Posted on 12/19/2003 11:28:47 AM PST by Reagan is King
The left has taken over the Democratic Party
The probable nomination of former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean marks a turning point in the modern history of the Democratic Party. The left has taken over. The tail is no longer wagging the dog. The tail has mastered the beast.
The moderates ran the Democratic Party from 1960 to 1972. Then the left took over, ruling until 1992 a period in which the party controlled the White House for only four out of 20 years, when Jimmy Carter, a moderate southerner, was president. Capitalizing on their failures, the centrists regained ascendancy in 1992 with the nomination of Bill Clinton. They ruled for 12 years and are losing power now.
Al Gore and Hillary Clinton are moving to the left to make their peace with the partys new masters. Hillary goes to Iraq and then signs up for every Sunday talk show to blast President Bush and the war. Gore backs Dean to court favor with the liberal anti-war faction that has taken over. The Ralph Nader fringe is now in charge, and Gore is moving left to accommodate them.
How did the left take over? Yeats had the answer when he wrote that the worst are filled with a passionate intensity and that the center doesnt hold. The war galvanized such activism among those who felt kicked out of the mainstream when they refused to join the flag-waving patriotism unleashed by the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, that it empowered the left to take over the party.
Using the Internet to compensate for its lack of capital, the anti-war faction made its alliance with social liberals who were attracted by Deans approval of the gay civil union bill in Vermont. It is the equivalent for the left of the deal Ronald Reagan made with the Christian conservatives, signing them up for his crusade in the 1980 election.
This coalition of peace advocates and supporters of gay civil unions has mobilized online and amassed enough money, manpower and excitement to outdistance the conventional candidates in the Democratic field. They have taken over the party, and they are not planning on leaving anytime soon.
Their ascendancy is paralleled by the solidification of the Democratic minority in Congress, cemented in place by the 2001 reapportionment in which GOP leaders drew district lines to concentrate Democrats in Democratic districts and keep Republicans and independents in marginal areas.
The result has been an inoculation of Democratic congressmen against defeat in general elections. But, with huge numbers of Democrats in their districts, they do have to fear primary contests, particularly on the left. This realization impelled the election of Californias Nancy Pelosi as minority leader and marks the House Democrats move to the left and to irrelevancy.
The dilemma for moderate Democrats is similar to that which afflicted moderate Republicans until George W. Bush came along. To win nominations, they must appeal to the extremists in their own party and move so far to the left that they become unacceptable to the mainstream of American voters.
A vicious circle sets in. Moderates, repelled by the liberal stances of the Democratic Party, will move to Republican ranks and abandon their Democratic affiliation. This movement will empty the partys ranks of its moderates and make takeover by the left more likely and more permanent.
The path the Democrats are about to tread is the same that left them impotent in the elections of 1980, 1984 and 1988 and akin to that which forced the British Labor Party to lose four consecutive national elections.
The capture of Saddam Hussein and the likely withdrawal of most American forces from Iraq by Election Day if Bush is thinking clearly and can pull it off will leave the leftist Democrats with no issues, only bitterness at having been robbed of their thunder by a fast-moving president.
Their lament at not having the economy, Iraq and prescription drugs as issues will parallel the wails of the 1996 Republicans in not having the balanced budget, crime or welfare to use as issues in toppling Clinton.
Good for President Bush.
It's clear to me that Gore is not interested in Dean but in Dean's supporters. It is also clear that he made his move after Hillary spent the previous weekend before the media. There are only two serious Dem candidates for POTUS, Gore and Hillary. What I can't figure for sure is whether the race is in 2004 or 2008. If it is in 2004 then Dean will be removed from the picture--possibly as a martyr. Night of the long knives.
And can you tell me
exactly who is running
the Republicans?
The "religious right"
isn't -- hence constant "restraint"
urged on Irael...
Libertarians
aren't in charge -- hence their whines
about terror laws...
Real conservatives
ain't driving -- hence socialized
medicine still grows...
So, yes, Democrats
seem totally out of touch.
But who is in charge?!
Hey - They took them over before WW II, even had Wallace as a VP for Roosevelt. Now the left is doing a take over of the Republican Party using the neo-con descendents of those that took over the Democrat Party. The liberals are on a roll.
And WJC is a man who's word can be taken as a solemn vow, right?
Clark was a trial ballon, nothing more. If he rises to the occassion and takes off in popularity a Clark-Clinton ticket was/is a possibility. But the Clinton's would accept that only if they know Clark will lose.
If Clark fails as a potential candidate this year, then the Clinton's will cross him off of their list of potential VP candidates for 2008.
Clark is looking more and more like an boob, who has no real potential to be President. He would bring nothing to the party in '08, from the Clinton's POV.
This next should warm the cockles of our little Freeper hearts,
Did you hear what call sign they used for Hillary's Blackhawk during her tour in Iraq?
"BROOMSTICK 1"
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