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David Sirota

David Sirota

Posted: August 28, 2007 10:22 AM

America's Most Conservative Newspaper Teaches Dems A Lesson


The Colorado Springs Gazette is one of the two most conservative papers in America (the other being the Waterbury Republican-American). This is no secret to anyone who has either read the paper, or who is in the journalism industry. But the political continuum is a circle, not a line, meaning that on some issues, ultraconservatives and progressives can make common cause. Today's Gazette editorial on the bipartisan support for warrantless domestic wiretapping and spying is a good example - and a good lesson for Democratic "strategists" cloistered in Washington with their weak-kneed and self-defeating pathologies.
Here's an excerpt:

"What do you do when critics call the legality of your secret spying program into question? If you're the Bush administration, you defend it, by becoming ever more secretive and by claiming to be above the law. The legal basis for the Terrorist Surveillance Program, which was launched soon after 9/11 to capture conversations of potential terrorists, has always been shaky. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 outlawed warrantless eavesdropping on Americans, and in 2005 it was revealed that the Terrorist Surveillance Program did just that. Though supposedly altered so as to operate within the law, the surveillance program continues to be defended on alarming and seemingly contradictory grounds -- that its legality depends on operational details too secret to be revealed, and that legality isn't an issue, anyway, since President Bush's powers as commander in chief cannot be so bound by law...We see the justifications of executive privilege as little more than weak excuses. Earlier this month, this same logic of secrecy, which plays on people's fears, helped excuse a further weakening of the law as Congress, in the Protect America Act, effectively gutted FISA protections against warrantless surveillance...Now that Congress has promised to revise this temporary measure, Bush and Cheney's continued excuses are all the more intolerable, obstructing Congress' ability to examine the genesis of the Terrorist Surveillance Program."

Pundits and Democratic "strategists" in Washington, D.C. clearly have absolutely no concept that issues of privacy, civil liberties and government intrusion do not fit conveniently on their preconceived - and childishly ignorant - notions of "red" and "blue." They dismiss the vast American heartland as just a Republican Party monolith that supposedly supports all efforts to strip citizens of their freedom, and they believe that in order to start winning in this heartland, they just have to out-Republican the Republicans on these issues.

We know this not just because they capitulated last month by rubber-stamping Bush's warrantless domestic spying program, but because they all but run out and tell reporters just how totally out of touch they really are when it comes to these issues. Remember how Sen. Chuck Schumer (D) claimed that his efforts to preserve the most odious parts of the Patriot Act were designed to protect "our Democrats in red states?" Remember how the insulated Washington media fawned all over him when he said this, billing him as an amazing political guru? And remember how, at the very same time, Montana's Jon Tester was campaigning against the Patriot Act as a way to attract support from libertarian-leaning voters? Yeah - in a race that was decided by a tiny margin, had Schumer's drumbeat been any louder, it may have lost Tester the Montana senate seat and Democrats might not be in the majority today.

I learned the political lesson inherent in the Gazette's spot-on editorial when I watched my friend Bernie Sanders in the House. As Rolling Stone's terrific profile showed, he worked closely with people like Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) and then-Rep. Butch Otter (R-ID) to forge left-right coalitions that passed legislation reforming the Patriot Act over the objections of Republican congressional leaders. Paul and Otter, you may recall, are among the most conservative elected officials in America. They know - sadly, more than many Democratic "strategists" in Washington - that there is nothing "weak" or "politically dangerous" about standing up for privacy and personal freedom and against government power grabs.

In fact, its the other way around: Democrats are exuding weakness and are walking into political peril by subscribing to the cartoonish "red" vs. "blue" outlook of those Washington insiders who claim expertise in a national political topography they clearly do not or do not want to understand. As the Gazette editorial shows, the panoply of privacy and civil liberties issues poses great opportunity for Democrats - but only if they show a shred of foresight and reject the absurd Washington conventional wisdom that says helping the most unpopular president in modern history trample Americans' freedoms is somehow "good politics."

Cross-posted from Working Assets

 
 
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01:26 PM on 08/28/2007
While I understand and agree with the criticism, and while I'm not averse to accepting cowardice or lack of grey matter as explanations, I wonder whether there isn't more to Dems' thinking on this issue. Members of Congress are, if nothing else, animals with a keen sense of shifting public winds. (The notion that they are there to lead is, despite election-time rhetoric, beyond them.) Could something be telling them that the public as a whole isn't convinced of a threat to liberty?
10:12 AM on 08/29/2007
The Corporatist MSM is the problem. Especially the insulated Beltway media. The world view outside the beltway is quite different form the world view you get when you live in that area.

Too many reps and senators forget that...they loose touch with their constituents. The experience by the Dem rep who got lambasted by his constituents in a townhall meeting yesterday for switching his stance on the War proves the point.
12:08 PM on 08/28/2007
I know that eventually American's are going to regret not paying attention to their Freedom.
Freedom is the whole reason for the USA to be and though it has never been as free as it should it has become a joke to consider the USA as a truly free country any longer.
The Bush-Clinton coin want it to be like China is ...Free to make money but that is all.
Republicans trust their government....somthing no true American Patriot would ever do.
Unfortunately too many Dems seem to as well.
I am proud to say that my Dem Rep voted against giving Bush the unlimited power to spy on us....If your Congressman didn't ( We Mean You Feinstein and Co.) tell them that they will be voted out if this is not corrected.
It is possible and necessary to both protect American Freedom without destroying it.
Bush,neoCONS and any who support the Patriot act for non-patriots, military comissions act, and the changes to FISA are by legal definition traitors to the US and have broken the Constitution.
11:58 AM on 08/28/2007
I said to my brother in law, who voted twice for W, that these great powers in the hands of
a great president, W for the sake of argument, are dicey but if America were to elect a corrupt
president, these powers could destroy us.
12:07 PM on 08/28/2007
Several Dems have been purchased. some have refused. More Republicans are co-opted than the Democrats, but most are all jingling in the same change purse.
11:33 AM on 08/28/2007
Terrific post. Democrat or Republican- everyone should be concerned about the power grab by the executive branch. And American have got to start doing their own thinking. A lot of the information coming out of the White House is deliberately misleading- essentially propaganda.
11:26 AM on 08/28/2007
'... the panoply of privacy and civil liberties issues poses great opportunity for Democrats - but only if they show a shred of foresight and reject the absurd Washington conventional wisdom that says helping the most unpopular president in modern history trample Americans' freedoms is somehow "good politics." '

You hit the elephant in the room again, David. Now why the hell can't the beltway Dems open their eyes and see it?????