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Perotistas on the March - The return of “raging moderates” and “angry centrists.”
National Review Online ^
| October 21, 2009
| Jonah Goldberg
Posted on 10/21/2009 10:30:45 PM PDT by neverdem
October 21, 2009, 0:00 a.m.
Perotistas on the March The return of raging moderates and angry centrists.
By Jonah Goldberg
One of the most macabre images I’ve ever heard described came in the aftermath of the Asian tsunami in 2004. Before the tidal wave crashed on shore, beachgoers stood around and idly gaped as the water drastically receded. Bewildered, they didn’t realize they were looking at the prelude to a calamity.
The Democratic party looks more and more like those beachgoers every day, watching popular support recede, oblivious to the Perot tsunami coming our way.
In 1992, the incumbent president, George H. W. Bush, was a disappointment to his party’s base and a pariah to the Democrats. Government seemed to have lost its grip. The deficit became a massive issue, a symbol of out-of-control government. The hangover of Cold War sacrifices, the S&L bailout, runaway crime, huge trade deficits, the long-term trend of manufacturing decline, and, of course, the recession contributed to the sense that America desperately needed to get its house in order.
Ross Perot, a quirky Texas billionaire, tapped into that anxiety perfectly. Western, pro-business, no-nonsense, pro-choice and pro-gun, culturally conservative but with little interest in culture-war issues, he managed to thread the needle between both parties. He also benefited enormously from the fact that his independent bid for the presidency was seen by the press as an indictment of both the incumbent Republican and the “Reagan deficits” that Democrats and the media had been denouncing for years. At one point, Perot led in the polls, and if he hadn’t dropped out and then rejoined (or had he not been so Yosemite Sam-goofy), he might have done even better than his historic 19 percent of the popular vote.
It’s still debated whether Perot cost Bush the election. But even if Clinton would have won regardless, Perot’s candidacy had an underappreciated significance. He forced Clinton to double-down on his “New Democrat” appeals. Clinton had already fashioned himself as a “different kind of Democrat” who would “end welfare as we know it.” But the Perotista revolt of “raging moderates” and “angry centrists” reinforced Clinton’s rhetorical commitments and the voters’ expectations.
Historian Richard Hofstadter identified the phenomenon decades earlier when he wrote of third parties in U.S. politics: “Their function has not been to win or govern but to agitate, educate, generate new ideas and supply the dynamic element in our political life.”
He added: “Third parties are like bees: Once they have stung, they die.” The Perotistas stung in 1992.
Once elected — with only 43 percent of the vote — Clinton seemed to betray his promises to govern from the center. His heavy-handed “Hillarycare” effort was exactly the sort of thing the Perotistas didn’t want (never mind gays in the military and all that). The Democrats were shellacked in 1994, losing the Senate and the House to Newt Gingrich and his “Contract with America,” which was a carefully calibrated appeal to centrism.
The liberal interpretation of this sea change has always been freighted with denial. The late ABC News anchor Peter Jennings said the election was a giant hissy fit: “Ask parents of any two-year-old and they can tell you about those temper tantrums. . . . The voters had a temper tantrum.”
In part because Perot voters and sympathizers were disproportionately white and male, and because they expressed their dismay with Clinton by voting for the GOP, the Democrats and the media ginned up the “angry white male” theory of American politics. The same voters who were part of a “vital center” when attacking a Republican president were increasingly recast as dangerous minions of Rush Limbaugh and the forces of hate when they aligned with Republicans.
Fast-forward to today. The tea-party protesters are in large part the heirs of Perotism, and they are being subjected to the same insults. Liberal commentators are deaf to the tea partiers’ disdain for both political parties, preferring to cast the protesters as a deranged band of birthers and racists or hired guns of a Republican “AstroTurf” campaign.
Meanwhile, as National Review’s Ramesh Ponnuru has argued, the Democrats have convinced themselves that the moral of Clinton’s failed health-care push is not that he was wrong to try, but that he was wrong not to cram it through against popular opposition.
President Obama promised a “new era of fiscal responsibility,” but he’s governing as if exploding the size of government is what Americans want, polls be damned. The Democrats’ budget games and giveaways amount to poking the angry Perotista beast with a stick.
If the GOP can convincingly align with and exploit the growing Perotista discontent, it very well might ride to victory on a tsunami the Democrats can’t even see.
— Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online and the author of Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left from Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning. © 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: angrycentrists; perot; perotistas; ragingmoderates
1
posted on
10/21/2009 10:30:45 PM PDT
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
Great - when the “angry moderates” get involved, the left wins every time. :(
2
posted on
10/21/2009 10:37:43 PM PDT
by
Tzimisce
(No thanks. We have enough government already. - The Tick)
To: neverdem; hiredhand
3
posted on
10/21/2009 10:39:55 PM PDT
by
Squantos
(Be polite. Be professional. But have a plan to kill everyone you meet)
To: neverdem
The biggest defeat of 2008 to the GOP was, ironically, the nomination of John McCain.
More than anything, this allowed the Democrats to divide and conquer.
The GOP will continue to lose as long as asshats like this gain the nomination and proceed to run half-ass backward RINO campaigns with the gloves on 24/7 and with only 1/2 their hearts and souls in it.
4
posted on
10/21/2009 10:40:30 PM PDT
by
AmericanInTokyo
(Election Nite 2010: The Difference beween "Yeahhh! We Did It!!!" and "Oh well. See you in the camps")
To: Tzimisce
When RINOs are also added, it’s going to be even harder for all of conservatism to improve by much. RINOs are already creating a ton of political damage without adding anybody else to the mix.
5
posted on
10/21/2009 10:43:03 PM PDT
by
johnthebaptistmoore
(Conservatives obey the rules. Leftists cheat. Who probably has the political advantage?)
To: neverdem
This has nothing to do with moderates. When a movement attacks both the dnc and rnc, people assume the attack is from the middle. This movement is about people on the right sick of democrats and the democrat-lite republican party.
6
posted on
10/21/2009 10:48:59 PM PDT
by
icwhatudo
("laws requiring compulsory abortion could be sustained under the existing Constitution"Obama Adviser)
To: icwhatudo
I don’t know that it’s entirely from the Right. There is also a strong Populist component that is very much what the Perotistas were all about: anti-Washington, anti-deficit, and anti-incumbent. They are not all Rightists, but they have conservative instincts. There is no reason why those voters cannot be Republicans, and they are an entirely satisfactory element to replace Northeastern Liberals in Republican ranks.
7
posted on
10/21/2009 11:01:40 PM PDT
by
FredZarguna
(It looks just like a Telefunken U-47. In leather.)
To: neverdem
Hell, these arrogant stupid elitist politicians are pissing everyone off. All they do is moan and bitch, point fingers and try to get re-elected. What have they done in the last 9 months. Cash for clunkers? Spend us further into debt? Time to clean house!
8
posted on
10/21/2009 11:27:36 PM PDT
by
smokingfrog
(No man's life, liberty or property is safe while the legislature is in session. I AM JIM THOMPSON)
The GOP platform SHOULD be rather simple for 2010/2012. Of all people, David Cameron sees this and has stumbled upon a bit of an intriguing message...Recent Government is the problem...the cause...not the solution. It is subtle, but it is the shifting of left’s myth that we should all look to government as the “fixer”. The way he said it is a way to shift the current groupthink rather than sound like a “fringe” person to independents. Obviously the UK is a different animal, but the core phrases were applicable.
Keep it Simple Stupid and focus on 2-3 main points. The Debt/Spending, overreach of intrusive government, jobs.
The economy and the failure of government will be driving the bus for the next 4 years at least.
2010 should be interesting. I don’t think the GOP has “gotten it” yet. Which is rather sad. If there ever was a time for the common man to get in there and run, the next 4 years is it.
To: wardaddy; Joe Brower; Cannoneer No. 4; Criminal Number 18F; Dan from Michigan; Eaker; Jeff Head; ...
10
posted on
10/22/2009 12:41:01 AM PDT
by
neverdem
(Xin loi minh oi)
To: AmericanInTokyo
We have to get the states to seal the primaries.
11
posted on
10/22/2009 12:52:54 AM PDT
by
Bellflower
(If you are left DO NOT take the mark of the beast and be damned forever.)
To: Bellflower
“We have to get the states to seal the primaries.”
Boy, have you got that right. Should be first priority of Pubs in states with open primaries. But those very states are infected with large amounts of RINOs, so it may not pan out.
12
posted on
10/22/2009 1:16:01 AM PDT
by
flaglady47
(In Unity There Is Strength.)
To: neverdem
"Divide and Conquer" Unfortunately the GOP battle cry is: "Snatch defeat from the jaws of victory"
At this point, IMHO, 2010 is a waste of time. Based on GOP performance during the past few weeks, I'd say that elections, as we have known them, are a thing of the past.
O will be anointed in 2012 and rule for at least 4 terms...The presidential term limit will be gone by 2014...
13
posted on
10/22/2009 1:33:20 AM PDT
by
SuperLuminal
(Where is another agitator for republicanism like Sam Adams when we need him?)
To: neverdem
It's not enough to save the country from the Democrats; we have to save it from the politicians. That's why I say vote
all the incumbents out, otherwise we'll just end up with the old irresponsible 'pubbies instead of the old irresponsible Dems.
Fortunately, voting all the incumbents out gets the Dems out of power anyway.
14
posted on
10/22/2009 4:09:19 AM PDT
by
Grut
To: neverdem
We did see a new political animal emerge from behind the curtain this season:
Volvo Maoists of the Democratic Party.
To: neverdem
To: neverdem
Yipes!
FR is over-run with these morons lately, trying to use Sarah Palin as a focal point to draw voters to the RINOs all the while claiming to detest them.
Guess what RINOs, Sarah is a Republican who aims to restore the Republican party, so your rhetoric is routine deception.
17
posted on
10/22/2009 7:59:00 AM PDT
by
editor-surveyor
(The beginning of the O'Bomb-a administration looks a lot like the end of the Nixon administration)
To: Squantos
If the GOP can convincingly align with and exploit the growing Perotista discontent, it very well might ride to victory on a tsunami the Democrats cant even see.
They'll have to flush the RINOs first. :-)
18
posted on
10/22/2009 5:03:18 PM PDT
by
hiredhand
(Understand the CRA and why we're facing economic collapse - see my about page.)
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