I
realize this blog is supposed to be about the Levant. But the American election
provides too much material to pass up.
Mitt Romney’s
chances of becoming president are disappearing faster than beer at a football
game. Republican leaders, if there are any, in Congress are already distancing
themselves from their candidate. “Mitt? Mitt who? Never heard of him.” All eyes
will be on Mitt’s concession speech to see if he finally realizes his dream is
over and whether he has the grace to leave the stage before the hook drags him
off.
If
Romney does indeed lose Republicans on the fringes will splutter with fury into
their bourbons and wonder how those ‘socialists, atheists, tax-loving, non-Americans,
French fry lovers’ managed to steal yet another election. The Tea Party
fanatics will invoke the spirit of the Alamo and vow to keep fighting to their
last tax deduction. Sarah Palin will undoubtedly re-appear and state loudly –
she has no volume control – that the results would have been different if she
had been the candidate.
Tea Party doing what it does best -- protest |
What
the Republicans fail to understand is that their recent hard-line, rejectionist
policies have consigned them to pretty much a permanent minority status. They
have yet to realize that the so-called ‘Golden Era’ of white, low-tax,
low-benefit, all-powerful America is over, if it ever existed outside their
fantasies in the first place. The world and America have changed since Ozzie
and Harriet ruled the airwaves.
In
many ways America has already become the personal and corporate welfare state
that the Tea Party pretends to hate – until you start talking about removing
some of their favourite tax deductions.
Would the Tea Party give up home mortgage interest deductions? |
By a wide margin Americans like Social
Security, Medicaid and Medicare. They don’t like someone talking about reducing
or taking those benefits away. States and local communities desperately need
federal grants to help their schools and other public services. You’re not
going to win votes by threatening to take those away. The federal government is
indeed big, and it probably going to get bigger and more intrusive. No
Republican, even the sainted Ronald Reagan and certainly neither of the Bushes,
has been able to reverse that trend. The Republicans need to understand that
the Tea Party actually hurts them. It allows the Democrats to portray the
entire party as a group that wants to roll everything back to Calvin Coolidge.
Calvin Coolidge -- the real Republican candidate? |
I
am reminded of a friend of mine who is an Abraham Lincoln scholar, He was once
invited to speak about Lincoln in, of all places, Vicksburg, Mississippi where
Union armies won a key battle in 1863. Many people in the audience still
thought of Lincoln as the devil incarnate. My friend looked over the audience
of sceptical faces and started his address, “We won. You lost. Get over it.”
Someone needs to say something similar to the Republicans. “The country has
changed. Deal with it.”
Romney
thinks the election will turn on the state of the economy. If it were that
simple he would be far ahead in the polls. What he fails to realize is that the
economy is only one of the several key issues. Yes it’s important, but so is
preserving federal benefits. So is immigration. And so is the perception of
fairness in taxation. Republicans can talk until they are blue in the face
about the fact that the 1% pays a disproportionate share of tax, and that
increasing taxes on that group isn’t going to help the budget all that much.
Mathematically they’re right. Politically they’re dead wrong. The middle class
they’re so fond of doesn’t want to hear about the benefits of tax breaks for
the millionaires. The middle class has trouble understanding how an extremely
successful company like General Electric can pay no U.S. corporate tax. It’s
all legal and I’m sure there is a way to explain how it benefits the country.
But not in the heat of an election. Not when you and your wife are working two
jobs and have trouble meeting the mortgage.
The
Republicans have given the Democrats a free ride on these critical ‘fairness’ issues.
Instead of saying how their plans would preserve important benefits by putting
the federal budget on a firmer foundation the Democrats can talk about the
danger of taking them away. By simplifying the argument they have avoided
serious debate on exactly how they will continue to pay for them. The Democrats' themes are very simple and very effective. Vote for me
if you want your next Social Security check. Vote for the Republicans if you
want to start eating cat food.
The
less said about Romney’s foreign policy the better. Other than blustering about
how big and powerful America is and how it won’t be pushed around by pygmies
any more it’s very hard to discern just what he’s talking about. The neocons he
relies on believe military threats will solve everything. They lament that
America is trying to work with Russia and China, hasn’t bombed Damascus or
nuked the ignorant radicals who storm our embassies, or basically that it is not trying
to remake the world in the image of the discredited neocons. One hoped the neocons might have the grace
to fade away silently after the fiasco of Iraq. No such luck. They’re back in
full force as if the serial disasters of their policies never happened.
Again,
it’s time to realize the world has changed. For all America’s power, it is now
a multi-polar world with competing national interests. Countries like Brazil,
India, Turkey, Malaysia and Indonesia have legitimate interests. America, for
all its power, is in no position to impose its will or its idea of a world
order. Foreign policy requires careful nuances and nudges, finding common
ground, and avoiding conflict for the sake of conflict. It’s a tedious somewhat
messy process. But it definitely beats the alternative.
The
main question is the attitude of the Republicans after the election. Will they
realize that their rejectionist policies really don’t work? Will they stop
trying to repeal the New Deal? Will they deal with America the way it is
instead of the fantasy that exists in their imagination? If they can do this,
if they can find someone who will actually lead the party instead of blindly
following the lunatic fringe they just might have a chance in 2016.
1 comment:
First political read I've ever enjoyed!
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