A new Democratic establishment has ruled the party almost unchallenged for the last 32 years, beginning with Bill Clinton. Its prophet was Gary Hart, who nearly defeated the last candidate from the earlier Demcratic establishment, Walter Mondale, for the nomination in 1984 by explicitly repudiating the New Deal legacy and appealing to young yuppies instead of industrial workers and their families. Bill Clinton, the first new Democratic president, governed as a fiscally responsible Republican, working with a Republican Congress for most of his term. The Democrats have become the party of the meritocracy, and our meritocracy of professionals sees itself every bit as entitled as any aristocracy ever did. The increasing importance of social issues, including women's rights and gay rights, increased the Democrats' sense of moral righteousness even as it cut them off from large segments of the population. Meanwhile, their strength among Hispanics, the fastest-growing segment of the population, convinced them that demography would keep them in power for the indefinite future.
The first indication of weakness in the new establishment came in 2008, when Hillary Clinton, the establishment's designated candidate, crashed and burned against a fresh face, Barack Obama. Coming to power in the midst of the greatest financial crisis in 80 years, Obama could have set the country on a new course and revived some of the principles of the New Deal, but he turned out to be an establishment acolyte, as his appointment of Larry Summers showed. He agreed that the economy had to be rebuilt from the top down, not from the bottom up, and his failure to do much for the unemplyed in his first two years cost him the Congress. He also essentially adopted George W. Bush's strategy in the war on terror, ramping up the war in Afghanistan, orchestrating more disastrous regime change in Libya and in Egypt (twice), and eventually resuming the war in Iraq. The establishment got another brief shock in 2016, when Silent generation leftist Bernie Sanders outpolled Hillary Clinton in the initial primaries, but the DNC managed to ensure her nomination. Then it turned out that the blue wall was vunlerable, and the Republicans, who had turned on all their establishment candidates, beat the Democrats, who had stuck with theirs.
The election of Donald Trump, I now believe, had a dreadful effect on the Democratic Party and its media supporters. It increased their feeling of moral righteousness ot a whole new level and persuaded them that they deserved victory merely by virtue of not being Trump. It also encouraged them, both before and after 2020, to rely on legal processes to ruin Trump's career, no matter what the mass of the American people felt about him. Trump's worst enemy as president, in actual fact, was himself, and he did enough to alienate the public, particularly after the pandemic struck, to make him vulnerable in 2020. The Democratic nominating process in 2020 has been understudied, in my view, and exactly how Biden managed to be nominated is not yet entirely clear. As I have mentioned many times, his own earlier attempts to win the nomination, in 1988 and 2008, had ended in disaster, but the vice presidency earned him new name recognition and access to leading Democratic donors that now served him well. He was lucky that Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren divided the left wing vote in the early primaries, and that Kamala Harris bailed out before the first primary, leaving him in position to pick up the black vote. By the time of the South Carolina primary he was overwhelmingly the establishment candidate and he cruised to an easy victory. And he won a solid electoral college victory thanks to wins in six key close states. After Trump tried and failed to overturn the election result and underwent a second impeachment, everyone seemed to assume that the Trump threat was over.
Once in power, Biden issued a string of executive orders reflecting the concerns of "progressive" Democrats, mandating diversity, equity and inclusion programs throughout the federal government and supporting transgender rights. In his first three years, 66 percent of his federal judgeship appointments were women and 66 percent were nonwhite. He continued the Trump strategy of fighting the economic effects of the pandemic with unprecedented infusions of federal money, and he had no strategy when high inflation followed. He and his immigration czar Harris did nothing for a long time to reduce illegal entry into the country, and they have done nothing to alleviate the worst housing crisis since the end of the Second World War. His infrastructure bill has yet to show many results, and his bill to deal with climate change--disastrously renamed the Inflation Reduction Act--passed only after he made significant concessions to the fossil fuel industry. And for all the talk of the 2022 Congressional election as a victory for the Democrats, the Republicans actually won the national popular vote for House candidates by 3 percent, and were therefore somewhat unlucky to emerge with such a small majority. Last but not least, his near-total support for the Netanyahu government in Israel has cost him support among Arab-Americans--key in Michigan--and young people.
And sadly, Biden's sense of entitlement has now taken over his life, making it impossible for him to acknowledge that he is no longer fit to be president, and thus needs to end his candidacy. Like Trump,. he now casts himself as the one indispensable man. According to a source deeply involved in Democratic politics, he will not even talk to anyone now who wants him to drop out of the race. The assassination attempt on Trump has taken the spotlight off of his decision, and the clock is ticking. Biden's insistence that he should--or must--be the candidate insults both the candidates who could replace him and the Democratic electorate as a whole. We can, and need to, field a competent candidate. Yet he may not get one. And every day that passes increases the odds that if Biden does drop out, he will give way to Harris--another establishment darling who has never demonstrated real appeal to the American people, but whom much of the Democratic elite believes deserves the White House because she is a black woman.
74 percent of the nation feels--correctly--that Biden is too old to be president. He trails in nearly every poll in big states, and additional states such as New Hampshire and possibly even New York are coming into play. The Democratic elite is too sclerotic, it seems, to do what has to be done--despite the laudable efforts of Hakeem Jeffries to make it happen. And despite all the Democrats' apocalyptic rhetoric about Trump, I honestly don't think they care that much whether they win or lose. They are part of our wealthy elite and will still survive and prosper. Apparently, they still need at least one more hard lesson.
4 comments:
> Once in power, Biden ...
What Biden has achieved may be more debatable:
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https://www.spiegel.de/international/world/star-economist-acemoglu-discusses-trump-its-likely-to-be-much-worse-now-than-eight-years-ago-a-6b687267-e315-4e0b-aad6-a0cc7a38cbf9
DER SPIEGEL: U.S. President Joe Biden came into office with the explicit promise of winning back the workers. Why hasn’t he succeeded?
Acemoglu: That’s a bit of a mystery, because Biden's domestic agenda has been a huge success. He has passed landmark legislation. And he has been the most pro-worker president in recent U.S. history, supporting unions, higher minimum wages and worker protections, in addition to prioritizing job creation. But instead, people reproach him for his immigration policy.
[...]
Biden did the right thing with his Inflation Reduction Act, which is the most comprehensive climate policy bill in the United States, perhaps anywhere in the industrialized world.
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But maybe that isn’t even the question.
Maybe it’s not about policies.
It’s Trump’s personality – not his policies – that most endears him to the base.
People want to be represented, but the meaning of "representation" has shifted away from policies. It’s about the image, about posing as representative of the common man against the elites.
I wonder what would have happened if Trump had won against Biden. Would he look worse in the eyes of his voters today? Fighting against those at the top is the role of his life. Being at the top is not.
By occupying the media, academia, FBI, CIA, bureaucracy the Democrats have become entrenched in power. Conservatives were seen as hillbilly, religious freaks, market libertarian fanatics, uneducated, racist, sexist, isolationists. Suppose all that is in essence true. Then what? Is the opposite then good and holy? It is not about that but rather about constant rethinking, openness to reality as a whole and not just labeling others as outsiders and following a single line of thought over the cliff. This is why democracy renews itself through competition. The parties are switching sides as Republicans support workers. Democrats used to be for the little guy. Now this is just virtue signalling.
"And sadly, Biden's sense of entitlement has now taken over his life, making it impossible for him to acknowledge that he is no longer fit to be president, and thus needs to end his candidacy." A tad premature, don't you think?
Also, inflation is at 3%. It certainly look as if Biden has an inflation strategy. And better for both the country and the Democratic Party's election chances than the main alternative which was, if I recall, "raise interest rates so unemployment doubles."
The Democrats need their own Chaos Monster to counter Trump. Somebody like Nick Cannon or Ru Paul.
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