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The left has taken over the Democratic Party
The Hill News ^ | 12-17-2003 | Dick Morris

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 party’s 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 doesn’t 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 Dean’s 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 California’s 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 party’s 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.


TOPICS: Extended News; Front Page News; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: democrat; democratparty; demorats; dickmorris; left
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To: tkathy
Extremists seem to be out to destroy both parties.

As to which faction is the most destructive to the nation, last time I looked, those on the "far right" of the Republican party (whatever that is; Jerry Falwell et al, I suppose) were not overtly supporting our enemies. I hasten to add I am not on the far right.

61 posted on 12/19/2003 3:26:22 PM PST by luvbach1
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To: Michael.SF.
Yes, Hillary will be tough to beat. The first woman on the November ballot for president in 2008 will have a lot of built-in good will from both men and women. Speaking as a man, I would love to vote for a good woman for POTUS. Is there a Republican woman who could cut down "her shrillness"?
62 posted on 12/19/2003 3:31:18 PM PST by luvbach1
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To: chudogg
Clinton was forced to take more centrist positions just to win in '92 - narrowly and thanks to Perot.

His true colors (and those of shrillery's) appeared with the gay policy and socialized health care proposal right after that. These guys run centrist and once in, do whatever they can to take the country to the left.

Slick Bill is as centrist as Marx.

63 posted on 12/19/2003 3:32:42 PM PST by eleni121
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To: eleni121
Slick Bill is as centrist as Marx

It's all relative, of course, so I really don't doubt that Bubba is near the center of the far-left Demorat Party.

64 posted on 12/19/2003 3:39:10 PM PST by luvbach1
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To: Michael.SF.
How about a "Bush-Rice" ticket in '04 followed by a "Rice-Watts" ticket for the GOP in '08?

How about Bush Cheyney again in 04', then trot out Rudy Guiliani and Condi in 08'.

65 posted on 12/19/2003 4:17:08 PM PST by Go Gordon (The older I get, the better I used to be.)
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To: Reagan is King
Old toe sucker makes some good points.

What a WEIRD fettish!

Still, he's a good political analyst or the KKKlintoons would never have paid him megabucks.

By the way. He isn't on our side, or on the dumbocrats side. He is a mercenary with a word-processor, but a damn good one. He will work for anyone who pays him. Right now, that is the press.

Even so, he does good work.

66 posted on 12/19/2003 4:22:05 PM PST by LibKill (You are not sheeple. Refuse to be clipped.)
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To: luvbach1
Is there a Republican woman who could cut down "her shrillness"?

I think Condi Riced has the potential. But '08 may be too soon for her, unless she becomes VP in '04. She also may not want to be a politician, but prefers to be more behind the scenes.

One reason I like Condi also is the fact that she is black which will make it more difficult for Dems to beat her up, as they would anyone else.

She is also a lot easier on the eyes then old Hill.

67 posted on 12/19/2003 4:55:55 PM PST by Michael.SF. ('America is not safer because of the capture of Sadam' - Howard Dean, Democrat)
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To: Go Gordon
How about Bush Cheyney again in 04', then trot out Rudy Guiliani and Condi in 08'.

I like it. But I was hoping for Rudy to run against Hillary in '06. Although I am still thinking Hillary will not run for the Senate in '06, if the Republicans have a formidable candidate.

68 posted on 12/19/2003 4:58:52 PM PST by Michael.SF. ('America is not safer because of the capture of Sadam' - Howard Dean, Democrat)
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To: gorush
From a strict constructionist conservative's point of view, the Republican Party has been taken over by the left as well.

Dang, you beat me to it. That's the first thing that came to mind, and all I had seen was the title.

69 posted on 12/20/2003 1:30:03 PM PST by brewcrew
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