Democrats do not have a great track record in the White
House. The number of Democratic presidents who have won second terms is small
and becomes much smaller with the second half of the 20th
Century. Unlike Congressional shifts
which reflect regional politics more than a national referendum, the Presidency
is a referendum on the usages of the nearly unlimited power of its holder.
The Democratic strategy has been to substitute iconography for
competence and their iconic presidents have invariably been men of dubious
character. FDR rode to power on the coattails of the Roosevelt name, after
conducting a smear campaign against Teddy Roosevelt’s son who would have been
the natural candidate.
Once in power, FDR assembled a grab-bag of bad ideas from
European Socialists and Fascists and employed a small army of writers and
artists as propagandists to lionize his programs. Marginally competent,
Roosevelt the Second cultivated an aristocratic paternal air, surrounded
himself with experts and programs to create public confidence.
FDR did not fix the economy, but he did lead the country
through World War II while preemptively losing World War III, which was enough
to give him the iconic status that had made his presidency possible.
The Roosevelt Administration, with an assist from Harry
Truman, had largely created the Soviet Empire through its betrayal of Eastern
Europe and the Republic of China. The Liberal camp had been thoroughly
infiltrated by Communist agents and was full of sympathizers for the Soviet
Union.
Before WW2 the USSR had been a regional backwater power with
a network of international agents at its beck and call. After WW2, Communists
were on the verge of swallowing up Western Europe and had taken China.
Truman’s disastrous China policy led to the Communist
takeover of a potential world power and to the bloody Korean War. The aftermath
of the FDR Administration was largely preoccupied with covering up the
disastrous results of its Communist-friendly program. The campaigns against
McArthur and McCarthy were necessary to cover up the consequences of Truman’s
China policy and FDR’s USSR policy.
The Democrats lost the White House and the public turned to
Eisenhower to clean up the strategic mess left behind by the progressive party.
The great national crisis was Communism and the Democrats had not seen the
crisis coming and had no credibility in deploying a policy to combat the Soviet
Union.
To retake the White House the Democrats needed a new image
and a candidate with credibility fighting Communism. That candidate was to be a
Kennedy, a member of a family at odds with FDR due to its Nazi sympathies,
whose patriarch had taken careful care to burnish the Anti-Communist
credentials of his sons.
FDR had been the avuncular figure in the chair; JFK was to
be the youth candidate. The new man, a creature of the old Joe Kennedy, with
fresh new ideas written for him by ghostwriters. Like FDR, JFK was a
manufactured figure. And like him, JFK was a man of ideas with no ideas who
disguised that lack with an army of experts and the cultivated illusion of
intellectualism.
JFK was not particularly Anti-Communist, but that was a
necessary qualification for any candidate looking to carry on FDR’s work. The Democratic
Party had adapted to the collapse of its old coalition of New York merchants
and Southern plantation owners after the Civil War by embracing Republican
Unionism with a vengeance and jettisoning the last of Jefferson to become the
party of big government.
FDR had borrowed Lincoln’s ruthless unionism and blended it
with Teddy Roosevelt’s anti-monopolism; mixing together the work of two
Republican presidents and claiming it for his own. JFK similarly took up
elements of a Republican civil rights program and blended it with their
aggressive Anti-Communism to create a new Democratic identity.
The underlying program in both administrations had nothing
to do with the depression or war; but of building up a national political
machine using the same methods of urban political machines. The core ingredient
was class warfare. FDR put a genteel patina over class warfare while JFK
phrased it as an idealistic ambitious form of American Exceptionalism that made
it seem American.
FDR and JFK both borrowed Lincoln’s martyrdom, FDR by acting
as a long-serving wartime president, and JFK, posthumously through his
assassination. Obama has taken on a crude form of that martyrdom by virtue of
race.
JFK’s death left his upgrade of Eisenhower’s “Dime Store New
Deal” unfinished. LBJ took up the baton as the consequences of Vietnam tore
apart the coalition between Liberals and Leftists leading to a culture war.
FDR died before events would have forced him to block
Communist ambitions in Europe and turned the intelligentsia against him,
allowing him to retain the services of the progressive propaganda corps. But
JFK’s façade of Anti-Communism had committed him to international policies that
broke apart the coalition between Liberals and Leftists. As much as the left
might have supported JFK’s domestic program, and even forgiven his domestic
show of affiliation with the Anti-Communists, by the time he was replaced by
LBJ, the stress fractures were just too big and they tore apart the Democratic
Party.
After that the Democrats lost the ability to compete on
national security. Their attempts at salvaging the white male vote led them to
two southern governors. Carter imploded on National Security, but Clinton
thrived through two terms in the Post-Soviet period when history no longer
seemed to matter. But history did matter.
The Communism menace had risen on FDR’s watch. Muslim
terrorism began its ascent under JFK and reached critical levels under Clinton.
The Democratic failures on Communism made Eisenhower, Nixon and Reagan possible.
Their failures on Islamism made Bush possible.
Obama was the third Democratic bid at an iconographic
presidency. Like FDR, he was confronted with an economic crisis, and like JFK
he faced a global conflict. And like both men, he proved inept at handling
both, relying on armies of experts and making unwise decisions. As with JFK’s
first term, the consequences of his foreign policy have not still struck home
with a decisive enough emphasis to turn the public against him, but unlike FDR,
there is no war to distract from the economic situation.
Obama has been running on his iconography for a while now
and like an old beat up car, he never noticed that it gave out on him a while
back. The debate was a wakeup call, but it won’t be the last one. He has to run
on something, but he can’t run on the economy or race and that just leaves
national security. The Benghazi attack emphasized the disastrous consequences
of his foreign policy, but they also did him a favor by shifting the debate to
the foreign policy arena.
With FDR fading and the cult of JFK not as strong as it used
to be in the twilight of the Boomers, the Democratic Party needed a third icon
to further integrate its political machine into the infrastructure of the
government.
The Democrats needed to win badly in 2008 because it put
them in a position of exploiting a crisis to protect and expand their
institutions, both private and public, that might have otherwise been targeted
by a Republican on an austerity mission. Defeating McCain, who despite his own
reputation for pork had a cost-cutting streak, was a major victory because it
avoided the specter of having McCain do to them what Prime Minister Cameron,
another non-conservative conservative, had done to the institutions of the
liberal state in the UK. Defeating Romney, who is also running as a
cost-cutter, is an even bigger priority for the same reason.
The ideological and emotional issues are secondary to this
core bureaucratic mandate of protecting the political machine that the
post-Civil War Democratic Party had built up. Unlike Bush, Romney is not
running as a compassionate conservative looking to reconcile social spending
with conservative politics. And Romney’s campaign is not focused on the
international politics that might divert him from putting the domestic house in
order.
Pushing Romney back into Bush territory, as Benghazi may
have done, may neuter him even if he wins, and shifts the focus away from the
economy. But the public does not appear prepared to follow that shift with
polls still showing the economy as the primary focus. And that focus contains a
dangerous trap.
Any shift to foreign policy risks a dangerous discussion
about the Islamist rise to power that was aided and abetted by Obama, in the
same way that FDR had aided and abetted the rise of Communism. The Democrats
did not survive the debate when it broke out during the Truman Administration.
Should an honest discussion begin about the defeat in Afghanistan and the
Muslim Brotherhood takeover of the Middle East under the guise of the Arab
Spring, the result may be as great a blow to Obama’s prospects.
Obama’s last stand is also the Democratic Party’s last
stand. A hundred years of foreign policy and economic failures at the hands of
a corrupt mafia is about to come home to roost. The Democratic Party has
marginalized itself, abandoning mainstream Americans while openly embracing a
trillion dollar welfare state.
Iconography elevated Obama as it did FDR and JFK, but it
cannot see him through a constellation of crises. And if he falls, then his
party falls with him.
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