Jonathan Schwarz alerts me to yet another rightwing neurosis: irrational fear of coffee cups. I don’t see how these people can leave the house in the morning.
Schwarz writes:
I guess what I’m saying here is, I’m perfectly happy to let Ms. Nunez put whatever quotes she wants on Starbucks coffee, if in return she will cede me control of corporate America, the media, the military, and all three branches of the US government.
Sounds like a good Republican-style bipartisan compromise to me.
The phase of this race bearing significant implications for the Democratic Party already happened, and whether Lamont wins or loses tomorrow is almost entirely immaterial to the political triumph of the netroots. Their scalp was claimed, mounted, and hung on July 7th, the day Joe Lieberman, an affable, popular incumbent who’d been his party’s celebrated vice-presidential candidate only six years earlier, was forced to mount a stage against some nobody named Ned Lamont and defensively debate his right to call himself a Democrat. Or maybe the seminal instant occurred four days earlier, on July 3rd, when Lieberman admitted that he would gather signatures to enable an independent run, a sign he feared defeat in the primary. Either way, the point is the same: The netroots won the moment Joe Lieberman felt fear.
With the netroots having proved they can generate an existential challenge to a safe-seeming incumbent, actually defeating Lieberman would be little beyond icing on the cake. Moving forward, a Lieberman victory would do nothing to blur the traumatic memory of his near-loss. And that gives the netroots an extraordinary amount of power, vaulting them into a rarified realm occupied by only the strongest interest groups.
Now the netroots will join that category. But, as evidenced by their choice of target — Dianne Feinstein and Herb Kohl, while war supporters, face no primary challenges — they will demand something altogether different. Rather than requiring submission to a certain set of policy initiatives, they’ll demand unity in certain moments of partisan showdown. What so rankled about Lieberman was his willingness to abandon ship when steady hands were most necessary — he was always the first to compromise on judicial nominees, or flirt with Social Security privatization, or scold critics of the Iraq War. His current plight is evidence that such opportunistic betrayals will not, in the future, go unpunished. On July 7th, being the Democrat who criticizes Democrats ceased being safe.
I think one of the things that few observers recognize is the lesson many of us took when the Democrats stuck together on the social security debate (no thanks to Joe Lieberman.) They shut down the Karl Rove juggernaut in no uncertain terms simply by hanging together and not allowing the GOP to claim any kind of bipartisan cover. It’s the most successful thing the Democrats did during the Bush administration and the netroots pressure of both the blogosphere and groups like Move-on were instrumental. It gave us hope that these people could be defeated if we stuck together.
Party unity does not mean orthodoxy. It is simply a recognition that when you are dealing with the modern Republican Party it is almost always a zero sum game. That’s how they see politics. If that’s going to change it’s going to have to come from them. They are the ones who have institutionalized excessive partisanship and they are going to have to wring it out of their political culture before they can be trusted to keep their word.
Dealing with these fanatical people (and the bizarre inability of the press to properly report it) has undoubtedly been difficult:
The party’s skittishness, Mike Tomasky has argued, was analogous to the legendary “learned helplessness” experiments where dogs “were administered electrical shocks from which they could escape, but from which, after a while, they didn’t even try to, instead crouching in the corner in resignation and fear.” The media, the pollsters, the consultants, and, occasionally, the voters seemed to punish the very act of being a Democrat, just as the researchers had turned on the shocks for the very act of being a dog. The result was a Democratic Party filled with cowering corner-dwellers.
The netroots have deployed Pavlov’s principles in the opposite direction. Call it learned aggressiveness — they’ve rewarded Democratic backbone (Howard Dean, Ned Lamont) and attacked its absence (Henry Cuellar, Joe Lieberman). And just as the researchers didn’t need to kill the dogs to teach the lesson, neither do the netroots need to defeat Joe Lieberman to make their point. The only question for tomorrow is whether the voters of Connecticut feel differently.
I would say that aggressiveness is what naturally happens to normal people when they realize they are fighting for their lives. At some point, the shocks became lethal — I suspect it was the 2000 election, although others may differ. But in 2006, it is a matter of life and death for the Democratic party to fight back. The other side is ruthless and dishonorable and they want to reduce the Democratic party to a symbolic opposition for them to run against and rail against while ensuring they have no real influence on politics. They have been remarkably successful at this considering they have never had even close to a national mandate. They are now in the inevitable process of blaming their failures on us. We aren’t going to let it happen this time.
Glenn Greenwald wrote an interesting piece yesterday about neoconservaitsm in which he posits that a real political realignment is taking place. And he asks an important question:
The idea that Lieberman is some sort of “centrist Democrat” and that the effort to defeat him is driven by radical leftists who hate bipartisanship is nothing short of inane. Why would Sean Hannity and Bill Kristol be so eager to keep a “centrist Democrat” in the Senate? Lincoln Chafee is a “centrist Republican.” Are there any Democrats or liberals who care if Lincoln Chafee wins his primary? Do leftist ideologues run around praising and defending and working for the re-election of Olympia Snowe or Chris Shays or other Republican “centrists”? Do Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity love other Democratic “centrists,” such as, say, Mary Landrieu or Joe Biden? The answer to all of those questions is plainly “no”.
The love which right-wing extremists have for Joe Lieberman isn’t based on the fact that he’s a “centrist.” If Lieberman were a “centrist,” extremists would not care about him. They would not be vigorously urging his re-election, or praising his potential appointment as Bush Defense Secretary, or touting him as a Vice-Presidential running mate for George Allen. They do that because he is one of them — a neoconservative extremist who is with them on virtually every major issue of the day.
This is more than simple ideology, although there’s plenty of that at work. I suspect that some of the support for Joe on the right comes from the shared neurotic sense of beseigement the conservatives have developed as their cultural identity.
Listen to conservatives now, and they’re still in the catacombs. “Just because a rock song is about faith doesn’t mean that it’s conservative,” National Review explains of U2’s “Gloria.” “But what about a rock song that’s about faith and whose chorus is in Latin? That’s beautifully reactionary.” Note the tone of sturdy defiance: So few bold souls, these days, are brave enough to publicly profess that underground faith, Christianity.
The liberal colossus is somehow still just as colossal, despite the fact that Republicans have controlled Congress and the White House and shifted the news media’s center of gravity to the right for several years. I have one 2005 book–forworded by Steve Forbes and blurbed by Evans, Buckley, and former Senator Jesse Helms–called Free Choice for Workers: A History of the Right to Work Movement. The flap proposes: “George C. Leef chronicles the thrilling ‘David and Goliath’ struggle between the bosses of Big Labor and the American citizens who oppose their lust for coercive power.” Somehow, the conservatives have even pulled off making Wal-Mart sound like the little guy.
There’s a precedent for acting beleaguered even in victory. In 1964, the Goldwater faction had just won a party presidential nomination. Folk Songs to Bug the Liberals was part of an avalanche of Goldwater kitsch–the more ostentatious the better–that loyalists lined up to purchase at campaign events: gold Goldwater pins, Goldwater cowboy hats, books, pamphlets, and magazines galore to pass on to your liberal neighbors. It was only one part proselytizing. It also proved the bearer’s stout-heartedness. Its meaning relied on Goldwater remaining unpopular in an overwhelmingly “liberal” culture.
That is why, now that conservatives own the government, conservatives are still stuck in their past: Their marginal self-identity is who they are. The trick is inventing new ways to soak in one’s marginalization.
I think this is an extension of a tribal impulse that goes back even farther than Goldwater — that’s just modern conservatism’s manifestation. Perhaps long-time readers of this blog will remember this:
It’s clear to me that during the first 70 years of the country’s existence, the old South and the slave territories that came later (as defined in that famous map from 1860) created a culture based largely on their sense of the rest of the country’s, and the world’s, disapprobation. Within it grew what Michael Lind describes as its “cavalier” culture, which created an outsized sense of masculine ego and “fighting” mentality (along with an exaggerated caricature of male and female social roles.) Resentment was a foundation of the culture as slavery was hotly debated from the very inception and the division was based on what was always perceived by many as a moral issue. The character and morality of the south had always had to be defended. Hence a defensive culture was born.
The civil war and Jim Crow deepened it and the Lost Cause mythology romanticized it. The civil rights movement crystallized it. A two hundred year old resentment has created a permanent cultural divide.
Why a bunch of cosmopolitans from New York adopted this is subject for another post, but the neoconservatives have certainly joined the party.
The latest example of this comes from none other than Martin Peretz in today’s Wall Street Journal, who in one short diatribe demontrates the conservative sense of beseigement and class consciousness, the irrational fear of hippies, the contempt for uppity blacks and the habit of making dire prognostications that Democrats are writing their death warrant by listening to any of that riff-raff that forms the base of their party. (I wonder what that’s supposed to mean in 2006, exactly — that we will be an even smaller minority party?)
Like most establishment elites, Peretz believes it’s still groundhog day, 1968:
We have been here before. Left-wing Democrats are once again fielding single-issue “peace candidates,” and the one in Connecticut, like several in the 1970s, is a middle-aged patrician, seeking office de haut en bas, and almost entirely because he can. It’s really quite remarkable how someone like Ned Lamont, from the stock of Morgan partner Thomas Lamont and that most high-born American Stalinist, Corliss Lamont, still sends a chill of “having arrived” up the spines of his suburban supporters simply by asking them to support him. Superficially, one may think of those who thought they were already middle class just by being enthusiasts of Franklin Roosevelt, who descended from the Hudson River Dutch aristocracy. But when FDR ran for, and was elected, president in 1932, he had already been a state senator, assistant secretary of the Navy and governor of New York. He had demonstrated abilities.
Just as an aside, Lamont’s political pedigree goes back further than FDR, which I didn’t know until I read this by Sara at The Next Hurrah. But that, of course, is Peretz’s gripe. The “limousine liberal” is second only to the “hippie protester” as an iconic boogeyman for political insiders of a certain age — although the class resentment and red-baiting on display in this piece would make even Richard Nixon blush.
Then, here come the commie hippies (also known as “peaceniks”):
But he does have one issue, and it is Iraq. He grasps little of the complexities of his issue, but then this, too, is true of the genus of the peace candidate. Peace candidates know only one thing, and that is why people vote for them. I know the type well. I was present at its creation. I was there, a partisan, as a graduate student at the beginning, in 1962, when the eminent Harvard historian H. Stuart Hughes (grandson of Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes) ran for the U.S. Senate as an independent against George Cabot Lodge and the victor, Ted Kennedy, a trio of what in the Ivies is, somewhat derisively, called “legacies.” Hughes’s platform fixed on President John F. Kennedy’s belligerent policy towards Cuba, which had been crystallized in the “Bay of Pigs” fiasco. The campaign ended, however, with Hughes winning a dreary 1% of the vote when Krushchev capitulated to JFK just before the election and brought the missile crisis to an end, leaving Fidel Castro in power as an annoyance (which he is still, though maybe not much longer), but not as a threat.
Later peace candidates did better. Some were even elected. Vietnam was their card. One was even nominated for president in 1972. George McGovern, a morally imperious isolationist with fellow-traveling habits, never could shake the altogether accurate analogies with Henry Wallace. (Wallace was the slightly dopey vice president, dropped from the ticket by FDR in 1944, who ran for president on the Progressive Party ticket, a creation of Stalin’s agents in the U.S.) Mr. McGovern’s trouncing by Richard Nixon, a reprobate president if we ever had one, augured the recessional–if not quite the collapse–of such Democratic politics, which insisted our enemy in the Cold War was not the Soviets but us.
I’ll leave it to the historians to deconstruct that odd rendering of disparate events. But I think we can see within those two paragraphs that in the person of Martin Peretz exists the perfect synthesis of the right’s dark Nixonian impulse and neoconservatism.
Finally our hero steps forth:
It was then that people like Joe Lieberman emerged, muscular on defense, assertive in foreign policy, genuinely liberal on social and economic matters, but not doctrinaire on regulatory issues. He had marched for civil rights and is committed to an equal opportunity agenda with equal opportunity results. He has qualms about affirmative action. But who, in his hearts of hearts, does not? He is appalled by the abysmal standards of our popular culture and our public discourse. Who really loves our popular culture–or, at least, which parent? He is thoroughly a Democrat. But Mr. Lieberman believes that, in an age of communal and global stress, one would do well to speak with the president (even, on rare occasion, speak well of him) and compromise with him on urgent matters of practical law.
Thoroughly a Democrat? This is the very definition of neoconservatism.
U.S. political movement. It originated in the 1960s among conservatives and some liberals who were repelled by or disillusioned with what they viewed as the political and cultural trends of the time, including leftist political radicalism, lack of respect for authority and tradition, and hedonistic and immoral lifestyles. Neoconservatives generally advocate a free-market economy with minimum taxation and government economic regulation; strict limits on government-provided social-welfare programs; and a strong military supported by large defense budgets. Neoconservatives also believe that government policy should respect the importance of traditional institutions such as religion and the family. Unlike most conservatives of earlier generations, neoconservatives maintain that the United States should take an active role in world affairs, though they are generally suspicious of international institutions, such as the United Nations and the World Court, whose authority could intrude upon American sovereignty or limit the country’s freedom to act in its own interests.
For a more nuanced definition, see Irving Kristol’s from 2003. Note that he explicitly affiliates neoconservatism with the Republican Party, which is probably the most succinct explanation as to why Joe Lieberman is having difficulties in a Democratic primary. He’s a living oxymoron — a Democratic neoconservative.
And now for more paranoid Nixonian red-baiting and hints of treason:
Yes, Mr. Lieberman sometimes sounds a bit treacly. He certainly is preachy, and advertises his sense of his own righteousness. But he has also been brave, and bravery is a rare trait in politicians, especially in states that are really true-blue or, for that matter, really true-red. The blogosphere Democrats, whose victory Mr. Lamont’s will be if Mr. Lamont wins, have made Iraq the litmus test for incumbents. There are many reasonable, and even correct, reproofs that one may have for the conduct of the war. They are, to be sure, all retrospective. But one fault cannot be attributed to the U.S., and that is that we are on the wrong side. We are at war in a just cause, to protect the vulnerable masses of the country from the helter-skelter ideological and religious mass-murderers in their midst. Our enemies are not progressive peasants as was imagined three and four decades ago.
If Mr. Lieberman goes down, the thought-enforcers of the left will target other centrists as if the center was the locus of a terrible heresy, an emphasis on national strength.
Ann Coulter says it with much more flair, don’t you think?
Whether they are defending the Soviet Union or bleating for Saddam Hussein, liberals are always against America. They are either traitors or idiots, and on the matter of America’s self-preservation, the difference is irrelevant.
Of course a piece like this couldn’t be complete without at least a passing reference to Neville Chamberlain:
Finally, the contest in Connecticut tomorrow is about two views of the world. Mr. Lamont’s view is that there are very few antagonists whom we cannot mollify or conciliate. Let’s call this process by its correct name: appeasement. The Greenwich entrepreneur might call it “incentivization.” Mr. Lieberman’s view is that there are actually enemies who, intoxicated by millennial delusions, are not open to rational and reciprocal arbitration. Why should they be? After all, they inhabit a universe of inevitability, rather like Nazis and communists, but with a religious overgloss. Such armed doctrines, in Mr. Lieberman’s view, need to be confronted and overwhelmed.
Man, I’ll bet Joe’s consultants were just thrilled when they read that part. Even far right Republicans are getting antsy about the megalomaniacal, war of the worlds thing. But hey, in for a penny, in for a pound. Put Joe not just to the right of the entire Democratic party, but to the right of everybody in the country but Bill Kristol and Michael Savage. With friends like Peretz making the case for him, Lieberman might find he’s too wacky even for the Bush administration.
And finally we get to the race baiting. No complaints about the Democratic party would be complete without it. After all, when you get down to it, those uppity negroes are what ruined the party for nice people way back in …you guessed it … 1968:
The Lamont ascendancy, if that is what it is, means nothing other than that the left is trying, and in places succeeding, to take back the Democratic Party. Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and Maxine Waters have stumped for Mr. Lamont. As I say, we have been here before. Ned Lamont is Karl Rove’s dream come true. If he, and others of his stripe, carry the day, the Democratic party will lose the future, and deservedly.
Now where have I heard something like that recently? Oh yes, that’s right: “Ned Lamont can have Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton,” Liebermen said. “I’m proud to have had Bill Clinton, Senator Dodd, Senator Inouye, Senator Salazar and a lot of other great Democrats.”
Now who’s pulling the flaps down on the big tent again? The limousine, hippie negroes of Connecticut who want a Senator who represents them or the political elites whose bigotry comes quickly to the fore when threatened by small-d democracy?
Whether it’s overly sensitive Democrats who have been traumatized by decades of “bug the liberal” taunts or just mainstream members of the old resentment tribe like Peret, those who feel such terror and revulsion at passionate liberalism are obviously in the grip of some sort of emotional tidal wave. I don’t think there is any hope for the latter; they are a permanent fixture in American politics. But the first need to start questioning their assumptions if they want to keep up. Their knee jerk evocations of 1968 are no less anachronistic than are Peretz’s throwbacks to McCarthyism. This is psychology at work not political analysis and the chattering classes need to take a good hard look in the mirror and recognize that.
You really can’t read this histrionic classist, racist, red-baiting tirade without wondering why Peretz maintains the fiction that he is a Democrat — or why Democrats should henceforth concern themselves with his opinion any more than they worry about William Kristol’s. Is it possible that we’ve finally seen the overdue conversion? I certainly hope so. Clarity is bracing and good for the body politic at times like these. Go ahead and jump Marty — and take Joe with you. You’ll feel better and so will we.
Update: A reader just sent me the following quote from Peretz circa 1971:
Source: Fred Dutton, Changing Sources of Power, p. 61 (1971), speaking on Vietnam: “These are times of moral enormity, when cool reasonableness is a more pathological and unrealistic state than hysteria.”
If I had ever said anything half so idiotic–just like if I’d aided and abetted a Black Panther murder like D-Ho–I’d devote my life to living it down, too.
True. But the hysteria itself — as with D Ho — remains.
Via Roy Edroso I read this tid-bit from conservative law professor Ann Althouse:
“I would, for a price, go sit in a movie theater crowd and cue the flow of laughter on the subtler jokes. I would, for a price, eat in a restaurant and make slightly audible favorable comments about the menu and, with a co-worker, contribute a pleasant sound of conversation and even make up gossip about fictional characters to give the other diners something to eavesdrop on. Or maybe I should just start a business, designing jobs like this and selling businesses on the notion that they need fake patrons to improve the attitude of the real patrons.”
Gosh what a brilliant idea. Amazing nobody’s ever thought of it before.
Wolcott currently has two great posts up. (“Here’s Gagdad Bob, whom I believe studied psychoanalysis under Jung’s cousin, Milt”)
He quotes from Gore Vidal’s new book in which the great old man says:
“A current pejorative adjective is narcissistic. Generally, a narcissist is anyone better looking than you are, but lately the adjective is often applied to those ‘liberals’ who prefer to improve the lives of others rather than exploit them. Apparently, a concern for others is self-love at its least attractive, while greed is now a sign of the highest altruism. But then to reverse, periodically, the meanings of words is a very small price to pay for our vast freedom not only to conform but to consume.”
I have two words of explanation: Ayn Rand. The wingnut geeks have never emotionally or intellectually matured since they read their first sizzling romance novel, “Atlas Shrugged” in the 10th grade. (“So self-centered, greedy assholes are sexy man candy to the ladies? Awesome.”) It forms the emotional core of their worldview and their political philosophy. I’m sure it still gives them a honking “big tent party” just thinking about it.
Yes, I am biased in favor of my friend, but I also fear that if Joe Lieberman – a man, let’s remember, who was the vice presidential nominee of his party only six years ago – is purged from national leadership, that would send a message rippling through both parties: that in our new politics, working too closely with leaders across the aisle can be political suicide. It’s hard to believe that, despite all their frustration, that’s what Connecticut Democrats really want to say.
I’m just curious what message the Republicans have sent rippling through both parties for the last six years of strong arm, thuggish political rhetoric and legislative tactics?
Here’s a mild example of what the Democrats have been putting up with, from Gergen’s brother in arms, David Broder:
Since 1995, when Republicans took control of both sides of the Capitol, the negotiating sessions often have been limited to GOP senators and representatives, with the Democrats locked out along with the press.
That arrangement has been reinforced by the “Hastert doctrine,” the policy enunciated by House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert that he will bring to the floor only bills that are supported by the majority of the Republican caucus. Because of that policy, bipartisan coalitions have become rarities in the House. The emphasis now is entirely on shaping bills in conference that most House Republicans can embrace.
No judgment there about whether it’s good for the country to kill bipartisanship in a time of war. Just business as usual. IOKIYAR, I guess.
This stuff was going on throughout the first term, despite the disputed election of 2000 — a unique historical circumstance that one would have thought called for excessive bipartisanship — as you can see by this article:
Republicans, meanwhile, defended their handling of negotiations, saying too many voices — particularly those of lawmakers who do not support their policy goals — would yield cacophony, not compromise.
“You want to try to negotiate agreements with people who are going to vote for it and negotiate in good faith,” said John Feehery, spokesman for House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. “You need to be able to reach agreement, and you can’t have 6,000 people negotiating.”
In both the cases of Medicare (HR 1) and energy (HR 6), the Republicans have been largely negotiating without the participation of Democrats, who have been complaining for weeks about the process. But in recent days the conflict has escalated.
There are, of course, a million examples of power crazed, partisan actions on the part of the GOP congressional majority over the years (not the least of which was an impeachment.) And it’s not like they have been quiet about it. Here’s Tom Delay all the way back in 1991:
We have a small faction, and they are a minority, who believe they are there to govern. Then there is the majority of us who believe that indeed we are there to govern but more importantly we are there to be an opposition to the Democratic philosophy and the only way to do that is through confrontation.
It’s a real shame about bipartisanship going the way of the buggy whip, but blaming Democrats for it is laughable. If anything they hung on long after it was obvious that the Republicans were punking them over and over again. Rank and file Democrats have finally had it up to here and are sending a message to their party that they aren’t going to sit by and let it happen anymore. The country is in deep trouble and somebody has to step up and put a stop to this.
Naturally, now that the crooked Republicans have shown themselves to be miserable failures at every aspect of governing, which they have consciously done without Democratic input, the mandarins who have been conspicuously silent about the excessive GOP partisanship of the last six years (and the previous decade as well) are calling for comity. If Democrats win in November, I have no doubt we are going to read sanctimonious op-ed after sanctimonious speech about how the Democrats need to put all this unpleasantness behind them and run the congress in a bipartisan spirit to heal the country’s wounds.
It’s always the same old nonsense with these people. The Republicans run the country into the ground, treat the Democrats like enemies of the state and when they are finally done screwing things up (and exhausted from counting all the money they’ve stolen from the taxpayers)the Dems have to clean up their mess. And they’re supposed to be generous and kind and not embarrass anyone when they do it.
I have no doubt that’s what will happen again. But I’m not ready to make nice, not by a long shot. The internet is a powerful tool that keeps a record of every rotten thing these people have ever done and said and I will never let them forget it.
Update: McJoan over at kos today has a great quote:
“Bipartisanship only works when the other side compromises, too. Otherwise it’s just capitulation.”
That seems like an obvious point. Perhaps David Gergen can give us all an example of anything Joe Lieberman has been able to get the Republicans to compromise on in the last six years. In fact, I’d be interested in hearing about any Republican compromises with Democrats in the last six years. I’m sure there must be a few.
Update II: Joe Gandelman of The Moderate Voice, examines various lessons people might take from the race if Lamont wins on Tuesday. One of them is this:
Bipartisanship Has Limits: If Karl Rove’s strategy has been to paint the United States’ security in danger if Democrats win control, and accuse Democrats who raise questions about the war as wanting to “cut and run” (event it is conceivable that someone supported the war but has very serious questions about its conduct), then it doomed Lieberman’s brand of bipartisanship. Rather than cultivate cooperation, Bush’s “your either with us or against us” has been applied to domestic politics and it sabotaged Lieberman’s cooperation with Bush would be perceived by many in his party.
Juan Cole has posted a fascinating piece about oil politics and the events in the middle east. I am not any kind of expert on the subject (not that I’m necessarily an expert on any subject about which I regularly pontificate) so I cannot judge how realistic the scenario is in its details. But from a gut instinct and common sense point of view I have have always known that we would not be spending so much blood and treasure in the middle east if it wasn’t the richest oil region in the world. We just wouldn’t. This is the new Great Game.
One point that Cole makes that I think is quite interesting is that there is some new belief that actual physical control of the oil fields, for both economic and practical reasons, may now be necessary. If that’s the case, I finally understand why the powers-that-be insist on those permanent bases in Iraq.
Anyway, it’s a very intriguing article. I’ll be curious to read some opinions from those of you who know more about this than I do.
There is a lot of chatter in the blogosphere about this article in the Washington Post this morning. It’s filled with interesting quotes (and analysis) but there is only one that I think is really important because it signals that at least some members of the Democratic establishment have figured out the right way to frame this race. And it’s very simple:
Rep. Rahm Emanuel (Ill.), chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said Friday he is not worried about the fallout from the Senate primary on House races, arguing that the message from Connecticut is that anyone supporting Bush’s war policies is in deep trouble. “What’s playing out here is that being a rubber stamp for George Bush is politically dangerous to life-threatening,” he said.
It isn’t just the war or the unpopular Bush — it’s his Republican majority enablers in the congress. The record is clear and damning. Failing to do their constitutional duty, the GOP Eunuch Caucus has rubber stamped every failed policy he put forward. They are as responsible for this mess as Bush is. The chickens are coming home to roost.
Last night I took a cruise up the East River to Randall’s Island to see the Dave Matthews Band. DMB was preceded on stage by Gov’t Mule and the sensational Warren Haynes, and before them by Bela Fleck and the Flecktones. DMB was fantastic, but that lead electric guitar of Warren Haynes took me back to my teen years. Simply exquisite. Tonight I get to repeat the experience, except it will be David Gray playing immediately before DMB rather than Gov’t Mule.
I remember a couple of years ago when Digby saw Kraftwerk in concert. Tristero’s music speaks for itself, literally. But what about everyone else? If you could get your hands on any ticket, who would you see? What music defines you?
More insider Democrats helping their “friends” across party lines.
Some of Hollywood’s most reliable and generous donors to the Democratic Party — Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg and media mogul Haim Saban — are endorsing Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s bid for reelection.
Their support is partly a matter of friendship over partisanship. But it could deal a blow to the governor’s main opponent, state Treasurer Phil Angelides, by signaling to other Democrats that it’s acceptable to embrace a Republican.
“It starts with a personal relationship. They are friends,” said Andy Spahn, a spokesman for both Spielberg and Katzenberg.
The two men also like Schwarzenegger’s plans to tackle global warming and fund schools. But further, Spahn said, “they are receptive to the governor’s taking a less partisan approach to the job and a more inclusive approach to government.”
Yeah, sure he does. That’s why he’s a member of the most polarizing party in American history.
And anyway, isn’t this what he promised the first time and then spent the first two years of his term stabbing nurses, firemen and cops in the back? Yeah, I thought so.
Any big shot Democrat who wants to support Arnold should ask him nicely to run as an independent instead. He has more money than God so he doesn’t need the support of the GOP. If he’s so inclusive and non-partisan, there’s no reason for him to be a partisan of any kind.
However, as long as he’s a member of the Republican party he’s affiliated with George W. Bush and everything he and the conservative movement stands for. He will be dragged out as their Blue State pet as an example of their “big tent” whenever they want to hide their ugly rightwing faces for national consumption. In this partisan day and age, no Democrat in good conscience should support that.