Posted on 09/19/2002 9:05:04 AM PDT by MadIvan
Mark Steyn says the Democrats are making a hash of the election campaign, but Bush is squandering his opportunities
Aside from the anniversary and the big UN speech, last week also saw Primary Day up here and in 11 other states, which means the parties candidates have now been selected and were into the election campaign proper. Hows it going to go? To be honest, I havent a clue. So I consulted the experts.
From the New York Times of 1 September: Domestic Concerns Take Center Stage In Congress Races, by Adam Nagourney. But, then again, from the New York Times of 6 September: With Focus Shifting To Iraq, Domestic Issues Fade, by Adam Nagourney.
On the one hand, as Adam Nagourney (1 September model) argues, The fight for control of Congress is revolving this Labor Day more around domestic than foreign concerns, with candidates battling over corporate abuses, prescription drug costs and Social Security rather than the threat of terrorism or the prospect of a war against Iraq. The emphasis on these domestic issues at what is traditionally the start of the general election season would seem to give an advantage to the Democratic party....
On the other, as Adam Nagourney (6 September model) counters, Events abroad, rather than the domestic issues pushed by Democrats this summer, could dominate the nations political discussion for easily half of the general election campaign this fall. Several Republicans said today that the focus on Iraq would serve the political needs of their party going into the close Congressional elections....
What happened between 1 and 6 September is that the Democratic party woke up and realised it had been suckered. Ever since the Afghan campaign wound down the best part of a year ago, President Bush has been talking about regime change in Iraq. Or, to be more accurate, hes talked about how he has no plans for regime change in Iraq on my desk. This may well be true. They could be on the sideboard, or in the filing cabinet, or stashed behind the coffee percolator. My own hunch is that theyre rolled up in the umbrella-stand. At first, in the absence of anything exciting on the war front, all those poll-tested, focus-grouped Democratic issues prescription-drug plans for seniors, mandatory federal bicycling-helmet regulations, whatever seemed likely to fill the gap, as the first Mr Nagourney so persuasively argued.
But, instead, as Bush carried on insisting that his desk remained free of war plans, Democrats were unable to resist piling on and started huffing that hed jolly well better not think about invading Iraq without getting congressional approval and going to the UN and answering a number of troubling questions party bigwigs claimed to have about the whole business. By this time, the President had gone off to play golf, leaving Democratic senators to hog the airwaves week in week out with their various concerns about the administrations policy on Iraq. With Mr Bush temperamentally disinclined to use the bully pulpit, the Dems seized the pulpit and started bullying him.
And then, round about Labor Day, they wised up: theyd spent so much time yakking about Saddam that all their issues had dropped off the front page.
Now, as readers may recall, I wanted Bush to invade Iraq by 11 September. Or even on 11 September. Instead of all that soft-focus moping, it would have been a lot better to see Don Rumsfeld and General Franks in a Pentagon ops room moving flags around the sandbox. I know the Iraq wars under way unofficially the no-fly zone seems to have been extended to any facility the USAF and RAF have a yen to bomb but, like a Broadway show in previews, its the official opening that counts, at least in political terms. So ten months after the liberation of Kabul were still sitting around discussing what to do for an encore. Mark Helprin, the novelist and sometime Republican speechwriter, wrote in Mondays Wall Street Journal that the President has failed the test of September 11. His analysis touched on some themes familiar to these pages (Bushs inability to be honest about the enemy, his continued coddling of the Saudis) and came to pretty much the same conclusion as your correspondent that the President has squandered his opportunity and lost the momentum.
Its fair to say that, among those of us on the Right, this is still a minority view. Take Andrew Sullivan, for example. It seems clear to me in retrospect, he wrote the other day, that Bushs summer strategy has been really, really smart. Bushs summer strategy was to take the summer off. If I follow the argument correctly, its that, by doing so, he allowed the Dems to overplay their hand, as the wily old fox knew they would. It is not necessary to agree with this theory to appreciate nevertheless that, up against the current Democratic leadership, even Bushs lethargy is a potentially lethal weapon.
So now, instead of fighting Saddam, Bush and the Democrats are fighting over the calendar. Its not so much that the Democrats are opposed to the war but that theyre opposed to talking about the war, at least before election day in November. People are going to vote on the kitchen-table issues weve talked about for 18 months, maintains Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe. War, terrorism, national security, nukes are all very well but its simply too late to pencil em in for this season: the programmes already been drawn up and were frightfully sorry but theres no room for Iraq. We cant let it replace the domestic agenda, says Ted Kennedy, whose political priority right now is subsidising outpatient drug coverage for Medicare beneficiaries.
Out on the hustings, Democratic candidates glide past the war question like the Queen passing one of those mooning Maoris: keep smiling and pretend nothings happening. In this, they have the considerable assistance of the press. The American Prospect gave Minnesota leftie Senator Paul Wellstone the full Monica the other day in a drooling campaign profile broken up by sub-headings such as The Draw of Conscience. I believe in Pauls conscience, says Karen Jeffords, a mental-health worker. The senator, in return, pledges his commitment to federal funds for light-rail transportation. Pauls conscience on the controversial light-rail issue seems to be in cracking form, but where does it stand on the war? Whoops, gotta run.
My guess is hes opposed to it, but his party would rather he didnt say. If Senator Conscience comes out against it, hes likely to lose to the Republicans. If he comes out in favour, enough of his progressive base will defect to the Green party to throw the election to the Republicans anyway.
Back when Bush had his feet up back at the ranch watching Austin Powers, the Democrats were telling anyone whod listen that the President needed congressional approval in order to go to war with Iraq. This is, as it happens, nonsense. But it never occurred to them that, after a couple of weeks of their whining, Bush would go, Yeah, sure, why not? Ill swing by Congress in the next couple of days and see whether youre ready to approve or not. Most Democratic senators voted against the last Gulf war. A majority would like to vote against this one, but preferably not just before they have to face the electorate. So now the partys frantically backpedalling: good heavens, we know we said you need congressional approval, but whats the hurry? How about if we leave it till December or the New Year? The new line is that, by bringing it to the legislature as they demanded, Bush is now politicising the war.
The concerns we have about the politicisation of this whole issue are ones that still exist, frets Tom Daschle, the Senate majority leader and putative Democratic presidential candidate. His colleague Joe Biden is equally concerned. Some issues are so serious, so important to the United States, that they should be taken as far out of the realm of politics as possible, he intones portentously. This is one of those issues.
Youd have to have a heart of stone not to be howling with laughter at this. Usually, when they call for something to be taken out of politics, theyre demanding that the Democrat line on, say, abortion or racial quotas be accepted as one of lifes eternal verities and the very subject retired from political contention. But in this instance what Biden means is that the Democrats should not be forced to take a line at all: the President should protect them from the political consequences of having to reveal their views. Some issues are so serious, so important to the United States that they cant be discussed in the national legislature, mainly because they might reveal the yawning chasm between me and the American people. The eve of an election campaign is no time to start forcing politicians to make our views on major issues known to voters. An election ought to be about light-rail subsidies and which Senate candidate has the more stylish toupee.
Hang on, say the Dems, Bush only wants a war because its an election year. As Dick Cheney pointed out, Every other year is an election year and you cant take half the calendar and put it off-limits. But Im sure even now the New York Times is commissioning Arthur Schlesinger Jr or some other venerable Ivy League Democrat flack to pen a learned essay arguing that the precedents of Americas entries into the first and second world wars suggest that it would be grossly unconstitutional to go into battle in an even-numbered year.
But, if that doesnt stick, some congressional Democrats are saying they wont be able to make a decision about Iraq until they hear what the United Nations thinks. The President had fun with that one: It seems to me that if youre representing the United States, you ought to be making a decision on whats best for the United States, he said last Friday. If I were running for office, Im not sure how Id explain to the American people saying, Vote for me, and, oh, by the way, on a matter of national security, I think Im going to wait for somebody else to act.
Okay, if delegating your responsibilities to Kofi Annan wont fly, its time to fall back on a sure-fire favourite. There was nothing new in President Bushs speech today to the United Nations General Assembly, wrote William Saletan in Slate. There was no compelling new evidence, wrote Maureen Dowd in the New York Times. Where have I heard that before? Oh, right: 1998/1999, the standard Clintonites defence of the impeachment era. Theres nothing new here. Weve heard it all before works well enough when its interns, cigars and semen, but it doesnt play quite so well with chemical weapons facilities and nuclear capability. Its true that much of what Bush says could have been said four years ago. In fact, President Clinton did say it four years ago. The difference is he didnt want to do anything about it.
Meanwhile, every ten minutes or so, the funereal Senator Daschle pops up on TV and announces gloomily that he still has a number of questions about Iraq that the President needs to answer. It must be quite a number, because, no matter how many answers the President gives, for Daschle there are always a number of questions that still remain. Actually, the only remaining question is how much longer the Democrats most visible spokesman can afford to go on making himself look like a total idiot. What question does he still need answered? Whats the capital of Iraq?? Daschle fancies himself presidential material. If so, hes supposed to have answers, not just endless unspecified questions.
The Democrat line on Iraq boils down to We urgently need a debate but not for the next few months. The longer you stick to that, the more obvious it is what you really believe. And, even taken at face value, its preposterous: if Democrats really have no views on the defence of the Republic, why exactly are they running for national office anyway?
But Dems dont need to be smart, just lucky. If Bush is planning to be at war by 5 November, the GOP could do surprisingly well. But, if we have another two months of unending drumbeat but no actual fighting, whos to say a bored public wont drift back to Kennedy and Wellstones issues? November 2002 still seems most likely to preserve the 50/50 split in the American electorate.
Thats why the laughable cowardice of the Democrat position makes Bushs inertia, faintheartedness or (as Helprin sees it) irresoluteness all the more frustrating. The party is vulnerable in this new world. If Bush were to use the bully pulpit, he could change the dynamics of American politics. Instead, over these last six months, hes allowed the culture to slip back into its default mode which is to say fuzzily Democratic. The Dems may not benefit from that this November, but, if Bush doesnt get serious about this war, time is on their side.
His sons, I might add, are worse.
Regards, Ivan
If you want to see what government run health care looks like, as a vet or a retiree.
I predicted here months ago that any attack on Iraq would be a long time coming. To understand why, you have to have figured out what's really going on, which Steyn obviously hasn't.
According to the Vice President, in his MTP interview the other day, the evidence suggests that Saddam was behind 9/11. Well, either that is true or it isn't true: those are the only two possibilities. So, what if it's true? Would Saddam Hussein conduct an attack on the United States on the scale of 9/11 (at minimum, the destruction of the WTC and the Capitol), even behind the veil of terrorism, without some back-end security to deter US finger-pointing and the attendant retaliation? No. What would that back-end security have to be? Well, it would presumably involve WMD -- this is the very scenario that we are using to justify regime change. But he doesn't have nukes. To the best of our knowledge, Saddam has only three WMD at his disposal at the moment: anthrax, botulinum toxin and VX nerve gas.
What happened last year, right after sleeper agents armed with box cutters took down the WTC?
Have you figured it out yet?
Your reasoning is all over the place, and again it assumes the semblance of a rational plan on Saddam's part. I'll add another element which indicates that Saddam is not entirely playing with a full deck - remember how he tried to get President Bush 41 assassinated. If the plot was discovered, he knew he could expect a pounding - he was fortunate that Weird Bill was in power. Yet he did it anyway.
Everything you are saying that exonerates Saddam involves him being a rational world leader. I am trying to tell you, you can impress yourself with all the logical webs you like, but that simply isn't the truth.
Did Saddam have something to do with 9/11 - given the meeting with Atta, and the fact that Saddam has given money to Al Qaeda, he certainly winked at it. That is sufficient reason to take him down.
Is he developing nuclear weapons? If we believe the defectors and the pre-bribed Scott Ritter, certainly.
Does he support terrorism? At the very least to the tune of $25,000 per suicide bomber family.
He needs to be disposed of. I am frankly surprised by how many "conservatives" can't see that having this fellow around is not a good idea.
Ivan
LOL! In a rational world, C-SPAN would hire Steyn to translate all comments by congress critters.
Saddam has survived invading Kuwait, the attempted destruction of the WTC in '93, the attempted assassination of Bush 41, and the successful destruction of the WTC and attempted destruction of the Capitol in 2001, because he has WMD -- and because he's a wily character who understands just how far he can push his luck. He will get out of this alive. Nobody has ever taken down a regime armed with WMD, so if we can get him out, it will be a first. But, even if we are successful, we aren't going to kill him. Watch.
Yes, I believe we could go it alone against Iraq and accomplish the task handily, but only at the cost of a huge drain on our resources. If the U.S. is saddled with the whole cost (something like $200 billion) of the operation, as well as provision of the 30,000,000 or more security forces that a post Saddam Iraq will require for the first several years, then our ability to prosecute action on other fronts in the WOT will be greatly compromised.
What a great line...
But won't the start of the operation against Iraq validate Steyn's judgment that such action is necessary? Which would mean that his last 2 pieces haven't been such "clunkers" after all. Funny to see some on this thread allude to Steyn's alleged "impatience for war", as though he's merely lusting for blood.
I can't help remembering the 2000 campaign where someone as lame as Gore closed rapidly on Bush by saying the health of the economy will be on the ballot. Bush had no response, even though there were some clear signs starting to emerge that the economy wasn't looking so hot. What you see as being sly looks to me like typical Bush cluelessness. I hope you're right and I'm wrong, but campaign 2000 is not a comforting precedent.
I was actually quite impressed and happy with Blair to quickly get on board with the War on Terror. The British have actually shown themselves to be our staunch allies. You see that at the top (Blair) and at the grass roots level. On 9-11 the shops in the UK were full of 9-11 memorials in which a two minutes of silence was observed for 9-11 victims.....
Now, if you listen to the LIBERAL media, you'd never know any of that.....
Thank goodness for FreeRepublic.com !!
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