(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mickey-kaus) 


_Mickey Kaus_ (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mickey-kaus) 
Writer, the kausfiles blog on Slate.com 
Posted: June 3, 2010 10:13 AM 


 
Huffington Post

 
          
 
 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mickey-kaus/democrats-are-on-the-path_b_599053.html#)
 


_Democrats Are on the Path to Doom -- I Want  Off_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mickey-kaus/democrats-are-on-the-path_b_599053.html)
  


 
It's a blatant imitation of a famous Paul Wellstone spot produced by North  
Woods Advertising.  The North Woods people _have been good sports_ 
(http://www.minnpost.com/ericblack/2010/06/01/18605/imitating_fast-paced-paul_wellsto
ne)  about me  stealing their joke--"unlike my opponent I don't have x 
million dollars so I'm  going to have to talk fast." The main reason the 
Wellstone format works, though,  is that it lets you talk about a lot of issues 
in 
a short period of time. It's  become a staple of underdog campaigns, like 
the old "empty chair" stunt. I _stole that one too_ 
(http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/california-politics/2010/05/mickey-kaus-vs-the-box.html)
 .  
Wellstone was a hard-core liberal Democrat, though as far as I could tell  
practically everybody in Washington liked him because he actually believed 
in  something and wasn't a disingenuous careerist schemer like most of those 
around  him. He said what he thought, and voted that way too. You got a 
problem with  that? 
I disagreed strongly with a lot of what he said and thought (though not the 
 principle of universal health care). But I want to make a brief pitch to 
those  HuffPost readers who didn't disagree. Because it seems to me that 
liberal  Democrats, especially, are being led by the interest groups who 
increasingly  control their party down the path of ... well, doom. 
Democrats are the party that believes in government, after all. We need to  
make it work for the majority of citizens. When teachers' unions force the  
layoffs of good young teachers because their seniority principle is somehow 
 sacrosanct--well, it's not only individual public schools that suffer, but 
the  whole idea of public education, as well as the whole idea of the 
social  solidarity, or equality, that institutions like public schools are 
supposed to  reinforce. 
The same price is paid when the teachers' unions prevent the firing of bad  
teachers--and face it, that's what's happening when in a district of 33,000 
 teachers (L.A.) only a dozen or two are forced out each year. The 
Republicans  needn't care that much about the resulting mediocre schools--it 
only 
makes their  call for vouchers more plausible. The rich don't need to 
care--their kids don't  go to public schools anymore anyway. It's the Democrats 
and 
the non-rich who  take the hit. 
Likewise, when illegal immigrants flood the labor market, it's unskilled  
workers who take the hit, in the form of lower wages. Even Rep. Luis 
Gutierrez,  a key backer of the "path to citizenship" immigration bill I 
oppose, 
admits that  immigrant competition bids down wages. That used to be organized 
labor's  position too. But now, in a pell-mell effort to lock down the Latino 
vote,  Democrats dogmatically insist that every attempt at reforming the 
immigration  system must include a conditional amnesty--the so-called path to  
citizenship--that would legalize immigrants who are here illegally. 
But if Democrats took Gutierrez at his word--and asked the question "How  
would we act if we wanted to boost wages at the bottom?"--I don't think they  
would end up supporting legalization. That's because every amnesty (like 
the one  we tried in 1986) attracts more illegal immigrants who arrive looking 
for  the next amnesty, secure in the knowledge that once they're here both 
Democratic  and Bush-Republican pols will soon accommodate them for fear of 
alienating the  growing Latino vote. 
If you really cared about wages of the working poor--including the Latino  
working poor--you'd want to make sure that this wave of 12 million illegals 
was  the last wave. That means securing the borders before talking about  
legalization. It means sending a message to the world that we're serious this  
time--if you want to come here, come legally and you'll be welcomed. When 
we get  control of the border we'll gain some control over the labor supply 
and can help  guarantee that employers face enough of a labor crunch that 
they  can't get away with paying semi-Third World wages. 
I'd argue these are the positions a liberal who cared about government and  
inequality would take. Why do Democrats reject them? They increasingly say  
it's not so much because of policy, but because of politics: they _have to 
turn out the "base" to win the next  election_ 
(http://calitics.com/diary/11701/mickey-kaus-represents-mickey-kaus-nothing-else)
 , and the "base" 
consists of union members and Latinos (plus  African Americans, who are badly 
hurt 
by illegal immigration but whom the party  takes for granted). 
Never mind that this theory is nearly unfalsifiable--if the Democrats lose, 
 its proponents will always say that they just didn't please the base  
enough. Has base-pleasing ever panned out? Looking back over  recent elections, 
I can only think of one where the "base" was clearly more  important than 
the moderate middle--that was the presidential election of 2004,  when George 
W. Bush turned out millions of new right-wing voters many people  thought 
didn't exist. But most recent mid-term elections have been preceded by  
predictions that "Hey, given the low turnout it all depends on mobilizing the  
base!"--only to be followed by acknowledgments that it was moderate swing 
voters  who swung the result. 
After a few weeks of running, though, I don't find Democrats who make the  
please-the-base argument that infuriating anymore. It's an argument, after 
all.  They could be right. And Democrats who violently disagree with me about 
policy,  rather than politics--about the role of labor unions and the 
undesirability of  amnesty, etc,--aren't bothersome at all. Having arguments is 
what a campaign is  all about. I've learned a lot from things angry people 
have yelled at me. That's  all good. 
What bothers me are the thug-like Democrats, the ones who say because 
people  like me dissent from party orthodoxy on these two issues we have no 
business  calling ourselves Democrats, are really Republicans, _should get out 
of 
the party_ (http://www.facebook.com/kausforsenate?ref=ts) , etc. As if 
people who  support health care, oppose the Iraq war, support same sex 
marriage, 
like a  whole slew of big government institutions and don't automatically 
oppose tax  increases could make common cause with today's Republicans. 
This "get out" mentality isn't an attempt to win a debate. It's an attempt 
to  suppress a debate. It's the attitude of power-addicted interest-group 
Democrats  who would rather lose the election than lose their grip on the 
party. 
But the debate over the Democrats' tired dogma is coming. If you want it to 
 come sooner, rather than later--and to come on Democratic terms rather 
than  Republican terms--I hope (if you live in California) you'll consider 
sending  that message by voting for my candidacy. 
*** 
Mickey Kaus, who writes the kausfiles blog,  is  author of The End of 
Equality and a candidate for U.S. Senator in  Tuesday's California Democratic 
primary.
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