Posted on 01/31/2010 5:57:46 AM PST by Kaslin
Fair or not, voters have distaste and distrust this year for any candidate running under the progressive banner that was so wildly popular just last year.
I essentially believe that progressive is the wrong P to be describing yourself as this cycle, said a Democratic strategist working on congressional campaigns across the country. Populist is the way to go.
Candidates, he said, should appear as an outsider who will fight for Main Street, not Wall Street.
Because the concerns of independents will continue to dominate the electoral landscape, the best that progressive candidates can do is to emphasize the overlap between progressive thought and populist ideals, such as reining-in corporate greed and influence.
In 2008 Barack Obama and Democrats won a sweeping victory through a somewhat uneasy coalition of progressive Democrats and a large wave of independent voters seeking populist change.
But President Obama and Democrats in Congress have not delivered to either group, which has tarnished their brand, especially the progressive label.
The progressive base, along with independents and Republicans, are angry.
Obama and the Democrats have not delivered, either, on the populist change they promised over and over during the campaign. They promised an era of bipartisanship. They promised an era of fiscal responsibility. They promised a government given back to the people, a government not beholden to special interests and corporate greed.
Independent voters who gravitated toward Democrats have seen none of this come to fruition but instead have witnessed bitter bipartisanship, soaring deficits and legislation plagued with special and corporate interests. Independents have lost their patience and become disenchanted; if they stay that way, a power shift truly will occur in Congress this fall.
Any politically expedient shifts will only further frustrate progressives and make it even more difficult for a liberal candidate to be successful in the coming mid-term elections, particularly when running against a more pragmatic, populist candidate.
To hold onto their majority, Democrats must focus on a populist message with real appeal and appear to be concerned about the voters angst.
Successful candidates will convince voters that they want to go to Washington to solve real issues, not to be part of a broken process. Voters dont much care for either party; they want people who will address their concerns.
Will this year be like 1984, a wave election driven by the need to have balance in government? Or will it be like 1992, when people were hurting economically and wanted something new versus the staleness of President George H. W. Bush?
Or will it be more like 1994, when a new President Bill Clinton hadnt got his footing yet and the signs of economic recovery were unclear?
Keep in mind that 1984 was not a great economic period in terms of the numbers. What President Ronald Reagan had in excess was optimism and a clear agenda: He wanted to lead America, his shining city on a hill. That is why his Morning in America commercial resonated; it gave people hope and played on the sense that the economy was turning up.
We probably are closest to 1992, in which incumbents need to beware, outsiders have real appeal and the man in the White House seems to lack vision. Voters likely will gravitate to candidates who show vision with enthusiasm and appeal, regardless of ideology.
Democrat Creigh Deeds lost Virginias gubernatorial race because he had no message or agenda; Republican Bob McDonnell won there because he did have those and voters saw it.
Democrat Martha Coakley lost Massachusetts U.S. Senate race because she had no message on fixing voters problems; Republican Scott Brown won because he spoke like someone who wants to fix problems. (His challenge going forward is to lead the effort and to be for something real on health care reform, not just the Senates 41st no vote.)
Voters have become much more fickle because of a rapidly changing world. We once feared change and, therefore, it occurred slowly, incrementally. Wave or change elections were generational: FDR in 1932, Kennedy to a lesser degree in 1960, Reagan in 1980. Then we started to see them in shorter, back-to-back periods: Clinton in 1992, balance in 1994, Democrats in 2006, Obama in 2008.
Many people still like Obama personally because they dont see him as corrupt but the way health-care reform proposals moved through Congress has angered them. Obama must be careful or he could turn out to be like fish and visitors unwelcome after three days.
In his case, it will be three years.
The Marxist shape-shifters attempting yet another rebranding.
I have never read a zito article on FR that was not a flaming leftist rant... this is no different. Delusional and falling over on the left side.
LLS
Do these Democrats actually believe they can fool enough voters this time around to survive?
And 0 just had a nice meeting with Jeb and Bush 41. That can’t make anybody happy.
I think the auther is missing the point. The democrats did deliver, but Americans generally don’t like it.
You know you can address her personally and ask her about it. She is a FReeper
The only ones they are fooling are themselves
That is pure evil.
First they called themselves liberal. After a wonderful Carter bout, and good teaching from Reagan, the masses eventually figured liberal was something not wanted. So most of them dropped that term.
Then they used progressive. Now people have figured out progressive means “liberal”. Ok, we’ll change our name again.
So now they are going to be “populist”. Not change what they do, just a deception.
Satan would be proud.
“And 0 just had a nice meeting with Jeb and Bush 41. “
?!?!?
I like GWB (not for some of his policies, but he is a good man), but why the @$%!*#@! would he meet w/ this POS after the POS uses every opportunity to blame his failures on GWB?
I hope your tagline will soon read: The Emperor has no CLOUT!!
When sitting at the CBS sports desk he said to a sports announcer(I paraphrase):
“I’ll have your job in 3 or 7 years” !!!!!!
They seem to have left out the “I’M a scu&bag” message.
One wonders if the truth will work with all those “brilliant” independents out there.
IMHO
I hope your tagline will soon read: The Emperor has no CLOUT!!
When sitting at the CBS sports desk he said to a sports announcer(I paraphrase):
“I’ll have your job in 3 or 7 years” !!!!!!
I didn’t know that Jeb was there too. But just watch for the p o s to bash them within a week.
I didn’t realize CBS had a station in Kenya.
Too late for Obama and his progessive friends. We know who they are and what they stand for.
It all boils down to a much more sinister ideology, the likes of which slaughtered a royal family out of rhetorical hatred. (The Romanov's) Mao also used the “Populist” mantra to gather his Red Guard together. Millions of people died as a result of the blind hate they created.
Now I understand why the Democrats think the term is so “cool”.
CP, that was Bush 41 not 43 :-)
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