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 : Did Slick Boink Monica? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Catfish who wrote (17284)7/23/1998 11:45:00 PM
From: lazarre  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20981
 
<<<<Why conservatives hate
Clinton
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

FORGET THE SCANDALS. RIGHT-WINGERS FEAR THE
PRESIDENT BECAUSE HE'S SAVING THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY.

Did you ever wonder why so many conservatives
seem to hate President Clinton so much? After all,
this is a president often described (and derided) as a
crypto-conservative, a Republicrat, an opportunist
who has betrayed the ancient precepts of
Democratic liberalism. Superficial as they may be,
those epithets contain enough truth that Clinton
ought to bemuse Republicans more than enrage
them. But enrage them he does, not because of his
sundry alleged scandals or even because he kicked
Republican butt in two consecutive elections.
Actually, whether they realize it or not,
right-wingers hate Clinton because they fear him.
As the more candid conservatives have confessed,
they're frightened by his political skills, although
that isn't what scares them most. What truly spooks
Clinton's enemies is watching him reanimate a
Democratic Party they quite reasonably had
pronounced dead, or at least brain-dead.

After years of infuriating his party's various tribes
while campaigning and governing, Clinton is
consciously attempting to create a new Democratic
consensus. Perhaps it is meant to be his presidential
legacy to the party he has mostly ignored. He did
begin this project during his first national campaign,
then abandoned it amid the chaos and
disappointment of his first term. Although he
contrived to disarm the Republicans of their
favorite racial "wedge issues" of crime and welfare,
he failed to put across an appealing alternative
program. Now, against the Democratic propensity
for ideological feuding and weepy nostalgia, Clinton
is promoting a modernized party of the center-left,
prepared to compete politically without abandoning
progressive values. Should he succeed, he will have
strengthened the party he has been accused of
destroying -- at a time when it is Republicans who
suffer from militant factions and stale ideas.

According to Sidney Blumenthal, the presidential
aide who is trying to bring together liberal and
moderate Democrats, what his boss seeks is a
"Third Way" between traditional social democracy
and free-market liberalism. It is an outlook he
shares most closely with British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, and also with leaders of governing
socialist parties in France and Italy as well as the
party favored to win power in Germany's next
election. The latest sign of ideological renovation in
the White House was a conference last week that
included more than a dozen longtime adversaries
from the party's right and left wings. Hosted by
Hillary Rodham Clinton, leading intellectuals from
the Democratic Leadership Council
(market-oriented liberal) and the Economic Policy
Institute (labor-affiliated social democrat), as well
as other groups, took a refreshing break from
mutual polemics. They spoke cordially and even
discovered agreement on a few matters of national
interest. Any such attempt at concord would have
been doomed before Clinton, for better or worse,
sold off some Democratic heirlooms. His balanced
budget, anti-crime program and welfare cutbacks
may still provoke anger on the left, but they seem
to have won acceptance if not enthusiasm among
liberal African-Americans and women, where his
popularity remains high. Yet those mass
constituencies -- without whom the Democratic
Leadership Council is nothing but a group of talking
heads -- cannot be mobilized without a positive
message.

What might that message be, if Democrats could
agree? David Osborne, the author of "Reinventing
Government" and a consultant of "new Democrat"
persuasion, foresees possible unity around a
platform of universal educational opportunity and
job-creating public investment. Democrats of all
stripes, unlike Republicans, "believe deeply in
government," he says. They may argue loudly
about how to manage public services and what to
privatize, but such arguments sound academic
when the Republicans talk about dismantling and
destroying services and institutions. And while
Osborne expects continuing dissension over trade,
an issue that has alienated Clinton from
congressional Democrats, he perceives "a lot of
potential for compromise" regarding environmental
and labor protections. "What you are seeing in the
Western industrialized countries," he says, "are
liberal and social democratic parties adjusting to the
realities of the global marketplace."

But can Democrats make that adjustment to the
future while honoring their past commitments to
society's most vulnerable, those excluded from the
worldwide bazaar in goods and services? Pessimists
will point to Clinton's welfare bill, insisting that only
an unusually strong expansion has prevented
catastrophic decline in the living standards of the
poor. Optimists will reply that Clinton's increases in
the minimum wage and the earned income tax
credit have helped lift millions out of poverty during
the current cycle. The most important test will be
the revision of Social Security, setting advocates of
private investment against defenders of public
entitlements. If Democrats somehow can avoid a
wrenching split over this question within their own
ranks, they may be able to prevent wholesale
privatization by the Republicans, and a subsequent
return to widespread poverty among the elderly. Of
course, that means displeasing the drooling Wall
Street Democrats who provide much of the money
that keeps the Democratic Leadership Council --
and the Democratic Party -- in business.

The process the Clintons launched is embryonic
and fragile. An afternoon of chat among Beltway
intellectuals is only the very beginning of real
negotiation between rival interest groups. But
achieving a rough consensus on issues that have
bitterly divided the Democratic Party would revive
the possibility of a progressive majority in
American politics. First it would mean getting rid of
at least one long-cherished ritual: the circular firing
squad. The Republicans seem to be adopting that
formation as their own these days, anyway.
SALON | July 21, 1998

Left Hook by Joe Conason appears every other Monday in
Salon. >>>>