On the winning of elections
November 13th, 2009After the 2004 presidential election, Adam Werbach, then-president of the Sierra Club, wrote a number of theses critiquing the performance of the Democratic Party, which he posted, in the style of Martin Luther, on the door of the Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C. He did this because he felt the party was being led by ”people who have failed to articulate a moral-intellectual vision for America and the world,” and as a result, Democrats had become the minority party for “the foreseeable future.” Among other things, Werbach’s theses stated that “Democrats are now history’s spectators, Republicans its actors”; that “Democratic candidates will continue to lose as long as they treat Americans as rational actors who vote their ’self-interest’ after weighing competing offers for health care, jobs, and security”; and that Democrats’ “obsession with denouncing the radical conservative project as a “lie” has become a useful substitute for vision.” In order to reverse the trend toward irrelevancy, Werbach said, Democrats needed to shed their party of anyone who “resist[s] the process to create a new vision” or who insists that the path to redemption needs only “more money and effort” rather than a new-found dedication to political realignment and a coherent set of values. ”In despair and defeat lie the seeds of triumph and victory,” he stated. “In that loss lies the opportunity to define a new progressive politics in the new century.” (For a complete list of Adam Werbach’s November 3rd Theses, see http://www.commondreams.org/views04/1112-34.htm).
But just two years later Republicans lost control of both the House and the Senate, and last year they lost the White House. The new minority for the foreseeable future is now the Republican Party. What happened?
Personally, I’m not so sure it was because the Democrats “got religion” so much as it was that the Republicans failed to meet the expectations of the American people. Werbach spoke of a need for “fulfillment” in his theses; Americans want “a deeper sense of personal meaning, a national mission, and passion in times of fear.” The Republican Party has spent decades building itself as the party of traditional values, but somewhere along the way those values became little more than campaign tactics that lost their urgency once the election was over.
I’ve been watching the deterioration—or is it self-destruction?—of the Republican Party since Obama assumed the presidency. There appears to be no consistency in the Republican position anymore, except to stand in opposition to all things Obama regardless of who it helps or hurts. For example, one of Republicans’ main arguments against health care reform is that it will undermine Medicare—a stance, notes Paul Krugman (“The Politics of Spite”; NYT 10/4/09), “utterly at odds both with the party’s traditions and with what conservatives claim to believe.” But, Krugman goes on to say, because Obama’s plan to reform health care relies on funding taken from Medicare savings, the GOP “has become the passionate defender of ineffective medical procedures and overpayments to insurance companies.” In effect, Republicans’ obsession with denouncing the liberal agenda as a “lie” has become their useful substitute for vision.
But this doesn’t give Democrats license to rest easy. If anything, the elections of 2006 demonstrated how quickly the pendulum can swing back the other way. Besides, “[e]lections aren’t necessarily won by the candidate with the most rational argument,” says Krugman (“Paranoia Strikes Deep”; NYT 11/9/09). “They’re often determined, instead, by events and economic conditions.” If the economy is slow to recover and jobs remain scarce, voters might start looking to Republicans out of frustration. The lesson to be learned by Democrats and Republicans alike is that your success is sometimes nothing more than your opponent’s failure. An election won is no cause to bask in the glory of new-found political capital—especially since such capital is so quickly spent—but time to roll up the sleeves and get to work defining a new politics for a new century. Loss of position and power is only ever an election away.