Published on Thursday, November 7, 2002 by CommonDreams.org  

How the Democrats Blew It  

by Stephen Zunes 
  
This should have been the Democrats' year. 

The country is still mired in recession. Polls consistently have shown
that the Republicans' positions on such basic policy issues as the
environment and the economy are decidedly unpopular. The connection of
top administration officials with scandal-plagued corporations provided
ample opportunities for a populist message against corruption and in
support of economic justice. 

Despite this, the Democrats became the first party out of office to lose
one of the houses of Congress in an off-year election. It was the first
time in a century that a Republican president saw his party gain seats
in an off-year election and only the second time since 1934 that a
sitting president's party did not lose seats in Congress 

Instead of emulating the hugely successful 1994 Republican strategy of
aggressively challenging the incumbent president and his party's
Congressional leadership, the Democrats instead decided to work on a
consensus-building approach with the Republican administration. They
even went as far as supporting President George W. Bush's demand that he
be granted the authority to invade Iraq without the legally-required
mandate from the United Nations Security Council. In addition, the
majority of Democrats went on record praising his support for last
spring's attacks by Israel's right-wing government against civilian
areas of the occupied West Bank. The Democrats went as far as supporting
Republican calls authorizing the use of military force to free any
citizen of the United States or an allied nation detained for war crimes
by the United Nations' International Criminal Court in The Hague. 

As a result, many thousands of rank-and-file Democrats, longtime
supporters of peace and human rights issues, voted for the Green Party
or simply did not vote. Thousands more voted reluctantly for the
Democratic nominee but did not put in the volunteer time or campaign
contributions they would have otherwise, angered that the Democrats had
shifted to far to the right. 

It is noteworthy that both incumbent Democratic senators and five out of
the six Democratic House incumbents who were defeated supported the Iraq
war resolution. By contrast, no incumbent who opposed the Democratic
Congressional leadership's support of President Bush's war plans lost,
with the exception of Rep. James Maloney of Connecticut, who was pitted
against a popular moderate female Republican incumbent in a redrawn
district. 

It is difficult to shift public attention to domestic issues in times of
international tension. Making a strong case against the Bush
administration' s war plans, its support for repressive governments and
its assaults on well-respected international institutions would have
almost certainly resulted in a galvanizing of the Democratic Party
faithful as well as large numbers of independents, insuring a Democratic
victory. 

The Democratic leadership should have recognized that calls for
prescription drug benefits for seniors while the nation is concerned
about an illegal, unnecessary and possibly devastating war simply did
not catch the imagination of the voting public. 

This was particularly problematic in that the Democrats were unable to
explain how they intended to pay for such benefits while refusing to
reverse recently-enacted tax cuts and in authorizing a military campaign
that will cost up to $200 billion. 

Hopefully, the Democrats will learn the lesson for Tuesday's devastating
defeat and decide to replace their discredited leadership with those who
have the integrity and political smarts to return them to majority
status. 

Stephen Zunes is an associate professor of politics at the University of
San Francisco and the author of the recently-released Tinderbox: U.S.
Middle East Policy and the Roots of Terrorism (Common Courage Press,
1993). 

 http://www.commondreams.org/views02/1107-07.htm


                                       Serbian News Network - SNN
                                           [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                                        http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to