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March 30, 2005
DeLayicans
Brad Plumer is so right on this it's hard to believe he's not been hired by the DCCC and given a corner office somewhere:
Look, last year no one was offering Senate Democrats a chance to "wash their hands" of Tom Daschle. Quite the opposite—the phrase "Daschle Democrats" spread far and wide across the airwaves, during the big push to paint the entire minority party as one giant ball of pure, black-hearted obstructionism. It was dirty, it was lame, it was disgusting, but that's how the fucking game goes. *No one* gets out of here alive!
Seriously, it's useless, entirely useless trying to turn Tom DeLay into a big lightning rod for all the outrage against the House's excesses these days. If that's what happens, he'll be purged in a minute's notice and then absolutely nothing will change. The GOP will just find someone else to do what DeLay does. Roy Blunt can do what DeLay does. The K Street stovepipe will still pump along. The rule-bending and committee-abusing will still go on. House Democrats will still be cut out of the decision-making process. DeLay's just the symptom of a larger disease, and that's how he ought to be treated and portrayed. Hm? Please, please get this right so I don't have to spend all my time being a shrill partisan hack. Thanks.
Agreed. Judged by temperament, I'm a pretty moderate guy. But there's no time to be moderate anymore, not if you've taken even the slightest look into what's going on in the House, in this Administration, in the Republican party, in the country -- the whole system is going so sour it makes me sick. Which is why I'd love to see the tumor removed. But it'd be terrifically moronic to make this about Tom DeLay, rather than make Tom DeLay about the Republican majority. If the former works, all the right has to do is pull him from the spotlight, either by snatching his position or forcing his resignation. Either way, the corruption train chugs along, just with a new conductor.
It's the same problem I'm seeing with Social Security. Democrats are gingerly testing the waters of attack politics, dipping in a toe here and there to criticize an opponent, or a policy, or a procedure. But they seem afraid, or maybe unwilling, to widen the assault, to kill something and tie the dead weight to the Republican party's neck. I'm glad we're nailing privatization, but it's not helping our poll numbers any. In fact, Democrats in congress are seeing the same drop -- though it's taking them even lower -- than their Republican counterparts. Tom DeLay's a really bad guy, but we're getting really excited at the sight of his weakness and not, so far as I can tell, working him into a long-term strategy. Rahm Emanuel can tap all the "squeaky-clean" candidates he wants, but if we make the scandal about the guy, once he's gone, there's no more scandal.
Privatization, DeLay, all these things need to become about the Republican party as a whole. Privatization needs to explain their unhealthy obsession with destroying the American safety net. DeLay needs to explain the tight embrace the Republican majority and industry lobbyists are locked into. Anything less allows them to lose a battle but escape the war. And, as the minority party, the status quo is too untenable for us to allow that.
March 30, 2005 in Republicans | Permalink
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» Ads target DeLay from Off the Kuff
By now you've probably heard of the anti-DeLay ads that are being run here in Houston (the Chron has a... [Read More]
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» Ads target DeLay from Off the Kuff
By now you've probably heard of the anti-DeLay ads that are being run here in Houston (the Chron has a... [Read More]
Tracked on Mar 30, 2005 10:07:09 PM
Comments
Yes! What I've been hoping for. Let's get into the trenchs and show Americans that we can fight bloody battles too. Republicans are in a precarious situation right now, Delay, Shiavo, and Social Security. Let's hit them while their down. I know most democratic operatives don't understand that phrase, "long-term strategy," but I think it's never been a better time for them to figure it out.
Posted by: Tony | Mar 30, 2005 2:50:05 PM
Yes! What I've been hoping for. Let's get into the trenchs and show Americans that we can fight bloody battles too. Republicans are in a precarious situation right now, Delay, Shiavo, and Social Security. Let's hit them while their down. I know most democratic operatives don't understand that phrase, "long-term strategy," but I think it's never been a better time for them to figure it out.
Posted by: Tony | Mar 30, 2005 2:50:05 PM
We have to run against "Republicans and the Republican party" not individual candidates. It doesn't matter if they are Olympia Snowe or Rick Santorum, we have to link them to the real goals of the Republican party.
Posted by: Col Bat Guano | Mar 30, 2005 3:54:31 PM
yeah but most people are lifting up the hype that Bush's war in Iraq is causing democratization.
IT ISN'T and you are guilty of just that. History shows that these countries who have been leaning towards democracy have been doing so for a long time. Lebanon is case in point. Perhaps the protesting is a nuance (it actually isn't).
But let's say for argument's sake, that Bush's war did indeed cause democratization.
Democrats have to stand up and say NO F'ING WAY! HOW CAN AN INVASION CAUSE A DEMOCRACY?
What you are touching upon here Ezra is political narratives. And those don't need to be honest or truthful or anything at all. Look at the Republican Noise Machine. They LIE LIE LIE constantly, Democrats onthe other hand are constantly taking the HIGH ROAD.
Not that I am opposed to the High Road, but if you are talking about pinning some losses on the Republican neck, you should definitely point to the fact that NO VICTORY, whatever slight should be pinned to their chest.
Otherwise 20 years from now you will hear Sean Hannity (as he is already) saying that George Bush was the greatest president in the history of America. He killed all the terrorists when he invaded Iraq and kept us safe from all the world's ilk.
Not only shall defeats be praised, but anything the republicans try to spin towards a victory (bankruptcy bill) should be counter spun.
This is a war of words, and the Democrats, so long as they try to get on the "right side of history" by ignoring the facts all around them, will always loose that war.
If not in the press, they will loose it at the polls.
FIGHT EVERY SINGLE THING. EVERY THING. Otherwise they will be nothing but a flip floping party as long as Karl Rove or one of his trainees is in the game of destroying Democrats.
Posted by: media in trouble | Mar 30, 2005 4:05:00 PM
I'd question the notion that in the scheme of Republican party machinations DeLay is easily replacable or that anyone is all that eager to get him out. It's not the worst case scenario to see DeLay drummed out, leaving a power vacuum and some milquetoast without DeLay's spine or taste for loose money and rough politics. It may be harder to find a symbolic representation of wrongdoing, but in this congress (and don't rule out GWB so soon either), candidates are pretty plentiful.
I also think this is a case of giving time some time. I think there's been more than "testing the waters" in Dems responses - they are, as someone points out here, the threads of a narrative. It has to start somewhere. Later, when we can tie a continuous skein through Republican K street dirty pool, gerrymandering, Terri Schiavo, judges, Social Security, bankruptcy law, Medicaid, Medicare and who knows what all else they'll mess up, it will be a pretty heavy load for any one congress person to get out from under. A big Dem mistake (and trust me, I was an early Deaniac) is to want perfect polling months in advance. The polls that matter are at least a year away. Give it time. We have plenty of that right now.
Posted by: weboy | Mar 30, 2005 5:16:05 PM
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Posted by: peter.w | Sep 15, 2007 3:42:38 AM
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