WSJ 
 
It Wasn’t Just Obama
The Democrats’ policies have been  pillaging their own political base

 
By  
Daniel Henninger 
 
Nov. 12, 2014 7:08 p.m. ET  
The Democrats who were caught standing on the beach last week when the GOP’
s  40-foot wave washed over them are now explaining why it wasn’t their 
fault.  
No. 1: It’s not us; it’s what’s his name, the unpopular president. (And 
that  awful Valerie Jarrett. ) 
No. 2: It was a midterm election with a bad map; we’ll be back in 2016.  
Hillary to the rescue. 
Official Obama Explanation : My ideas and policies are fine; I just have a  
messaging problem.  
USS Democrat Captain _Nancy Pelosi _ 
(http://topics.wsj.com/person/P/Nancy-Pelosi/5361) :  “There was an ebbing, an 
ebb tide, for us.” 
This all reminds me of the classic film satire, “I’m All Right, Jack,” 
about  the dying days of the British trade-union movement. When an idealistic 
young  factory worker shows the efficiency gains possible from actually using 
a  forklift, the union steward calls a strike. Three guesses which 
Democrats in the  U.S. version would play the roles of Peter Sellers, 
Terry-Thomas 
and Margaret  Rutherford.  
A few Democratic voices, mostly party professionals whose job is winning  
elections, have said the donkey herd that just ran off the cliff needs to  
rethink its sense of direction. No one is listening to them. Most Democrats,  
especially the left that took control of the party in 2008, deny any 
problem.  And well they might. There is no Plan B.  
The Democrats’ standard political model is generally attributed to FDR  
confidante Harry Hopkins : “We will spend and spend, and tax and tax, and elect 
 and elect.” Hopkins denied ever using these words, but the formula lived 
on. 
Tax, spend and elect just slammed into the mountain.  
In Wisconsin, the party’s armies not only lost to Scott Walker (twice!) but 
 watched Republicans gain the most seats in the state’s legislature in 50 
years.  How else to explain former businessman Rick Snyder winning 
re-election as  governor in Michigan? New England, notably Massachusetts, is 
bleeding 
red again.  Nevada’s state government is so red that _Harry Reid _ 
(http://topics.wsj.com/person/R/Harry-Reid/5832) may have to  sneak into Nevada 
from 
the California side of Lake Tahoe. 
Then there’s Maryland. We may look back on Maryland’s 2014 gubernatorial  
election as the battlefield where the long liberal advance stopped. In blue  
Maryland, and elsewhere, the Democrats are losing for the same reason 
medieval  potentates fell: They resorted to plundering their own people. 
Maryland’s victorious Republican gubernatorial candidate, Larry Hogan,  
deserves credit for alerting the population to the dangers of Democratic  
pillage. He ran hard on the reality that Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley in two 
 
terms raised some 40 taxes and fees, including the corporate income tax, 
sales  tax, personal income tax and a “millionaire’s tax.” Maryland was a 
progressive  Utopia. But it is the wave after wave of fees in Maryland and 
other 
states that  is killing the Democrats politically.  
The Maryland Democrats imposed or raised fees on anything that moved—
license  plates, liquor, fishing, birth and death certificates, even something 
called  “storm water management fees” based on the size of people’s roofs, 
driveways,  patios and such. Bridge and tunnel tolls rose every year from 2011 
to 2013.  
Less noticed outside Massachusetts than the election of Republican Charlie  
Baker as governor was that voters also overturned a law that ratcheted up 
the  state’s gasoline tax each year at the inflation rate. No more.  
Illinois residents, who just put GOP businessman Bruce Rauner in the  
statehouse, experienced a similar fee and tax mania under Democratic Gov. Pat  
Quinn.  
The Democratic Party has become the Nickel-and-Dime Empire. Their 
compulsion  to chisel money out of the population is collapsing the empire from 
within.  Here’s how: 
The Democrats are the party of the state and public sector. Over a long  
period, the costs of maintaining the state have risen inexorably, especially 
in  the North due to public-union costs and transfer payments. We may call 
this  phenomenon political global warming, with the gases of public spending 
driving  the fiscal tides ever higher.  
Unwilling to restructure government, state Democrats used taxes as sand 
bags.  First they raised taxes on large business. Then the “wealthy.” Then 
came the  fees and regulatory costs for smaller businesses. In Maryland and 
Illinois,  companies and the wealthy fled.  
It still wasn’t enough. Over the past decade, Democratic politicians (and  
some Republicans) started imposing regressive fees on everyone. Which means 
the  party’s pols are now siphoning cash straight out of the budgets of 
their  blue-collar and middle-class base. That hurts.  
Traditional Democratic liberals understood that the private sector at least 
 needed room to breathe. The party’s left, having self-deported from the 
private  sector, does not. Thus at the same time their governors were bleeding 
the base,  congressional Democrats voted through ObamaCare with its “
Cadillac tax,” device  tax, Transitional Reinsurance Fee and noncompliance 
penalties. As you can see,  it’s just a messaging problem. 
It was good being the party of Robin Hood. Until they morphed into the  
Sheriff of Nottingham. In November 2014, the forest people in at least four  
states figured out who has been picking their pockets. What the Democratic  
Party’s answer will be in 2016 to this public rebellion is so far  nonexistent.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to