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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: lurqer who wrote (36190)1/25/2004 10:20:04 AM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Looks like there will be no antiwar candidate come November. The war party contols both the Democrats and Republicans even if the former are a little less bellicose than the latter.

The hard truth is that the US elites will not fundamentally change their imperialistic ways unless and until the costs in blood and treasure go far beyond what we have seen to date



Out of Position: Where Will the 'Antiwar' Vote Go?

by Anthony Gancarski
On Monday evening, as the returns from the Iowa Presidential Caucuses flooded in via CNN, C-SPAN, and other like outlets, it became all too clear to the casual viewer what the ramifications were. That Howard Dean, so-called "antiwar" candidate, had played himself. That MoveOn.Org made very little impact in the heartland; Senators Kerry and Edwards, who won and placed respectively, had gotten no love from the Soros-backed grassroots internet outlet. And finally, that those hundreds of thousands of protesters, energized in righteous fury against the US invasion of Iraq in San Francisco, DC, and New York City, meant next to nothing in the end.

But is [was?] Howard Dean even "antiwar"? Readers of this column know better. When the Vermont Governor saw fit, he kowtowed to AIPAC, advocating a financial package for Israel that exceeded even the stated goals of Pentagon hand Paul Wolfowitz, for whom a day doesn't pass without him being demonized, incantation-style, in one quarter or another. US to Liberia? Fine with the good Doctor. And Iraq? As Dean said in July, "now that we're there, we're stuck." If such positions qualify as antiwar, then Heinz ketchup is an organic vegetable.

Despite such bald refutations of the idea that Dean is anything other than a politician willing to project American power into any crevice of the world incapable of defending itself against such incursions, lefty outlets echoed the corporate media assertion that Dean's "viability" was a function of his opposition to the US invasion of Iraq. But as Iowa indicates, Maple-Powered Howard's viability is every bit as suspect as his antiwar credentials. Or his endorsements – $20k per month for an endorsement to Carol Moseley-Braun, of all people? Wouldn't Marion Barry have come cheaper? Can we believe that any endorsement Dr. Dean gets is legitimate?

And don't look for things to get any better for Howard, who crumbles under pressure in a way not seen in American politics since Democratic frontrunner Senator Ed Muskie melted down in 1972. Not in this millennium has a Democratic candidate for any office, much less the highest in the land, botched an MLK Day appearance in the way Dr. Dean did in Des Moines. To summarize: unsolicited, the putative frontrunner for the nomination stormed the event with media in tow, and reportedly demanded to address the crowd; denied the microphone, Dean and his considerable entourage stalked out, blaming the attendant media corps for blowing his big chance to ride the King legacy to yet another overblown soundbite, telling the press to "get a new life." What's next? Will Dean stalk into the Holocaust museum in Washington DC, demanding to read Allen Ginsberg's "Kaddish"? Oy gevalt!

Gentle reader, please excuse my scabrous tone here. But I tried to warn people, gently, firmly, with varying shades of delicacy, that Howard Dean was a hack, incapable of surviving the hurly-burly of a contested Presidential campaign. I warned of impending Muskie moments to people who should know better, in emails that went unresponded to, in pieces that ended up rejected. And now, just when the scoreboard is turned on to count the delegates, those Muskie moments are coming, one after one, like trembling puppies tumbling from a bitch's womb.

The ramifications of such, for those who still oppose US action in Iraq, Afghanistan, and beyond, are grim. With more than nine months until the US Presidential election, we are already left with no "antiwar" candidate [unless Dennis Kucinich, he of the plan to sacrifice all native-born nubiles' maidenheads to the tender mercies of the UN, tickles your fancy]. Failing a cataclysm befalling the two-party political firmament, we will be left with the sonorously stentorian cadences of Kerry, Edwards, and the delusional General Clark to provide the counterargument to the Bush/Cheney foreign policy Washington is locked into for the duration. In this election year, optimism is a fool's prerogative and a simpleton's sanctuary; the safe bet is that America as we once knew it is dead, buried, decaying under silt.

And that, loyal readers, is the true State of the Union. But for those interested, I should add that my analysis of Bush's 2003 SOTU is online. G'wan and read the damned thing, already, and peace be with you!

        



To: lurqer who wrote (36190)1/25/2004 10:33:24 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Pre-emptive Politics

________________________

THE BUSH AGENDA

The president seizes the Democrats’ issues, but not without some political risk

By John J. Pitney Jr.

is professor of government at Claremont McKenna College and author of "The Art of Political Warfare."

January 25, 2004 - "Newsday"

Just as he carried out a pre-emptive military strike in Iraq, President George W. Bush is waging pre-emptive political war against his opponents. He has invaded some of their favorite issues, making it much harder for them to attack his record.

In doing so, Bush is behaving more like former President Bill Clinton than partisans of either man would like to admit. But, as Clinton learned, this potentially powerful strategy also can leave the president at risk, even within his own party.

The pre-emptive attack was much in evidence in the State of the Union address last week. Bush emphasized his education-reform plan, laying claim to an issue that the Democrats had long "owned." He noted the enactment of the Medicare prescription-drug bill and called for measures to curb health care costs.

In these cases, Democrats can scarcely label Bush as a "do-nothing" president. They do complain that these measures do not go far enough, and that the administration has botched the follow-through. To many voters, though, these criticisms may sound like nitpicking.

On immigration, the president called for "bringing millions of hard-working men and women out from the shadows of American life" through passage of a temporary worker program. By proposing a plan that is far more lenient than most observers had expected, Bush is undercutting the Democratic charge that Republicans are anti-immigrant. The political benefits could be substantial. Even if his proposal increases his Hispanic vote just a little, that could be enough to solidify his hold on Florida, Nevada and Arizona, and it could tip New Mexico into the GOP column.

This pre-emptive strategy is consistent with his 2000 campaign, where Bush ran as a "different kind of Republican" who spoke of"compassionate conservatism." Terrorism and Iraq eclipsed these themes for quite a while, but Bush is giving them a renewed emphasis as the election campaign begins. Accordingly, his State of the Union speech also mentioned such matters as job training and faith-based initiatives.

In the 1990s, Bill Clinton pre-empted Republican positions on issues ranging from balanced budgets to welfare reform. Dick Morris, his political consultant, coined the term "triangulation" for the practice of positioning the president above and between right-wing Republicans and left-wing Democrats. If Bush's State of the Union address had a shape, it would be a triangle.

The Clinton comparison raises a puzzle. Clinton closed the deficit, ended the federal entitlement to welfare and won enactment of the North American Free Trade Agreement. On the issues, Republicans should have liked the guy. Instead, they hated him with a sputtering fury. Bush provokes similar anger among the liberals who cluster in the states that Al Gore carried in 2000. Since television election maps colored these states in blue, we might refer to the Bush-haters as "blue-hots."

Why all the heat? For one thing, many blue-hots think Bush cheated his way into the White House, just as many right-wing Republicans thought Clinton had won atop a cavalcade of lies. And pre-emption itself is a source of anger. Party loyalists really do develop a sense of ownership about issues, and they resent it when the other side grabs their turf.

More important, though, triangulators depict the other party as beyond the pale. Clinton repeatedly referred to Republican leaders as extremists. He loved to maneuver them into positions where they would reinforce this image.

According to an internal memo that Morris later published in his memoirs, the Oklahoma City bombing "afforded an important political opportunity." Morris and other political consultants saw political gain in the "Extremist Issue vs. Republicans." They urged Clinton to use "cultural differences with the radical right to separate it from the norms of American culture" just as "Nixon stressed patriotism and mainstream values against the culture of demonstrators." Clinton proposed actions to curb right-wing hate groups and their access to weapons. When Republicans opposed such plans, they inadvertently linked themselves to violent crackpots.

Bush is taking a tough political approach toward Democrats who oppose him on Iraq and terrorism. Late last year, the Republican National Committee ran a television ad saying: "Some are now attacking the president for attacking the terrorists. Some call for us to retreat, putting our national security in the hands of others."

The ad enraged the blue-hots. Nevertheless, Bush alluded to the same message in his State of the Union address, saying that some lawmakers "did not support the liberation of Iraq." In an obvious jab at Howard Dean, he added: "America will never seek a permission slip to defend the security of our country."

Bush may be reaping political benefits just as Clinton did, but triangulation has a cost. In 1998, GOP anger climaxed in impeachment. The effort backfired on Republicans, but it scarred Clinton's reputation and diminished his political effectiveness. While no impeachment looms on Bush's horizon, blue-hot antagonism has made it harder for him to secure Democratic congressional votes.

And triangulation necessarily involves some distance from one's own party on Capitol Hill. Liberal Democratic lawmakers seethed when Clinton compromised with Republicans. Now some conservatives are faulting Bush for the growth of government spending and the expanding federal deficit. The president's proposal for a manned mission to Mars does not necessarily belong to one party or the other, but some on the right worry that a visit to the Red Planet could permanently make America a land of Red Ink.

To some extent, GOP criticisms may help Bush's image by making him appear more moderate. On the other hand, they fuel public concerns about rising deficits. They also make it harder for Bush to run against "Democratic overspending." That charge, a staple of GOP rhetoric for years, is now in danger of flunking the giggle test.

Clinton supported gay rights, but disappointed Democratic liberals when he signed the Defense of Marriage Act. Conversely, Bush emphasizes his support for the traditional family, but his stand on the issue has frustrated conservative Republicans. Though his State of the Union address suggested that it might someday be necessary to pass a constitutional amendment against same-sex marriage, he has not explicitly endorsed such a measure.

In dealing with his party, Bush has two advantages that President Clinton lacked. First, he is a wartime commander-in-chief. Many Republicans defer to him on national security issues, and they close ranks with him when Democrats attack.

Second, he has helped Republicans at the voting booth. In 1994, Democrats lost both chambers of Congress for the first time in 40 years, and many of them blamed Clinton's political bungling. Two years later, some blamed him for their failure to retake Congress, saying that he had hoarded party money for his re-election instead of helping Democratic congressional candidates. In 2002, by contrast, Bush helped the GOP increase its House majority and regain control of the Senate.

Of course, Republican majorities are in Bush's best interest. If Democrats came back to power in Congress, they would use their control of committees to make life miserable for the administration. At that point, he would face the revenge of the blue-hots.

Copyright © 2004, Newsday, Inc.



To: lurqer who wrote (36190)1/25/2004 10:34:58 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 89467
 
Re..."Recently we were regaled with the statement that "The coalition has broken the back of resistance".

It seems we are dealing with a Hydra.... so..
What is one back among many..........?

pantheon.org