SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (507027)12/10/2003 1:01:29 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 769670
 
AMERICAN CONSERVATISM
Left Behind
Liberals imitate the retro-right.
BY JAMES TARANTO
Monday, December 8, 2003 12:01 a.m. EST
Divided government was long the rule in Washington; between 1969 and 2002 the president's party controlled both houses of Congress less than 20% of the time. Is this a new era? Has the Republican Party achieved a durable governing majority?

We'll be closer to an answer next November, but here's a possible leading indicator: Democrats and liberals are beginning to sound like a beleaguered minority. They are employing many of the same complaints and tropes that Republicans and conservatives used during their decades in the political wilderness:

• Media bias. Left-wing authors like Eric Alterman, Al Franken and Joe Conason have done quite well with books arguing that the media actually slant rightward. On its face, this claim seems risible. Sure, conservatives have Fox News Channel, talk radio, the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal, and a variety of small magazines and blogs, but liberals have almost everything else: ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, the New York Times and most other major newspapers, not to mention (your tax dollars at work) PBS and NPR.

Yet the left's anxiety is well founded. While liberalism still dominates the media, it no longer monopolizes them. Both commercial and journalistic competition are likely to push the media to the right. The success of Fox News Channel has shown that there is a demand for conservative-friendly news, while talk radio and the Internet have given voice to the right's longstanding frustration about media bias. Publishers, editors, broadcast executives and producers can't help but notice the erosion of their market share and public esteem.

At the same time, Republican power in Washington means that reporters, whatever their leanings, have to cultivate GOP sources in order to get the stories that matter. The journalists who are most successful will be those who best understand the reigning political philosophy, and they can be expected at least to treat conservatives and Republicans with fairness and respect.

• The deficit. Newt Gingrich's Contract With America promised "to restore fiscal responsibility to an out-of-control Congress." But the GOP majority has been far from frugal. In fact, it was Senate Democrats, joined by only a few Republicans, who successfully filibustered a pork-laden energy bill last month, and who tried but failed to stop the GOP's vast expansion of Medicare.

This role reversal leads one to think that a party's attitude toward spending is a function less of ideology than of political power. All else being equal, the party that controls Congress will be far more free-spending than the minority party, because the party in power gets to decide how to spend money, and it gets the political credit from the beneficiaries of government largesse. This is hardly cheering to those of us who would like to see government shrink, but it does appear to be a political fact of life.

• Isolationism. Why did the bipartisan unity that prevailed immediately after the Sept. 11 attacks prove so short-lived? Partly because of legitimate differences of opinion over whether to expand the war on terror to Iraq, but also in part because the Democratic Party's minority status has strengthened the hand of the party's McGovernite isolationists.

Democrats since Vietnam have always had difficulty dealing with national security, but between Sept. 11, 2001, and Nov. 5, 2002, they mostly kept their differences with the Bush administration within the bounds of reason. On the latter date, however, the Democrats lost their last redoubt, the Senate majority, either because of or in spite of their accommodationist approach.

The loss of the Senate stoked the frustrations of the Democratic left and lent plausibility to the argument that foreign-policy bipartisanship is a losing strategy for Democrats. Howard Dean became the presidential front-runner by tapping this anger, and the other candidates, to varying degrees, have followed along, becoming harsh critics of U.S. foreign policy.

The political calculation seems to be that military victory will help the president, so the Democrats' only chance is to hope for quagmire or even defeat. Yet even if things go badly in Iraq between now and November, it's not clear that this will redound to the opposition party's benefit. George McGovern, after all, ran against an unpopular war and carried one state. If the Democrats had actively opposed President Bush on foreign policy, they might have done even worse in 2002 than they did. By doing so now, they may be setting themselves up for a big loss in 2004.

• Judicial activism. Democratic hostility to the Supreme Court in the wake of the Bush v. Gore decision was so intense that it called to mind the "impeach Earl Warren" movement of the 1950s and '60s. But the cry of "judicial activism" had been heard from the left before, in response to Rehnquist Court rulings vindicating property rights and limiting Congress's power vis-à-vis the states.

Yet these rulings were rather narrow, and it's obvious that what really scares liberal Democrats is the prospect that the court will roll back past liberal judicial activism. They're right to worry. Had the Democratic Senate confirmed Robert Bork in 1987, it's a near certainty that the Supreme Court would have overturned Roe v. Wade five years later. Nor would a Justice Bork have written two sweeping opinions in favor of gay rights (Roemer v. Evans in 1996 and Lawrence v. Texas this year), as his understudy, Justice Anthony Kennedy, did.

Liberal Democrats portray conservative jurists as ideological extremists, but if abortion rights and gay rights are "mainstream" positions, wouldn't they ultimately prevail if left to the democratic process? Perhaps, but social liberals would no longer be able to impose the more extreme and unpopular elements of their agenda, such as the legalization of partial-birth abortion and same-sex marriage. This explains the Democrats' desperate rearguard tactic of filibustering conservative nominees who command the support of a majority of senators.

All this will change, of course, if President Bush loses or the Democrats retake the Senate. But if Mr. Bush is re-elected and his party extends its congressional majorities, we can expect the liberals of tomorrow to sound ever more like the conservatives of yesterday. The only question is whether they can continue calling themselves "progressive" and keep a straight face.
Mr. Taranto is a columnist for and editor of OpinionJournal.com.



To: calgal who wrote (507027)12/10/2003 1:01:38 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 769670
 
The Time Is Now
While Democrats fight, the president organizes.
The Medicare bill that President Bush signed into law yesterday will show up in lots of ads once the presidential campaign season truly gets under way next year. But right now, the president's political strategists are involved in an even more important campaign.
For many months, the Bush campaign has been working hard to match the get-out-the-vote power — now called "voter contact" — that heavy labor-union support gives Democrats. The big unions have vowed to put on their most extensive effort ever to mobilize voters against Bush in 2004.

In addition, for the first time, Democratic candidates will have powerful help from new Democratic support groups like America Coming Together. Funded with $10 million from zillionaire George Soros — who has said he would spend every penny he had if it would guarantee the defeat of the president — America Coming Together will focus on voter contact in key competitive states.

So it is imperative that Bush get going now. Not in January, not at convention time, but now. (Not long ago, the Washington Post ran a lead story about Bush's voter-contact efforts headlined "Election Is Now For Bush Campaign: Early Efforts Aim To Amass Voters" — as if an effort to counter months of Bush-bashing by nine Democratic presidential candidates was somehow "early.")

In some ways, it's surprising that the Bush campaign is still a relatively low-profile affair. In months past, some observers wondered whether Bush might try to replay the reelection strategy of Bill Clinton. Nearly a year and a half before the 1996 election, according to former Clinton political adviser Dick Morris, Clinton okayed a massive advertising campaign.

"Week after week, month after month, from early July 1995 more or less continually until election day in '96, we bombarded the public with ads," Morris wrote in his memoir Behind the Oval Office. "This unprecedented campaign was the key to success."

When inside-the-Clinton-camp antagonists like Harold Ickes argued that nobody in 1996 would remember ads that aired in 1995, Morris "countered by predicting that if we brought legislative issues into every American's home through ads, the Republican issues would be dead before the race even started."

Clinton sided with Morris and soon became "the day-to-day operation director of our TV-ad campaign. He worked over every script, watched each ad, ordered changes in every visual presentation, and decided which ads would run when and where."

Now, that wasn't exactly legal — in 1997, the Post's Bob Woodward, with an almost touching innocence, reported that the ads might have violated "strict spending limits faced by presidential candidates." And in fact, they did — but they worked. Just ask Bob Dole.

Several months ago, a reporter brought up the Clinton strategy with a member of the Bush circle. If Clinton was running ads in July '95 — well, was Bush planning something similar in July '03? The person close to Bush dismissed the idea completely. Not gonna happen, he said.

Perhaps surprisingly, one person who fully agrees with Bush's decision not to imitate Clinton is Dick Morris. "In Clinton's case, there weren't going to be any developments which would save him," Morris says. "The economy wasn't going to get better; it was already good. There wasn't a war that was going to work out okay, one hopes. The only thing that was really going to change in the Clinton administration was the perception of him."

With Bush, on the other hand, "the reality is changing," Morris says. "Bush needed there to be more positive reality before he could advertise. He needed to have something to say." Now, Morris believes, Bush has that something. "I think that now it would make a great deal of sense for him to be advertising the prescription drug benefit and the increasingly improving economic news."

And, of course, Bush can run as many ads as he wants, having opted out of the federal campaign-finance system and its "strict spending limits." The reformers will fret, of course, but they've been fretting all along — and have far less room to criticize Bush now that Howard Dean and John Kerry have opted out of the system, too.

A Bush ad campaign would be a twofer. On one hand, it would highlight Bush's accomplishments (He can ram through a bad Medicare bill over the objections of his conservative base!) On the other hand, it would emphasize that Democrats have been obstructing him every step of the way.

One of the main issues of the coming campaign will be Democratic efforts to derail the Bush agenda, whether it be energy legislation, judiciary nominations, or malpractice reform. No single issue would be a major winner for Republicans, but together they constitute a pattern of Democratic negativity that may turn off voters.

They are also perfect subjects for negative ads. And there are a few former Democratic senators, defeated in 2002, who can attest to that.

The Bush air campaign will be especially needed as the Democratic presidential primaries draw near. Bush's aspiring challengers will be all over TV in key states attacking not only each other, but the president as well.

"I think it's important for Bush to engage in ads to offset that," says Morris. And now would be a good time to start.