Down and Out With the Democrats? Maybe Not, Look at the '48 Election
Word has it that regardless of today's results in Indiana and North Carolina, the Democrats have already lost the presidential election. Until the Texas and Ohio primaries on March 4, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama sounded like equally qualified presidential contenders with every reason to keep battling. They were refining their issues seriously and entertainingly and making mush of old sexist and racist barriers despite attempts by debate "moderators," as the television networks' agent provocateurs brand themselves, to entrap them in the mud-pits of white-male king-making.
What a transformation, though. Since March 4, Clinton and Obama have become uninteresting. They've abandoned issues for triggers. Their pandering to voters who cling to guns, gods and prejudice as badges of virtue reminds you of Republican primary contests or country music acts. Their greater purpose is lost to the egomaniacal compulsion to annihilate each other, and with them the party they presume to represent.
A few weeks ago it did seem like the Democrats would lose, but not because of self-destruction. Clinton or Obama would be a gift to the Republicans' well-honed machinery of character assassination. And for all its enlightened presumptions, today's median American voter -- old, white, fearful and reactionary -- can still muster a little nostalgia for rancid assumptions. When we assume we're being polite by saying that "America isn't ready to elect a woman or a black person," what we're really saying is that America is still as bigoted and misogynistic as ever if, in the 21st century, the very notion of a candidate's skin color or sex is capable on its own of raising questions of electability.
The weakness of John McCain's doddering candidacy and the equally doddering economy he's promising to steer with his predecessor's walker should've been Clinton-Obama's opportunity to vault over voters' prejudices. Instead, the two have chosen to work for the McCain campaign. The attacks they're leveling at each other will be the Republican camp's script against whichever candidate prevails by summer.
For all that, it'd be foolish to write off the Democrats. Conservatives, who hate it when Iraq is compared to Vietnam, love making comparisons between the Democrats' 1968 election, when they supposedly self-destructed, and 2008. But despite the Democrats' infighting that summer, Hubert Humphrey lost to Richard Nixon by barely 500,000 votes, while the Republican victory was aided mostly by an assassination -- Robert Kennedy's that June. Kennedy would have likely clobbered Nixon in the general election. Nor is it a footnote to remember that Democrats lost to a crook who even then had amassed a record of lies and frauds that would culminate in his and the presidency's disgrace. There are similarities there, to be sure, but only with the current administration.
If history is to be a guide at all, the more instructive comparison -- for both sides -- is the 1948 election. By then Democrats had held the White House 16 years. The nation really was tired of them. Republicans seemed to have a dream ticket in Thomas Dewey and Earl Warren, the hugely popular governors of New York and California. Democrats seemed hopelessly fractured. South Carolina's Strom Thurmond, a Democrat in a torrid love affair with Jim Crow at the time, was angry at Harry Truman for desegregating the military. He challenged him as a Dixiecrat. Henry Wallace, once Franklin Roosevelt's vice president, challenged Truman as a progressive (and correctly predicted that Truman's national security state would usher in a "century of fear"). Dewey, Warren, pollsters and newspaper editors took a GOP win for granted, running a leisurely campaign that almost sneered at the Democrats' perceived debacle. Truman won with more than 2 million votes to spare. He even claimed New York State.
Today, it isn't Bush fatigue that's playing Democrats' favor, but Republican fatigue: The party's religious and reactionary puppeteers have so disgusted the nation that the only candidate even GOP voters could stomach is a man who several times mulled a switch to the Democratic party and considered being John Kerry's vice president four years ago. The Democrats have every reason to be overconfident. But that, and whatever novel slanders the GOP electoral machine has in store for them, is the only thing they have to worry about, whoever their nominee may be.
Tristam is a News-Journal editorial writer. Reach him at ptristam@att.net or through his personal Web site at www.pierretristam.com.
© 2008 News-Journal Corporation
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22 Comments so far
Show AllWhat a sad, bleak bunch we have here. This blog is a cesspool of despair, negativity, and hopelessness.
Get over yourselves!
Vote for the Democrats or stay home and whine.
(I suspect you'll chose whining!)
"My words are your past. My questions are simple: With whom do you ally? What is survival if you do not survive whole?" Frank Herbert, Heretics of Dune.
Your English Language Lesson for Today. Repeat after me:
The Former United States of America...
"The Former United States of America"
Show me your papers, animal...(now get the sneering growl right)
"Show me your papers, animal"
God made women to be Gender Slaves...(said with the exultation of Revelation)
"God made women to be Gender Slaves"
And here's the last one for today:
I hear and I obey Master...(eyes down, voice lowered in submission)
"I hear and I obey Master"
Peece.
The despair from many of these bloggers is palpable, but its too easy an out. Reform is a long, slow process and it can come in ways that we cannot yet see. The winner take all system and fifty different state run election systems is a mess, but things can change. The anti-Democratic laws of the Bush Administration can (and must) be repealed, just as slavery was ended, child labor and other progressive legislation was enacted. Of course, people had to risk ruin, injury and death to end those evils. When people in France are dissatisfied with some policy or other they take to the streets! Why couldn't the American public have done that when Scalia and his friends on the Supreme Court put Bush in the White House in what was clearly a cynical and unconstitutional action?
I am so bummed. What a wasted opportunity. The national party is going to rue the day that Obama wins the nomination.
It should have been Clinton/Obama.
Think of the Supreme Court picks McCain will be making.
EPHRAIM: I have wondered the same thing...
"The vast majority of the population is far too politically brain-dead to know or care."
Of all the pundit postings , that's the only one that is signifigant . Americans would elect Mickey Mouse if MSM kept advising it
I guess all the comments were written before the end of the election. Barak Obama will be the nominee and he gave a great speech last night tearing down the corporate media for distracting and putting the people against one another.
McCain may have Jeb Bush, Hucksterberry or Juliano. Whomever he's ORDERED to have will be his running mate.
Obama cannot beat MCcain. Hilllary can beat him, especially if Obama is her VP running mate. That ticket would swamp the repugs, by at least 40 states.
If Hillary is the nominee and does not have the popular vote, the Dems will lose. If Florida and Michigan votes are not allowed at their conventions, the Dems will lose. If Hillary get the nod and does not have the popular votes, she MUST have Obama as her VP choice or the Democratic party will have shot itself in the face again and McCain will be Bush the third.
it does not matter who wins in november...on november 5 th 2008...most people are going to have the same jobs,same bills and same problems...our gov't does not care about us
All I can say is I am hoping and hoping Barack Obama is not the nominee. It will not be in real progressives best interests for him to win in November. I'm a broken record, I know, but I do wish people would take a look at his policy positions - AND REJECT HIM 1 MILLION PERCENT!
Even if Hillary does win the (D) nomination:
(a) the fix is already in and McBush wins; or
(b) the fix doesn't work, and Hillary ekes out a win (in which case, so what? How will things change? More of the ol' same-old) or
(c) the neo-cons are far from finished with their agenda, so IF there is a November election, and IF a (D)does manage to beat the fix and win, look for some catastrophic "terrorist" attack that includes the president-elect among the victims, at which point GWB and Cheney and Rice et.al. can say "In these dark and dangerous times, it is too much to ask grieving Americans to subject themselves to another [rigged] election [controlled by the GOP and the corporate press]. We need to stay the course, get a big stick, bomb Iran, and go fight 'em over there so we won't have to fight 'em over here."
To make it official, they'll dust off The National Security and Homeland Security Presidential Directive (with a dual designation of NSPD-51, as a National Security Presidential Directive, and HSPD-20, as a Homeland Security Presidential Directive), and declare martial law. Then, the round-ups can begin....
Cheers!
"Truman won with more than 2 million votes to spare."
In 1948, they didn't have Diebold, ES&S, and Sequoia electronic voting machines, did they?
Hillary has carried the big states, the ones that will be needed in November. Obama has carried the small red states where people can cross over and vote for who ever for what ever reason.
This is going to sound bad, but the truth often is. A black man is going to be real hard for white men to vote for. A woman is bad enough for some rednecks, but it is a relative thing. There I said it, now I am done...flame away.
McCain will be seen as an old out of touch guy that is running on his war record when people are tired of war and are focused on the economy. The Democrats have spotted him a few points by running a woman and a black, but I do not think he can win.
I believe Hillary has a stronger chance of beating McCain in November. Hillary is just getting warmed up, even after a year of primaries. She will hand McCain his hat in the debates....you watch.
I'm glad to learn there's one optimist left. The problem is this: THERE IS NO WORTHWHILE CANDIDATE AND NONE ON THE HORIZON EITHER! Get used to Bush. He and his party will once again reign supreme.
I'm not sure on this... can Cheney be the Veep for McCain? If so, there you have it. He'll hold on to power.
The Dems are imploding, maybe deliberately if we take into account how supine they were after the 2000 and '04 (s)elections. The two parties are so indistinguishable on policy matters, once the empty rhetoric is stripped away, that it's feasible they've been colluding for 8 years to make this a bona fide fascist state, fully committed to a permanent war economy and damn the torpedos. I don't think the Dem hierarchy gives a damn that they're throwing yet a third election to the Nazis. How could they possibly care and yet be doing it so effortlessly? The vast majority of the population is far too politically brain-dead to know or care, so McCain will likely waltz into the White House due to a permanently distracted electorate and a Democratic Party in collusion with the "opposition."
The neocons will get McClone elected by blaming all of the current problems on the Democrats...didn't let us send enough troops to Iraq to win the war, didn't let us drill ANWR so we would only be paying 98 cents a gallon for gas, didn't let us privatize social security and keep the stock market up...
A lie repeated three times and not challenged becomes a fact and the the neocons are expert at creating facts and revisionist history by the boatload.
The vice president will be whoever Dick Cheney wants to be vice president.
Duncan Hunter-the ahole who wants to keep hunting on an island refuge--allegedly for wounded war veterans.
People like that should have been wounded so badly they couldnt see...oh wait--there was that case of a hunter who was blind and had his son shot him where to shoot.
Some people just dont know when to quit.
I'm still going with what I said in January: Hillbilly will be anointed at the convention and the Democratic party will be torn asunder.
Because of the infighting and increasingly bitter partisan struggle, half of the Democratic party will end up 'losers'. Many will bolt for independent candidates or stay home in disgust.
I repeat my call for a united Democratic party, to stand together against the common enemy.
For Rethuglican VP, keep Duncan Hunter (San Diego) in mind. He's a veteran, lots of MIC connections, and as dangerous as Cheney.
I have a stinking suspicion that Joe Lyingan is going to be McSame's running mate. And I suspect that the Repugs will keep the White House.
IF there is an election in November, my take is that it really doesn't matter who wins the WH with the slate of candidates we have now. This election is not going to change a damn thing. The reason is fairly obvious. We no longer live in a democracy. The government of America does not represent the PEOPLE. It is no longer a government by, of, or for the people. Period.
I'm going to write in the candidate of my choice in November if I get to vote at all. And I can almost guaranty that they won't have a D or R behind their names.
Amongst people I know, the strong feelin that the uneducated electorate of this country is not about to elect a black man or a woman (especially the one running) as president, is paramount.
The only unknown is who the GOP VP nominee will be. That is who will really be running things (especially since Cheney is getting away with the unitary Veep syndrome).
This isn't 1948 and Harry Truman is not on the ballot.