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Bovine byproducts

Bovine byproducts

by digby

So John Harris has written a piece for Politico entitled:

The Dark Art of Political B.S.

Pay no attention to the pundit behind the curtain: Most of them are full of it.

Yes, that’s by the same John Harris who edits the Politico, the premiere Village font of gasbaggery.

In fairness, he does indict himself among the gasbags — and he’s basically right about what he calls out although it’s a little bit amusing that it took him so long to recognize what most of us have known for a while: these sweeping statements that the political world stopped turning on its axis and went the other direction every single election was just, as he puts it, “bovine byproducts.”

In 2004, after George W. Bush won re-election despite the war controversies that had battered his approval ratings, the line went like this: The turnout machine built by campaign advisers Karl Rove and Ken Mehlman was so technologically superior that—combined with the natural GOP advantage on national security—Republicans held an advantage that would allow them to dominate national politics for the next generation. Rove, in the afterglow of victory, famously declared that “a conservative era in American governance could be starting now” and discussed the possibility of a permanent majority.

Two years later, Democrats won control of Congress, and two years after that, the Obama era launched a new set of “for the next generation” narratives. Obama campaign manager David Plouffe’s data wizards had lapped Republicans in the former art and now science of voter outreach and mobilization. Meanwhile, the GOP was the party of old, white, male straight conservatives in a country that is increasingly less of all those things.

While throwing myself on the mercy of the court let me hasten to plead that there is a difference between pure B.S., and much of what colleagues I respect produce—an alloy of partial B.S. merged with some genuine measure of intelligent and conscientious effort to divine larger truths about the broad patterns shaping our political life.

Those earlier narratives that were served up with such emphatic confidence weren’t flatly wrong. They just failed to reckon with the reality of life: Current trends never continue indefinitely. Politics especially is an infinitely fluid process, refreshed continually by new issues, new circumstances and, above all, new voters with different generational perspectives. Politicians are intelligent people, whose ambitions naturally orient them to accommodate change and find a way to prosper in it.

In other words we can’t really tell the future. Stop the presses.

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Published inUncategorized