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The Libertarian Democrat: This Year's Jackalope
Reason ^ | June 16, 2006 | David Weigel

Posted on 06/20/2006 1:19:37 PM PDT by neverdem

Desperate Dems are trying to change their stripes and get your vote. Don't believe them

"Could you give me some reasons why libertarians might want to vote for you?"

I could tell my question startled Connecticut Democrat Ned Lamont, who's running against Sen. Joe Lieberman (D-Conn.), the war hawk and culture nanny par excellence. We were standing in Lamont's room at the Washington Hilton, the site of the Campaign for America's Future 2006 Take Back America conference. (Someone missed an opportunity for synergy by not booking the American Values suite.) As long as I was a hurdle for the candidate to jump before he could meet some people with checkbooks, I figured I could rope him into the "Libertarian Democrats" debate.

Lamont's first response was a look of wide-eyed, Marty McFly bewilderment. But after a moment of noodling, Lamont said "Terri Schiavo." Sen. Lieberman had rushed the stage when President Bush and Republican leaders were staging an intervention in the tragedy of the comatose Florida woman whose husband and parents disagreed on whether she should be taken off life support. "Sen. Lieberman thought it was the government's job to decide what was right for that family," Lamont said. "He's all right with the government intruding into our private lives. And not just in that case."

It was a good answer. (This judge would also have accepted Lieberman's video game censorship, his support for the Iraq war, or the Department of Homeland Security.) Last week, Markos "Daily Kos" Moulitsas floated the "Libertarian Democrat" idea and sparked a discussion of what the party of Jefferson Davis can do to bring libertarians into its tent. It was thrilling, insofar as anything in Connecticut politics can be thrilling, to find a little common cause with a real Democratic candidate.

But as Lamont circled the room, and later as he spoke to the whole crowd of about 50, I heard less and less that could appeal to libertarians. The liberals in the room wanted to hear about Lamont's support for universal health care, and for federal spending on schools, and for rolling back tax cuts "for the richest one percent." The candidate was interrupted by applause when he said that, if he was in the Senate, he would have "led the fight against Judge Alito."

If there were any other libertarians in the room (there conspicuously were not), we could have commiserated after Lamont's speech. This was the kind of Democrat who'd be challenging Republicans in close races all over the country in five months. And these Democrats won't be running against doctrinaire economic liberals like Lieberman. They'll be running against Republicans who are equally wrong on the war and on government's march into the bedrooms, but obviously preferable on taxes and (at least in theory) on the size of government. But what if libertarians temporarily switched sides? What if they bought into the argument that the current crop of Democrats stand hand-in-glove with them on war and privacy issues, and that by loaning libertarian votes to the minority party, they could eke out a few little victories? Would libertarians be happy in the Democratic party?

Of course not. Just ask a liberal.

After all, this was supposed to be a conference by and for liberals. The Campaign for America's Future was founded three years ago as a counterweight to the staggering D.C. Democratic party and its sclerotic think tanks. Every element of the Democratic base had a place here. At the book table in the exhibit hall, Sen. Hillary Clinton's autobiography mingled with books about the stolen 2008 election and Ward Churchill's classic exposé of the Eichmann-9/11 victim connection. In the hall connecting the "workshop" rooms with radio and TV hookups, the "Backbone Campaign"—a guerrilla theatre posse best known for awarding trophies in the shape of anatomically-accurate spine sculptures to stalwart Democratic congressfolk—suited up four of their members with prison uniforms and giant papier må'chè heads modeled after the Bush cabinet. The hydrocephalic Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice walked past attendees very, very slowly, hands bound by cardboard shackles, as mainstream Democrats like Gary Hart and Terry McAuliffe danced quickly away from cable news cameras that could have placed them in the same shot.

But the really activist left-wingers were incidental to the conference; they had as much control over the proceedings as toddlers have over the locks of their playpens. The event was carefully coordinated by the hidebound D.C. Democrats of the Campaign, and they were aiming to repackage themselves for a November 2006 relaunch. On Monday morning pollster Stanley Greenberg introduced new surveys he'd done for the Campaign, cherry-picking the issues and phrasings of issues ("make this economy work for the many, not simply the few") that could position to party to purloin as many GOP seats as possible. Immigration wasn't mentioned; the Iraq war was finessed away as a matter of "national security." The professional Democrats suggested the party enter the midterm fight as reformers on trade, universal education, and health care—in other words, tariffs, taxes, and catastrophe. On the one hand, they suggested policies that would set back the causes of libertarians. On the other, they suggested ignoring—and by definition setting back—the most pressing causes of the liberals.

The disconnect became crystal clear during Sen. Clinton's speech, which opened the second day of the conference. Most journalists (including this one) rushed to report on the shrill, bullshit-calling reception Clinton received after the once and future co-president refused to back off her Iraq war support. That isn't surprising anymore; coupled with the news that John Kerry's oratory actually drove the audience into rapture, it deserved the headlines. But it didn't signal any kind of break between the activist liberals and the party brass. The few people who defied posted warnings and guards that banned signs or banners from the speech lifted their flags before and after Clinton's address. Julia Field, a Chicagoan and member of the flamboyant anti-war feminist group Code Pink (they once disrupted a speech by arch-neocon Nancy Pelosi) admitted her disgust at Clinton's refusal to reconsider the war. But she didn't boo her, and she didn't plan to withhold her vote from pro-war Democrats. "If my choice was a really rotten Republican against Hillary," Field said. "I'd still have to vote for Hillary. We just have to win at least one house of the Congress."

Activist liberals in the Democratic party's base are more or less trapped. They can't get what they want from the Republicans, and they're not promised everything they want from the Democats, but under the circumstances the party of Clinton is the only hope they have for getting anything they want. They've grown nostalgic for the party that, during the administration of President Bill Clinton, disappointed them on an hourly basis. That feeling will be familiar to libertarians who in 2000 expressed their dissatisfaction with Clinton by yanking the lever for that dumb-but-promising governor of Texas.

This isn't a simple election. Some of the Clinton party's candidates, like Virginia's James Webb, actually deserve the "Libertarian Democrat" moniker. In Connecticut, where a Democrat's going to win anyway, the pro-privacy, anti-war, pork-bashing Lamont would clearly make a better senator than Joe Lieberman. In the short term, libertarians could be satisfied—even more so than liberals—with a Democratic Congress that rolled back anti-privacy laws and acquainted Bush with his veto pen. But the Democrats are the Democrats. Even when they're railing against NSA wiretapping, they're wishing they could be passing higher taxes and entitlement payouts.

It might be in libertarians' best interest to ally with Democrats for this election. If they do, they could see short-term progress that would never come out of the invasion-happy GOP majority. Inevitably, they'll find out something they have in common with liberals. They'll be let down.


David Weigel is an assistant editor of Reason. He lives in Fairfax, VA.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Connecticut; US: District of Columbia; US: New York; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: democrats; desperatedems; donothings; hillary; kerry; libertarianparty; libertarians; losertarians; lp; spoilers
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1 posted on 06/20/2006 1:19:41 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Oh,,please raise my taxes Mr. libertarian demoncat.!!


2 posted on 06/20/2006 1:22:02 PM PDT by samadams2000 (Somebody important make The Call.....pitchforks and lanterns.!)
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To: neverdem
Yeah do nothing EVER as an agenda is really going to win elections. More lunatic loser fringed nonsense.
3 posted on 06/20/2006 1:24:32 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (The Democrat Party! For people who prefer slogans over solutions!)
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To: neverdem

Any real libertarian would recoil in horror at the candidate's answer. Terri Schiavo was an example of a libertarian's worst nightmare, a citizen being deprived of the most basic liberty - the right to life - under the full glare of national attention, and nobody acted to stop it.


4 posted on 06/20/2006 1:28:03 PM PDT by thoughtomator (A thread without a comment on immigration is not complete)
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To: neverdem

a democrat by any other name is still.. a democrat!


5 posted on 06/20/2006 1:31:04 PM PDT by Cinnamon
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To: neverdem

This is only the final stage of the left-wing infiltration into the Libertarian party that's been going on for years.


6 posted on 06/20/2006 1:37:47 PM PDT by aynrandfreak (The Left hates America)
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To: neverdem
I remember reading somewhere that Noam Chomsky considers himself a "libertarian" ...

Sorry fellas ... putting libertarian lipstick on a socialist pig isn't going to change the fact that it's still a socialist pig.

7 posted on 06/20/2006 1:38:57 PM PDT by bassmaner (Hey commies: I am a white male, and I am guilty of NOTHING! Sell your 'white guilt' elsewhere.)
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To: neverdem

Libertarians---The loser party.

Actually I have affinity for Libertarian thought, but it's not like they will ever win an election for dog catcher..


8 posted on 06/20/2006 1:41:49 PM PDT by Pondman88
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To: aynrandfreak
This is only the final stage of the left-wing infiltration into the Libertarian party that's been going on for years.

The LP has been going downhill since 9/11, when the anti-war crowd became the loudest voices in the party. In 2004, they even ran a poll in their monthly paper as to whether talk show host Neil Boortz, who had previously been asked to speak at the LP national convention, should be 'disinvited' because of his pro-war stance!

I used to think that the LP had the potential to become a force to be reckoned with -- unfortunately that's no longer the case.

9 posted on 06/20/2006 1:45:53 PM PDT by bassmaner (Hey commies: I am a white male, and I am guilty of NOTHING! Sell your 'white guilt' elsewhere.)
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To: Cinnamon

A Democrat is either a moron or a traitor. Perhaps both sometimes.


10 posted on 06/20/2006 1:48:34 PM PDT by pleikumud
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To: pleikumud

Excellent. This is my new tagline.


11 posted on 06/20/2006 1:49:57 PM PDT by LongsforReagan (A Democrat is either a moron or a traitor. Perhaps both sometimes.)
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To: bassmaner
Noam could consider himself a potato. It doesn't make it true.

Anyone acting in accordance with the Non-initation of force, fraud, theft principle is a libertarian by definition. Democrats CANNOT, nor will they ever, meet this standard. That Republicans can't either isn't much of an issue.

Neither party has the respect for individual Rights that it should. Then again, the current LP is chock full of anti-war lunatics that couldn't find their own arses with a map and a flashlight.

12 posted on 06/20/2006 1:54:57 PM PDT by Dead Corpse (It is not the oath that makes us believe the man, but the man the oath.- Aeschylus)
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To: neverdem

Libertarians who think Republicans were wrong on the Iraq War and who accuse the government of marching into their bedrooms are S.O.L.

Libertarians have no home in the Democrat Party. If they don't want to vote for Republicans, they should become survivalists and live in the woods in a National Park somewhere.


13 posted on 06/20/2006 1:55:12 PM PDT by TSchmereL ("Rust but terrify.")
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To: bassmaner

Maybe there could be a right-leaning third party that would acknowledge that the left is the main threat, and that if it looked like the Dem was leading in three way polls, the new party would agree to tell their people to vote Republican at the last minute.


14 posted on 06/20/2006 1:57:35 PM PDT by aynrandfreak (The Left hates America)
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To: neverdem

Here we go again with the Libertarian bashing, never mind that they and liberals are opposite sides of the coin.


15 posted on 06/20/2006 2:00:09 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: neverdem

"It might be in libertarians' best interest to ally with Democrats for this election."

What nonsense!

It might be in libertarians' best interest to plant I.E.D. in their own driveways, but I doubt it.

It might be in libertarians' best interest to chop their noses off if they don't like their own faces.

Was it in the "Libertarians' best interest" to ally themselves with Saddam Hussein?

Who is this guy?


16 posted on 06/20/2006 2:07:38 PM PDT by TSchmereL ("Rust but terrify.")
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To: neverdem
Pictures required for threads talking about Ann Coulter, FR female mods and jackalopes:


17 posted on 06/20/2006 2:10:22 PM PDT by CedarDave (When a soldier dies, a protester gloats, a family cries, an Iraqi votes)
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

Libertarians and 'conservatives' (and Neo Cons) have one important thing in common- a belief in personal accountability; that is why they are so often 'fellow travelers' even though on issues such as the enforcement of state defined morality and the efficacy of foreign intervention they are so at odds.


18 posted on 06/20/2006 2:11:16 PM PDT by RedStateRocker (Nuke Mecca, deport all illegals, abolish the IRS, ATF and DEA.)
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To: RedStateRocker

This article is from Reason Magazine.

The editor, Nick Gillespie, argues that the spread of pornography is a victory for free expression and that heroin should not only be legalized, but using it occasionally is just fine.

In my opinion, even if you agree that pornography is a victory for free expression and that heroin should be legalized, you make an ass out of yourself by making a point of supporting it.

I generally like Libertarians, but they are extremely childish.

The only thing Libertarians and Democrats have in common is childishness.


19 posted on 06/20/2006 2:18:36 PM PDT by TSchmereL ("Rust but terrify.")
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To: neverdem
A Libertarian-Democrat: A pot-smoking porn-addict who believes that sex addiction therapy should be covered under Medicare.

Doesn't sound like that much of a stretch to me...
20 posted on 06/20/2006 2:21:58 PM PDT by Antoninus (I don't vote for liberals -- regardless of party.)
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