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Party at Sea
by Vincent
Fiore
The
election of 2004 will be remembered for many things, some of which
will have long-term implications. The GOP has broadened its base
among minorities and women, and has strengthened its ties to Catholic
and Jewish groups. The party has also energized and turned out the
Christian base en masse, which all leads to the exit-polling sleeper
that reflected the number-one issue concerning the country today,
moral values.
This came as quite a shock for the old media elites,
as most among them believed that the issues of terrorism, Iraq,
and the economy would decide voters. Perhaps though, no one was
more surprised at this than leaders of the Democratic Party.
Having invested much capital in the outcome of this
election--frequently billed as the most important election in our
history--Democrats are left with not just a defeat at the polls,
but also in need of a major redefining of their platform.
This is not the party of Franklin D. Roosevelt or
John Kennedy anymore, nor has it been for some time. It is not even
the party of Bill Clinton, whose "triangulation” philosophy
bought Democrats eight years worth of a reprieve. In truth, since
Barry Goldwater’s run in 1964, which not only propelled conservative
ideology onto the national scene, but introduced Ronald Reagan to
the nation, Democrats and the liberalism that defined them was an
ever-waning political movement.
The 2004 election represents a journey for Democrats
that started some 40 years ago, highlighted by the failure of Jimmy
Carter in 1980, surrendering the House of Representatives in 1994,
and losing the presidency in 2000 to George W. Bush. The salad days
of Lyndon Johnson are far and away a relic of what once was.
Today’s Democratic Party leaders will have
many discussions among themselves regarding the shift in the electorate,
a shift that has been happening right before their very eyes. So
it came as a shock that when you consider the political intelligentsia
that resides in the party, one-time Clinton strategist James Carville
has set aside his usually caustic and partisan musings for some
old fashioned reality checking. At a breakfast hosted by the Christian
Science Monitor on November 8, Carville fired a shot sure to be
heard around the country: "We have to come to grips that we
are an opposition party now, and not a particularly effective one.
We’ve got to re-assess ourselves. The underlying problem here
is, there is no call to arms that the Democratic Party is making
to the country," said Mr. Carville. "We've got to re-assess
ourselves. We've got to be born again."
Along
with Carville at the same breakfast was longtime Democratic pollster
Stanley Greenberg and chief Kerry strategist Bob Shrum, who knows
a thing or two about losing elections. While all three conceded
that Republicans are winning elections on many issues facing today’s
voter, Shrum could not refrain from re-asserting that part of the
Democratic platform that Carville was attempting to steer the future
of the party away from. "Some of the stuff I read is not going
to happen," Mr. Shrum said. "The Democratic Party is not
going to be better at competing with the Republican Party at being
anti-gay. And frankly, I wouldn't be in that party. I would leave
that party."
The
2004 election was not won by Bush because he ran as being intolerant
to minority groups, or was specifically anti-gay, anymore than the
majority of Americans are. Though the old-school curmudgeons that
still call the Democratic Party home would have you think otherwise,
Bush won by presenting better solutions to the issues than John
Kerry did, and by promoting his beliefs on the moral issues questions
that most Americans felt are worth preserving. This defies the hedonistic
purview that has ruled a large part of the Democratic Party since
the 1960’s, and fights to stay relevant today.
At that breakfast meeting, Carville also said "We
can deny this crap, but I'm out of the denial. I'm about reality
here," "We are an opposition party, and as of right now,
not a particularly effective one. You can't deny reality here."
America is fundamentally better served with a multi-party
system that forces parties to compete for the vote, and forces voters
to examine a divergence of opinion. I believe that ultimately, the
Joe Liebermans, Evan Bayhs and Blanche Lincolns, and apparently
the "born again” Carvilles of the Democratic Party will
win this fight, but not anytime soon. For the Democratic Party is
a party at sea. For the benefit of the country and the process of
democracy, let’s hope they find a friendly star in the near
future to steer by and cast aside the bitter and selfish feelings
of this past year’s election.
Their survival as a viable party depends on it.
Vincent Fiore is a freelance political writer who lives in New York
City.
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