for voting, wants campaign donations limited, etc.
Jon Tester: A nutty organic farmer, supports the same sort of stuff. How an pro-choice hippie got elected in Montana (the only thing conservative about him is gun rights) is beyond me.
Bernie Sanders: Socialist. Nuff said.

Need I keep going? Sheldon Whitehouse made Chafee look like Reagan. Sherrod Brown had a liberal rating of 84.2%. Amy Klobuchar, Webb, etc -- these are what you call "conservatives"? Nonsense. It's the same in the house. These people are dyed in the wool liberals. Apparently they've even pulled that wool over some conservatives' eyes.


16 posted on 11/16/2006 12:44:43 PM PST by OldGuard1
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To: stm

The Dem "tsunami" didn't even turnover as many seats as the average midterm for a six-year President. They "crawled" across the finish line...literally.


17 posted on 11/16/2006 12:45:33 PM PST by ez ("Abashed the devil stood and felt how awful goodness is." - Milton)
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To: OldGuard1
Have you looked at their policy platforms?

How many voters did that?

Here in IN, they ran as a conservative against an incumbent conservative.

" I don't like either, but let's throw the guy out that's in there, cause there ain't no difference"....was the sentiment

18 posted on 11/16/2006 12:48:59 PM PST by digger48
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To: ez
They "crawled" across the finish line...literally.

Yes, and only with the MSM pulling out every lying cheating trick they could think of.

Much more slanted coverage than any election in recent years and this is all they could do?

Libs' power is going down with the DINO media.

19 posted on 11/16/2006 12:49:03 PM PST by what's up
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To: dmz

Yeah, it sounds like she's making fun of that meme.


20 posted on 11/16/2006 12:49:33 PM PST by Cyclopean Squid (Authoritarianism depends on lack of information. Totalitarianism depends on misinformation.)
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