For GOP, Reliable Wedge Issues Suddenly Fall Flat

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First Posted: 10-16-08 12:49 PM   |   Updated: 11-16-08 05:12 AM

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Assaults on Obama from the right have been unrelenting, including charges that he "pals around with terrorists"; that he is a lockstep liberal bound by the orthodoxies of the left; that his party caused the economic crisis by requiring banks to give subprime mortgages to "unqualified minorities"; that he is a closet Muslim or Muslim sympathizer who will sell out Israel; that he would accept defeat in Iraq in order to court the antiwar vote; and so forth.

One of the toughest punches was thrown by McCain running mate Sarah Palin when she told a crowd in Clearwater, Florida: "This [Obama] is not a man who sees America the way you and I see America... I'm afraid this is someone who sees America as imperfect enough to work with a former domestic terrorist who had targeted his own country."

"When Palin squints her eyes, tells her supporters Obama 'pals around with terrorists,' calls him 'exotic' and invites us to wonder with her who he really is, it's that code all over again. It's a rhetorical rifle shot [revealing] a malignant mindset - us vs. them - and anyone who says otherwise is a damn liar," wrote Joe Cutbirth, ABC News commentator and adjunct professor of journalism at Columbia University.

Obama says of himself: "I'm not making an argument that the resistance is simply racial. It's more just that I'm different in all kinds of ways. I'm different even for black people... If I were watching Fox News, I wouldn't vote for me, right? Because the way I'm portrayed 24/7 is as a freak! I am the latte-sipping, New York Times-reading, Volvo-driving, no-gun-owning, effete, politically correct, arrogant liberal."

In another year, the onslaught Obama has been subject to might have brought down a Democratic nominee - as Willie Horton and the Swift Boat Veterans helped to bring down Michael Dukakis and John Kerry.

But this year, not only has Obama weathered the conservative bombardment, but Republican tactics are bouncing back against John McCain.

Take, for example, the New York Times story of October 15: "Poll Says McCain Hurts His Bid by Using Attacks." The Pew Research Center, in turn, found that "Obama also has an advantage in voter assessments of the tone of the campaign. Nearly half (48%) see McCain as too personally critical of Obama. By comparison, just 22% see Obama as too critical of McCain. Even among McCain's own voters, nearly one in five (19%) think he has been too critical of Obama. Fewer Obama voters (13%) think their candidate has been too hard on McCain. Perceptions about the campaign McCain is running are starkly different from what they were in June, when just 26% said he had been too personally critical of Obama."

The same assessment of the McCain campaign is being voiced by some of the Arizona senator's own allies. Writing on TheNextRight web site, conservative blogger "mindyfinn" argues that, "In the last month, McCain's favorability rating has dropped 6 points, from 56.4 to 50.1, and Obama's favorability has increased, from 55.3 to 57.4, according to the RCP polling average. The Obama-focused [GOP] campaign is not working. Now 'Election Politics 101' dictates that when you're down and your opponent is hovering at 50% in electoral polls, it's time to enlighten voters as to the negative aspects of your opponent, commonly known as 'negative' ads. The McCain camp followed this rule to a 'T.' And in this case, it did not work."

Story continues below

This is the first year in recent memory that the politics of race, as well as the politics of 'God, guns, and gays' appear to be falling on deaf ears.

Since the late 1960s, the GOP has been strikingly successful in demonizing all things liberal, especially on matters of race - relying on a presumption that, in many voters' minds, a Democratic candidate who supports affirmative action, welfare, and expansive civil rights, will also support abortion, an anti-war platform, higher taxes, gay rights, increased domestic spending, a less assertive foreign policy, and a general erosion - in this view - of traditional moral values.

Democratic consultant Bill Carrick told the Huffington Post, "For the last 40 years, Republicans have had a very consistent strategy of defining liberalism and Democrats as a failed political philosophy out of touch with mainstream American values and interest." Emory political scientist Alan Abramowitz expands on Carrick's argument: "There's no question that Republicans have been successful at associating liberalism and liberal Democrats with some causes and issues that are rather unpopular with a majority of Americans including affirmative action, gay rights, weakness on defense and higher taxes."

Republican presidential candidates and their allies have repeatedly painted Democrats into a far left corner -- in 1972, 1980, 1984, 1988, 2000 and 2004 -- raising the specter of Communism, crime, inner-city riots, anti-war protests, and more recently liberal weakness in the face of threats from Islamic revolutionaries.

This year the Republican Party is using similar tactics - why junk a winner? - but the tactics are not working.

There are a host of reasons for this failure. These include the collapse of the Republican brand; widespread hostility to President Bush; and above all, the emergence of the economy as an issue trumping all others. The current economic crisis is interpreted by many voters as a refutation of conservative laissez-faire ideology and of the deregulatory policies that such ideology spawned. These emerging convictions on the part of what may be a majority of voters are reinforced by a loss of faith in the GOP as a competent assessor and manager of risk; by continued doubts about the legitimacy of the invasion of Iraq; and by widespread repudiation of the Republican legacy of corruption (Abramoff, DeLay, Ney, Mark Foley, etc) in Washington.

"What's happened this year is that this [anti-liberal, wedge issue] strategy is not working well because voters are focused on economic concerns, and the economic side of liberalism -- stronger government regulation, job creation, universal health care -- has much broader support among the electorate, especially during hard economic times. So this year Democrats have been more successful at emphasizing their support for economic liberalism while downplaying other, more controversial positions," Abramowitz tells The Huffington Post.

In addition, Abramowitz says, it "helps that the conservative approach to economic and national security issues has been discredited by the policy failures of the Bush Administration. It's pretty hard for Republicans to argue against big government and for deregulation when a conservative Republican president is forced to support partial nationalization of major banks."

Along similar lines, Carrick notes that "the Republicans are viewed as the Party most responsible for both our current economic crisis and for an unpopular Iraq war. There is a Republican fatigue in the country. Republican strategies, tactics, and messages all feel very worn out. After all, most of them are decades old."

One of academia's foremost students of ideological trends, University of North Carolina political scientist James Stimson, contends that the crucial swing voters in virtually all recent elections are "conflicted conservatives," a generally white group made up of people who identify themselves as conservative but who believe that the government is spending "too little" on a range of domestic spending programs. Stimson calls these voters "symbolic conservatives" and "operational liberals." They make up, according to his calculation, 22 percent of the electorate.

Such voters - and their parents - arguably constitute a disproportionate share of the voters who abandoned liberal self-identification in the mid-1960s. Stimson, analyzing public opinion surveys back to the 1930s, found that the percentage of voters who identified themselves as liberals abruptly nosed-dived by a dramatic 10+ points from 1962 to 1966.

Stimson, exploring the reasons for the drop-off, writes:

"The Great Society was enacted in a rush, following the 1964 election. It included popular items like Medicare and voting rights -- popular outside the South -- but also a "Poverty Program" that was controversial... The response was terrible race riots in 1965, 1966, and 1967. Liberalism acquired a new clientele. Democrats of the "New Deal" had as a client the common man. The common image [was] a worker in hard hat carrying a lunch pail. The new client of the Poverty Program was a black welfare mom. She didn't work, didn't marry, and was angry over inadequate government benefits. That value-violating image is a burden for liberalism.

"The liberalism of Roosevelt, Truman, and Kennedy...appealed to the self-interests of a majority of voters. Beginning with Lyndon Johnson, liberalism comes to mean support for the 'underclass.' It asks the majority of voters to sacrifice their self-interest for the good of others."

The result, according to Stimson, was a sharp drop in the percentage of people willing to call themselves liberal and an increase in the number of self-identified conservatives, making it "natural to conclude that this electorate...is ever-more conservative in all other aspects. But that conclusion is quite dramatically wrong. There is no comparable trend in policy preferences, which stand near an all-time high in liberalism."

The continuing support for a New Deal-type liberalism which calls for programs providing universal benefits -- in contrast to the far lower levels of support for Great Society programs -- can be seen in the following chart, which, according to Stimson, shows that: "Spending is popular. Americans, on balance, want more of it. [But] self interest appears to underlie spending attitudes. Programs that offer universal benefits (health, education, social security, environment) draw nearly universal support. More particularized benefits (mass transit, cities, highways, and race) produce more limited support."



"Conflicted conservatives decide most elections in the United States," Stimson says, and "when they think about symbols, they vote Republican. When they think about programs, they vote Democratic."

In the current election, not only is the Republican candidate severely hampered by the failings of the Bush administration and by the intensity of global economic turmoil, but McCain faces additional dilemmas: First, when he emphasizes conservative symbols, he risks identifying himself with an unpopular conservative president and, second, he has sought to "avoid discussions of specific programs and spending... But he can't be against spending on education, healthcare, cities, environment...and all the other popular programs," according to Stimson.

Conversely, Obama has been able to "avoid the symbols of liberalism -- and the word 'liberal.'" while emphasizing "specific programs and commit[ing] to doing more and spending more on them," Stimson says.

The question then becomes: how long will the current Democratic advantage last?

Abramowitz, for one, is optimistic about the party's prospects:

"For the next several years I think there will be broad popular support for an expansion of government programs aimed at alleviating the effects of the current economic crisis and assisting working and middle class families. And some of the hot button issues conservatives have benefited from in the past, such as gay rights, are losing their power due to shifting public attitudes.


I think race remains a potential danger area for Democrats, but Obama can finesse this by emphasizing class-based policies that benefit working class whites as well as blacks and Hispanics. He will also have to demonstrate a sure hand in dealing with foreign policy and national security threats to strengthen his image in that area.

Overall, though, the severity of the current economic crisis and the extraordinary unpopularity of President Bush should give him some breathing room. He's bound to look good in comparison with the current incumbent, at least for a while and Democratic majorities in the House and Senate will be supportive for his first year in office, especially if, as now seems likely, his coattails help to bring many new Democrats into office."

It should not be forgotten, however, that major opportunities for Democrats in the relatively recent past have been lost. Most glaringly, Bill Clinton took office in 1993 positioned by to restore Democratic vitality only to fritter away his chances and see Republicans take over both the House and Senate in 1994, and the White House from 2000 to 2008.

Clinton's eight years in office never offered him the kind of game-changing event -- a war or an economic upheaval -- which can provide a president with the opportunity to establish greatness. That, clearly, will not be the case for Obama who, assuming he wins, will have the chance to achieve greatness, or to fail to master a major financial catastrophe, two wars, and the continuing threat of terrorist attack.

Assaults on Obama from the right have been unrelenting, including charges that he "pals around with terrorists"; that he is a lockstep liberal bound by the orthodoxies of the left; that his party caus...
Assaults on Obama from the right have been unrelenting, including charges that he "pals around with terrorists"; that he is a lockstep liberal bound by the orthodoxies of the left; that his party caus...
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- OldKnute I'm a Fan of OldKnute 110 fans permalink

Oh,, and who the hell believes Taxes are not patriotic?

Well,,, let me clarify, Taxes spent on BUILDING, not DEATH.

Strong Defense? Heck Yes!
Invading Countries to sell of their oil futures? Heck NO!

Building Roads and Bridges that we now employ to form the backbone of infrastructure that FEEDS our Interstate Commerce? Heck Yes! Building Bridges to Nowhere? Heck NO!

Paying “Copper Tax” to Communications Systems that they can reach even the most distant farms and rural areas? Heck Yes!
Paying folks to Spy on Americans? Heck NO!

Improving Rail Transportation to get our goods to market cheaply and efficiently? Heck Yes! Taxing people to Buy-Out or rip up railroads that compete with Wheeled Transport? Heck No!

Building efficient, modern, swift and low pollution, inner-city and commuter Mass Transit? Heck Yes! Using Taxes to Pay off Politicians and Shareholders and jerk up the Los Angeles, Red Car and clean Electric Rail from Birmingham to Boston? Heck NO!

Building the best Educational System in the world? Buildings and Equipment? Heck Yes! Withholding funding and decimating the same schools though wasteful spending on redundant administrators, feasibility studies, charts and graphs, unfounded Mandates and unnecessary useless testing. Heck NO!

Paying Teachers MORE, after school programs, head start? Heck Yes! Building more Prisons? Heck NO!

Paying Taxes IS PATROTIC!

Squandering Taxes on Halliburton, KBR tow trucks,, Blackwater, NO-Bid Contracts, jobs and offices for cronies, Bailing out Wall Street raiders is NOT PATRIOTIC!

All the best

Knute Neo-LIB

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 10/16/2008
- jaglon I'm a Fan of jaglon 4 fans permalink

Right on! Taxes when applied correctly, buys us a civilized country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:38 PM on 10/16/2008
- KevinMast I'm a Fan of KevinMast 14 fans permalink
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Right on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:16 PM on 10/16/2008
- Mull I'm a Fan of Mull 2 fans permalink

Thank you thank you thank you!! Please write that in a letter and send it to every news outlet in the country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 10/17/2008
- Chavez08 I'm a Fan of Chavez08 58 fans permalink
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The Federalist right is set to lose an empire 50 years in the making. Watch out for Bush invoking "Emergency Powers" caused by this "Nashinull Crahsis".

I know, I know...but he's a total idiot and they are desperate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 10/16/2008
- MossyOak I'm a Fan of MossyOak 63 fans permalink
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Racism is a very interesting phenomenon of late. Last week I overheard an older white guy sitting in the seat in front of me on an airplane say to his companion,"Oh no, the pilot is black. I hope he knows how to fly this mother." I leaned forward and said in his ear, "Better get used to it, dad."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 10/16/2008

The KKK sent fliers in some newspapers in Oklahoma telling people that they don't support Obama. I am OUTRAGED.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 10/16/2008
- MossyOak I'm a Fan of MossyOak 63 fans permalink
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Why? The KKK is a tiny splinter group of extremist right wingers. Wait, didn't Palin accuse Obama of associating with extremists? Wow, how surreal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 10/16/2008
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well I am sure you can talk to someone about it, just head out to the next McCain rally near you .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:47 PM on 10/16/2008
- flymic I'm a Fan of flymic 14 fans permalink

lol!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 PM on 10/16/2008
- Progress08 I'm a Fan of Progress08 22 fans permalink
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It didn't hurt either that he mentioned Warren Buffett as an economic advisor. Even the right wing tards have a bon er for Buffett because he's got the best business mind on earth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 10/16/2008
- GuyFawkes I'm a Fan of GuyFawkes 28 fans permalink

Just some facts from last night:

McCain says he's always refuted and denounced any smear tactics against Obama. But he has never once denounced the "pallin' around with terrorist" charge, or his own "he'd rather win an election than win a war", which goes to the core of a citizen's patriotism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 10/16/2008
- kellygrrrl I'm a Fan of kellygrrrl 643 fans permalink
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CA GOP racism -- followed up with the "Ignorance Defense"

http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/2008/10/16/newsletter/index.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 10/16/2008
- KennaP I'm a Fan of KennaP 4 fans permalink

Sorry everyone I know it's not on topic but if you were offended by the comments made by Lim b@ugh then this is a VERY easy way to file a complaint:


http://esupport.fcc.gov/complaints.htm

Just takes 3 minutes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 10/16/2008
- BluePride I'm a Fan of BluePride 6 fans permalink
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Everybody RUN...

HomeComing Queen Palin's got a GUN!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=59mOukUZNUo

Obama's got VISION: Yes, We Can Can:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVwpMB8QAUU

McCain's View:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKVBq4VbC6w

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 10/16/2008
- canobserv I'm a Fan of canobserv 34 fans permalink

http://crooksandliars.com/david-neiwert/mccainpalin-supporters-let-their-rac
This has already been disappeared from u-tube.
These are the 28%

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:58 PM on 10/16/2008
- WmC I'm a Fan of WmC 16 fans permalink

I was able to get it. It's pretty spooky.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRqcfqiXCX0

And be sure to check out "Greeseball's" response. A bit vulgar, but entirely appropriate.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxTMegtanSg

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 10/16/2008

Each time that Palin is quoted on this, as in paragraph two of this post, I think it's important to include a bit more of the excerpt. Here's a more complete version as reported here last week - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeffrey-feldman/is-palin-trying-to-incite_b_132534.html -

"I am just so fearful that this is not a man who sees America the way you and I see America... I'm afraid this is someone who sees America as imperfect enough to work with a former domestic terrorist who had targeted his own country." (my emphasis)

Her use here of the phrases "I am just so fearful" and "I'm afraid" represents hypnotic language or subliminal language (well known in NLP and in advertising), the intent of which is to associate the emotion of fear with the person of Barack Obama in the gut of the listener.

I think it's very important to bring to light this aspect of Palin's speech as well as the more obvious facets of her inflammatory rhetoric.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 10/16/2008
- Lagniappe I'm a Fan of Lagniappe 13 fans permalink

McCain Strategist Opposed King Holiday


McCain Defended Controversial Spokesman Richard Quinn, McCain's who called the MLK Holiday "Vitriolic and Profane." Richard Quinn, was a South Carolina "strategist" for McCain in the 2000 campaign. In a Partisan View column, Richard Quinn wrote, "King Day should have been rejected because its purpose is vitriolic and profane. By celebrating King as the incarnation of all they admire, they [black leaders] have chosen to glorify the histrionic rather than the heroic and by inference they spurned the brightest and the best among their own race. Ignoring the real heroes in our nation's life, the blacks have chosen a man who represents not their emancipation, not their sacrifices and bravery in service to their country; rather, they have chosen a man whose role in history was to lead his people into a perpetual dependence on the welfare state, a terrible bondage of body and soul.” Quinn has also advocated electing David Duke, and sold T-Shirts through his magazine celebrating Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. [Partisan View, Southern Partisan, Fall, 1983; Partisan View, Southern Partisan, Winter, 1989, PFAW Release, 2/17/00] [Spartanburg Herald-Journal, 12/23/05; Vanity Fair, 11/04]


McCain Defended Quinn as ‘Respected’ and a ‘Fine Man.” Despite Mr. Quinn’s writings and history of racial insensitivity, McCain defended him as a ‘respected’ and ‘fine man’ and refused to fire him. [Associated Press, 2/18/00; New York Times, 2/8/00]

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:32 PM on 10/16/2008
- MossyOak I'm a Fan of MossyOak 63 fans permalink
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Well, we finally do have something real to fear... Palin in the White House. I shudder at the vision.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 10/16/2008

"The liberalism of Roosevelt, Truman, and Kennedy...appealed to the self-interests of a majority of voters. Beginning with Lyndon Johnson, liberalism comes to mean support for the 'underclass.' It asks the majority of voters to sacrifice their self-interest for the good of others."

democrats for the middleclass...repubs are for the rich...

http://politicaladattacks.blogspot.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 10/16/2008
- vegas9999 I'm a Fan of vegas9999 6 fans permalink

Now the American dream ends at 250. When Nancy, Harry and Barry get done with the dream, it probably will be 150.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 10/16/2008
- wazzucoug I'm a Fan of wazzucoug 2 fans permalink

News Flash: "Grumpy McCain defeated in landslide! Goes home to Sedona ranch and kicks family dog. Cindy and the kids get angry and won't talk to poor ol' John anymore. John packs up the mule and rides off into the sunset!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 10/16/2008
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