Saturday 22 November 2008

 

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Michael Henderson

Michael Henderson suggests


McCain is in for a terrible shock if he wins

Wednesday, 4th June 2008

Reihan Salam says that most Republicans have no idea how much the American social landscape has changed. They should learn from Obama’s Google-like appeal

But Reagan’s domestic project — of cutting taxes and continuing the wave of deregulation kicked off by Jimmy Carter — had an unintended side effect. By lowering the top rate of tax, Republicans made it safe for suburban professionals to become ‘postmaterialists’. So to win elections, Republicans increasingly relied on supermajorities of working-class whites. This worked brilliantly for a time. Working-class whites gave George W. Bush his victories in 2000 and 2004. The trouble is that working-class whites are a shrinking slice of the population, and they are increasingly receptive to the often crude economic populism of the Democrats, in no small part because Republicans failed to grapple with the downsides of the wealth boom they helped spark.

On 13 May, the Democrats had their own Crewe and Nantwich in Mississippi, where Democrat Travis Childers soundly defeated Republican Greg Davis. This is despite the fact that President Bush carried this district comfortably in 2000 and 2004. The Republican defeat in Mississippi comes after two other defeats in conservative bastions in Illinois and in Louisiana. To be sure, special elections in the United States tend to be less significant than by-elections in Britain. Yet the Mississippi race was also a testing ground for Republicans hoping to beat back a resurgent Democratic party. Decidedly unsubtle television advertisements attempted to link Childers, a conservative white Democrat from a humble rural background, to Barack Obama and to Obama’s erstwhile pastor, the eccentric black nationalist Jeremiah Wright. It was the kind of culture war appeal Republicans have used with great success in the Deep South for years. This time, however, it fell on deaf ears.

Just as Tony Blair flummoxed even the most skilful Tories, Obama — a candidate many in the Republican establishment believe to be deeply vulnerable — seems strangely invulnerable to criticism. It often seems as though the Obama movement has managed to transcend mere politics. His candidacy is being marketed, as political strategist Patrick Ruffini has observed, as a high-end consumer brand. The halo of progressive cool that surrounds, say, Apple or Google or the Prius is Obama’s greatest weapon. That is precisely why traditional attacks against Obama backfire. They seem somehow gauche, and thus they prove more damaging to the attacker than to Obama himself.

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Ray

June 5th, 2008 10:47am

The reason the Republican Party is in such dire straits is precisely because it is no longer a 'conservative' party.
Under Bush, it has dabbled in big government, ruinous foreign wars, open-doors immigration, precipitous trade deficits and grievious assaults upon the civil liberties of its citizens. No wonder many disillusioned Republicans are seriously pondering whether an Obama presidency could really make things any worse.

Kiffa

June 5th, 2008 2:42pm

Great article, more from this writer please.
His remark that the Cameroons have reconciled themselves to the welfare state confirms depressingly an answer George Osborne gave me about the need for radical Charles Murray type reform. I was hoping his was a cautious reply during a position of weakness. How depressing. THE STATE IS NOT THE SOLUTION. Never has been, never will be.

Tina

June 5th, 2008 4:25pm

Obama has a hardcore of support based on spin, rhetoric and sentiment - his 'halo' as you put it - but he's a long way off pulling the wool over everyone's eyes with his sweet talking snake oil salesman patter.

Even Newsnight last night said it tried to find someone in the Obama camp to talk about his foreign policy to them but no one would.

The mood music won't fool everyone.

cuffleyburgers

June 5th, 2008 4:48pm

If true a depressing article.

Is there nowhere to hide from the socialists?

No beacon of hope?

Alexander

June 5th, 2008 5:55pm

While Obama is certainly the media darling, he hardly has "Google-like appeal". It's been at least a month and a half since we knew that he was going to be the Democratic nominee, but he still couldn't carry states that he was supposed to, like Indiana or South Dakota. He lost the democratic primaries in critical swing states like WV, Ohio, and Florida. He did not carry the Democratic heartland of the Northeast. His victory rests on liberal electorates in states that will go Republican in November, super delegates and the undemocratic allocation of more delegates to him as loser of the Texas primary than to Clinton as the victor.

While I agree that the House and Senate are going to have larger Democratic majorities, I remain dubious that Obama can win, even in this most Democratic of all years.

Christopher Chantrill

June 5th, 2008 6:53pm

The comparison with the Tories in 1997 is palpable.

But remember, after eleven years of New Labour, the voters decided they had been had. And what is metro/green/moderate David Cameron proposing?

Education choice, welfare reform, and crime control. Can you spell c-o-n-s-e-r-v-a-t-i-v-e?

Peter Collins

June 6th, 2008 7:59am

Mr. Salam,

I'll get right to the point.

You're not an American. You have no feel for this country. Apparently you think that Ipod-wearing, latte-sipping, Prius-driving twits are now a majority. Get a clue, dude. Next time you visit, go somewhere besides New York, Washington, LA and their suburbs.

You're full of crap.

Cheers,

Peter Collins
Norfolk, Virginia

David Lindsay

June 8th, 2008 12:33am

Of course, they can always join up with the disaffected Clintonites, as a rump party of neoliberal economic policy, just plain liberal social policy, and neoconservative foreign policy. No change there, for either of them. But mercifully never in office again.

Jack Heismann

June 8th, 2008 3:08am

Quite amusing, actually.

If Mr. Salam is correct, and that the American landscape has so dramatically changed as he claims, then it would be rather impossible for Mr. McCain to win, wouldn't it.

But even more to the point, if Mr. McCain should win the election, it would be rather conclusive that Mr. Salam was, well, quite the fool.

In reality, his title contradicts his premise to the point that he either lacks good common sense that every writer should have before putting a pen to paper, or more likely, it is just that his editor simply doesn't like him.

Not surprising given his content.

Jack Heismann

David Lindsay

June 8th, 2008 8:22pm

The first black President of the United States will have neither a Civil Rights background nor even a slave ancestry.

He will win as a Democrat with so many paleocon votes that it will not matter that the Israel Lobby was against him.

The first woman President of the United States will not now be a member of the feminist generation.

And no one who fought in Vietnam will ever now be President of the United States.

Funny Old World.

And Brave New World.

rightwingprof

June 9th, 2008 11:07am

Wishful thinking. The landscape hasn't changed that much, and the Pew poll asked the wrong question. Battleground polls which ask people to rate themselves as somewhat/very liberal v. somewhat/very conservative still show that conservatism is dominant in the United States.

You don't really want us to put on our diapers like all of you, do you? Who would change yours?

David Lindsay

June 10th, 2008 5:31pm

Barack Obama: Conservative Republican

Yes, you read aright.

Obama is an isolationist in all but name, and a protectionist even in name.

Obama's links to the black churches give him a vast morally and socially conservative hinterland, in marked contrast to the other side's purely rhetorical relationship with such concerns over long decades.

Obama's black base has no time whatever, either for the mass immigration favoured by McCain, or for the consequent diminishment of English in American society and public life (long indulged by the Bushes).

Obama has already beaten Hillary Clinton.

And, whereas the Republican Party is now as ludicrously misnamed as our own Conservative and Labour Parties, Obama really does believe in the 'res publica' that his opponents actively want to destroy.

What's not to like?

Jo-jo

June 11th, 2008 8:09pm

Many conservatives still think it is the 1980s much the way liberals in the 1980s acted like it was still 1964. Tens of millions of voters are under the age of 35 or are immigrants. They have no recollection of either Jimmy Carter's or Ronald Reagan's presidency. They do remmeber the good times under Bill Clinton and the awful times we are experiencing today. To those tens of millions of voters, liberal isnt a dirty word, conservative is.


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