Preparing for a Republican  comeback?  
Lance  Selfa examines the  political terrain surrounding the upcoming 
November midterm elections  
International Socialist  Review Issue 73, September–October 2010 
_http://www.isreview.org/issues/73/rep-repcomeback.shtml_ 
(http://www.isreview.org/issues/73/rep-repcomeback.shtml)  
IT’S BEEN obvious for more than a year that  the Democrats can expect a 
beating at the polls in the November midterm  elections. For months, most 
leading opinion polls have shown the Republicans  tied with, or leading, the 
Democrats in voters’ preferences for congressional  candidates. And even more 
ominous for Democrats, President Obama is now more  unpopular than popular, 
with an average of 50 percent saying they disapprove of  his performance, 
compared to the 45 percent who say they approve, according to  polling averages 
Pollster.com compiles.  
What does this mean for November? Washington  election forecaster Charles 
Cook predicts a “wave” that will sweep out the  Democratic majority in the 
House of Representatives. Although considered less  probable, Republicans 
winning the Senate is also not out of the question. If one  or both of these 
events takes place this fall, it will mark one of the biggest  reversals in 
mainstream electoral politics in decades. If both houses of  Congress flip to 
the GOP, the “Republican Revolution” of 1994 would look like  incremental 
change.  
For months, polls have also noted a wide  “enthusiasm gap” between people 
who say they plan to vote Republican and those  who say they plan to vote 
Democrat. This means that conservatives are fired up  about the midterms while 
people who voted for Obama in 2008 and the rest of the  Democratic “base” 
remain demoralized and seemingly indifferent to the outcome in  November.  
There are factors that may make the outcome  in November something short of 
a disaster for the Democrats. As of late July,  the Democratic 
congressional campaign committees and individual House members  considered the 
most “
vulnerable” to losing to GOP candidates held a significant  cash advantage over 
the Republican opponents, according to Federal Election  Commission 
figures. Some ultraconservative GOP candidates, like Nevada’s Sharron  Angle—
nominated to run against Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid—may be so  extreme 
that they scare away more voters than they attract. And the only major  
political force less popular than President Obama or the Democratic Party is 
the  
Republican Party.  
But even if these factors help the Democrats  to stave off disaster, it won’
t change the fact that November is shaping up to  be a major defeat for the 
party of mainstream liberalism in U.S. politics. After  the right had so 
thoroughly discredited itself during the Bush years, how could  the GOP be 
staging a comeback? How is it that a sizable segment of the  population appears 
to accept the conservative case that  unions/immigrants/public-sector 
workers are to blame for the crisis? Or that  cutting the government deficit is 
more important than government aid for jobs  and the unemployed? Or that the 
president was not really born in the United  States?  
It’s the economy, stupid

Only a  year or so after the biggest economic crisis since the Great 
Depression  punctured all the neoliberal and conservative myths about the free 
market, and  gave a Democratic administration the opportunity to change course, 
it seems that  not much has changed. Instead of a movement calling for the 
bankers and CEOs to  pay for the crisis they caused, we seem to have a “
movement,” embodied in the  Tea Party fringe, calling for a deepening of 
policies that will only make these  matters worse. Except for a brief uptick of 
confidence among liberals that came  with the passage of health care reform in 
the spring, the political shift for  Obama supporters has been from “hope” 
to “frustration.” How do we get our heads  around this crazy situation?  
The explanation, of course, starts with the  dire state of the U.S. 
economy. No incumbent party presiding over nearly 10  percent unemployment in 
the 
worst recession since the Great Depression could  hope to win accolades from 
millions of the unemployed and underemployed. Though  the GOP will tout any 
gains it makes as proof that Americans have rejected  Obama’s “socialist” 
agenda, rejection of the Democrats has a less ideological  explanation.  
Salon.com’s Steve Karnacki broke down the  opposition to Obama into three 
main groups: conservative diehards who hated  Obama and the Democrats from 
the start, “mushier” Republicans willing to give  Obama a chance, and true “
swing” voters who have switched from supporting the  Democrats to supporting 
the Republicans. As Karnacki explained the impact of the  bad economy on 
these three groups,  
The expansive agenda Obama has pursued  provides plenty of specific targets 
for his foes. But if he had pursued  different (or fewer) agenda items, I 
doubt his overall approval rating would  be much different. The diehards 
would still hate him, the mushier Republicans  would still have turned on him 
(maybe more of them would cite the deficit,  instead of, say healthcare), and 
he’d still be losing swing voters, too. A bad  economy causes voters whose 
opinions are subject to change to view just about  all of a president’s 
agenda items negatively (or to deemphasize the agenda  items that they agree 
with). A robust economy reverses this phenomenon.  
This analysis is all right as far as it goes.  But it focuses only on the 
conservative side of the political spectrum. To truly  understand why the 
Democrats and liberalism look headed for defeat in November,  we have to also 
look at what will be the most likely explanation for a  conservative 
resurgence: the demoralization of the Democratic “base” over the  last two 
years. 
Blogger Les Leopold, writing on the liberal FireDogLake Web  site, summed up 
this feeling:  
It’s open season on Obama, whom so many  hoped would lead us out of the 
neoliberal wilderness. He once was a community  organizer and ought to know how 
working people have suffered through a  generation of tax breaks for the 
rich, Wall Street deregulation and unfair  competition. When the economy 
crashed, he was in the perfect position to limit  the unjustified pay levels on 
Wall Street. 
Instead, we got a multitrillion-dollar  bailout for Wall Street, no health 
care reform, no serious financial reforms  whatsoever, record unemployment, 
and political gridlock that will be with us for  years to come.  
If Leopold truly believed that Obama would  lead liberals out of the 
wilderness, he certainly missed the fact that Obama was  more of a 
pro-business, “
centrist” politician than the radical conjured up in  the fantasies of the 
likes of Glenn Beck. But millions of Democratic “base”  voters share Leopold’
s sense that Obama hasn’t produced the reforms he promised,  while 
embracing policies like Bush’s “war on terror” and the Afghanistan war  that 
they 
abhor.  
Democratic discontent

Michael  Hais, writing for the New Democrat Network (NDN) blog, explained 
how this may  play out in November:  
Actually, however, it is not what  independent—or even Republican—voters 
do that will determine what happens in  this November’s elections. It is what 
Democrats do, or perhaps not do, that  will be decisive. This is true for 
two reasons. First, a significantly greater  number of voters now identify 
with or lean to the Democratic Party than to the  GOP. Second, only a 
relatively small number of politically uninvolved and  disinterested voters are 
independents that are completely unattached to either  of the parties. As a 
result, the big election story in 2010 will be the extent  to which the large 
plurality of Americans who call themselves Democrats shows  up at the polls 
this fall, and not the voting preferences of unaffiliated  independents or 
Republicans. 
Hais notes that long-term demographic shifts,  including the development of 
a much more multiracial population and the  overwhelming support among the 
youngest voters for Democrats, predict a  long-term Democratic majority in 
the country. Moreover, he reports the results  of an NDN poll that shows a “
solid majority of Americans prefer a government  that actively tries to solve 
the problems facing society and the economy (54  percent), rather than a 
government that stays out of society and the economy to  the greatest extent 
possible (31 percent). Three-quarters of Democrats (76  percent), and just 
over half of independents (52 percent), favor an activist  government, while 
60 percent of Republicans want a laissez-faire approach.” In  other words, if 
the Democrats manage to tap into that sentiment, they can win in  what is “
a country that is anything but center-right.”  
That’s the nub though. However “expansive”  the Obama agenda—and however 
much the Democrats want to use the boogeyman of Tea  Party hordes running 
the country after November 2—they can’t get around the fact  that the core 
supporters of mainstream liberalism feel that the Obama  administration has 
not measured up to its rhetoric of “hope” and “change.” And  Obama and the 
Democrats have only themselves to blame for that state of affairs.  
The Democrats had large majorities in both  houses of Congress, including, 
for a period of time, a 60-vote majority in the  Senate. They had the 
potential to reset mainstream politics for a generation.  Yet, with the Obama 
administration in the lead, they mainly assumed the role as  savior of the 
corporate system that was teetering on the edge of the economic  abyss in late 
2008 and early 2009. Even though the Obama administration was not  the 
originator of the massive bailouts of the Wall Street banks and the likes of  
AIG, 
it assumed the role as chief defender of those programs.  
Since then, the Obama administration has bent  over backwards to placate 
business and its right-wing critics while ladling out  thin gruel to its most 
fervent supporters. Obama stiffed environmentalists when  he endorsed the GOP
’s “drill, baby, drill” solution to offshore oil  drilling—only a few 
weeks before one of those offshore oil rigs caused the  largest environmental 
catastrophe in U.S. history. For supporters of immigrant  rights, the Obama 
administration has mouthed rhetoric in favor of “comprehensive  immigration 
reform” while indefinitely postponing legislation, and deporting  more 
immigrants than George W. Bush’s administration did. Obama has dragged his  
feet 
on ending the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy against gays in the military,  
despite overwhelming support in the public and even among the military 
brass to  get rid of it. On top of this, the Obama administration has escalated 
war in one  country (Afghanistan), and is still committed, despite claims of 
withdrawal, to  a sizable military presence in the another (Iraq).  
The administration may have hit its lowest  point in July when, in response 
to a completely fabricated “controversy” stirred  up by the right-wing 
media, it pressured the Agriculture Department to fire  Shirley Sherrod, a 
Black department official whom the right falsely accused of  racism. Even 
though 
the administration reversed itself and the right-wing fraud  was exposed, 
the conservatives know they have Obama’s number. They know they  have the 
administration on the run. And the administration has demonstrated that  it won’
t even stand up for someone like Sherrod, whose background is deeply  
rooted in the 1960s civil rights movement.  
If Obama and his top advisers are looking for  explanations for why their 
supporters aren’t more fired up about the midterm  elections, they should 
look in the mirror.  
Bailouts and deficits

It’s very  likely that the massive government backing of the financial 
system saved it from  meltdown, but that is cold comfort for the majority of 
Americans who continue to  suffer high unemployment, loss of retirement wealth, 
and a massive foreclosure  crisis. Obama and the Democrats legitimized 
massive government spending without  changing any of the neoliberal assumptions 
about the aims to which that spending  was dedicated. Even though the 
stimulus bill passed in February 2009 was the  largest single spending measure 
ever passed, it was underpowered from the start.  
As critics like liberal economist Paul  Krugman pointed out at the time, 
the stimulus plan was too small to lift the  economy out of its deep hole. And 
the administration trimmed it further in a  largely futile attempt to win “
bipartisan” support for it. Unemployment  continued to rise under Obama, 
feeding the public perception that “government”  and “government spending,” 
was ineffectual. If the crisis of 2008 had  discredited neoliberal nostrums, 
the continued crisis of 2009 and 2010 appeared  to discredit liberal, “big 
government” solutions.  
Today, the administration now proclaims the  necessity of “deficit 
reduction,” “entitlement reform,” (aka, cutting Medi?care  and Social 
Security), 
and austerity. While this largely reflects the  administration’s attempt to 
carry out big business’s agenda, the White House  claims that it is only 
responding to public concern about the growing federal  budget deficit.  
But this is a self-serving, and incorrect,  reading of the public mood. 
Polls showing “the deficit” as the public’s “number  one problem” tend to 
reflect what the Washington elite and the media have  already defined as the 
main problem facing the government, according to research  by political 
scientists Benjamin Page and Robert Shapiro.  
What’s more, “When people are talking about  the deficit and being 
concerned about the deficit, that’s really a metaphor for  a whole lot of 
things in 
their mind: It’s about debt to China, it’s also about  the waste of 
government money as far as they’re concerned, it’s about bailing  out big 
corporations while their jobs are lost,” Democratic pollster Mark  Mellman told 
the 
Huffington Post’s Ryan Grim.  
In other words, public concern about “debt”  and “the deficit,” like 
public concern about unemployment, is really a  reflection of the general 
economic crisis—and the sense that no one in charge,  either in Washington or 
in 
Corporate America—cares much about how ordinary  people are suffering. 
Official liberalism, which once at least appeared to stand  on the side of “the 
people,” seems incapable of mustering much passion for  ordinary people. It’s 
nothing short of scandalous that the Republicans could  filibuster an 
extension of unemployment benefits for two months, causing misery  for 
millions, 
without the Democrats being able to make them pay for it  politically.  
The Democrats may think that they’re the  “responsible” party for 
Corporate America that’s more concerned with “solving  problems” rather than 
with 
engaging in “class warfare.” But this sort of  pragmatism, like embracing “
border enforcement” as part of comprehensive  immigration reform, only allows 
the GOP and the far right to shift the political  debate even further to 
the right. To continue with the example of immigration,  the Democrats’ 
support for border enforcement opens the door to greater  repression. Worse, it 
creates an atmosphere where the far right can legitimize  even more extreme 
policies, like denying U.S. citizenship to children of  immigrants born in the 
United States.  
The need for an alternative

The  missing element here has been a movement from below to pressure the 
Democrats to  act on an agenda that responds to ordinary people rather than to 
bankers and big  business. For much of Obama’s term, the leading liberal 
organizations—like the  AFL-CIO, the NAACP, and the Human Rights Campaign—
have played “good soldiers” in  trying to carry out the White House’s agenda. 
As a result, there has been no  sustained national effort to give voice to 
millions facing economic devastation  today.  
Despite their grave disappointment in Obama  and his administration, 
liberals and much of the Democratic base will grudgingly  vote for the 
Democrats 
in November, if only because they fear the GOP  alternative. But simply 
ratifying the political status quo isn’t the way to  fight the right. It’s the 
status quo itself that has to be challenged.  
A “One Nation” march on Washington, D.C., for  jobs and justice, called by 
the NAACP with several major unions on October 2,  has the potential to 
show the political establishment that real popular  sentiment doesn’t lie with 
the Tea Partiers and the deficit hawks. With an eye  on the electoral 
calendar, October 2 organizers no doubt hope to shake the  Democratic base from 
its lethargy.  
Whether the march and rally will be  successful in electoral terms is anyone
’s guess. But if it gives local activists  the chance to work together to 
build networks that can express working-class and  antiracist demands, that 
will be a positive outcome. This will be necessary  because, whatever happens 
in November, working people will face a much more  concerted attack on 
their living standards and rights next year. We will need to  build the kind of 
organizations that will meet that challenge.  
Even if we can build organizations to fight  effectively for working people’
s demands, we will continue to find ourselves  facing the same Hobson’s 
choice between “terrible” (the GOP) and “not as bad”  (the Democrats). As 
long as there is no political alternative to the left of the  Democratic Party, 
activists will always face this rotten choice. The time to  build that kind 
of an alternative is long overdue.  
============================================================================
=============

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