October 04, 2007
Democrats Can Win Election For GOP
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
With President Bush reaching new lows in
national polls,
Christian conservatives threatening to bolt if Rudy
is the nominee and the
Iraq war bleeding support in Middle America,
Republicans are in a funk about 2008.
And understandably and deservedly so.
The war, a product of hubris, born of
the smashing triumph in Afghanistan, and ideology, a
Wilsonian vision of
democratizing the Middle East, has been a disaster
for the country, and the party that plunged us into it.
And the Bush
amnesty for illegal aliens ignited
a rebellion that dealt the establishment its worst
thrashing in many moons.
Free trade
has cost 3 million manufacturing jobs, sent the dollar
plunging to peso levels, denuded America of productive
capacity and left us dependent on Chinese loans to
finance $800 billion trade deficits.
So, are Republicans doomed to defeat in
2008? By no means.
For the performance of the Congress and
Democratic field of presidential hopefuls should be
troubling to any Democrat with visions of winning back
the White House.
Congress has
failed to end U.S. involvement in Iraq, or to
contain the surge, or impose its formula for fighting
the war, leaving the party base in sputtering,
exasperated, impotent rage.
Why has Congress failed? Because it is
terrified of the possible consequences of imposing its
policy. Congress fears Bush may be right—that a
rapid troop withdrawal risks a strategic disaster
and humanitarian catastrophe. Having been lacerated for
the loss of Eastern Europe to Stalin, of China to Mao,
and of
Southeast Asia to Hanoi, they desperately do not
want to be held responsible for losing Iraq to Islamic
radicalism.
On social and cultural issues, Democrats
seems to have learned nothing.
In the last presidential debate, at
Dartmouth, Bill Richardson said that, as president, he
would
refuse the honorary chairmanship of the Boy Scouts.
Why? Well, the Boy Scouts does not allow
homosexual scoutmasters to take
Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts on camping trips.
All the Democratic candidates but
Hillary favored a federal law banning smoking in public
places. Would that mean U.S. attorneys prosecuting
bartenders for letting patrons puff away. Are Democrats
going to take the nanny state national? Do they think
Middle America is
Mike Bloomberg's Manhattan?
All the Democratic candidates except
Dennis Kucinich favored the Federal requirement that
states outlaw drinking by 18-year-olds, which means high
school kids who join the Marines can't have a night of
beer with their buddies before heading to Anbar.
All the Democratic front-runners favored
second-graders being read stories in school about a
homosexual marriage between a pair of princes.
This would
result in the absurdity of 6-year-olds, forbidden by the
U.S. Supreme Court from learning about God, Adam and Eve
in school, being introduced to sexual unions between
Adam and Steve.
America is just not that far down that
road.
Following the debate, Hillary Clinton
proposed giving a $5,000 "baby bond" to every
child born in the United States. This would add $20
billion to federal spending yearly, with the main
beneficiary being illegal aliens who average more than
three babies each.
The message that would go out to the
world: If you're pregnant, get
a visa and fly to the United States—or, if you can't
get a visa, get across the Mexican border. Because if
your baby is born here, you hit the jackpot. The baby is
an
automatic U.S. citizen and
entitled to a $5,000 Hillary "baby bond" you
can take back to Mexico, if the feds catch you and boot
you out.
In short, Democrats sense their
vulnerability on the war and security issue, which is
why they are frustrated and floundering in Congress and
stiffing the antiwar base of the party. And they remain
vulnerable on social and cultural issues, if Republicans
have the nerve to hammer them, as Bush's father did in
that miraculous summer of 1988, when he turned a
17-point deficit to
Michael Dukakis on Aug. 1 into an eight-point lead
by Labor Day that he never lost.
If Barack is the Democratic nominee,
nervousness over a president three years out of the
Illinois legislature will play to the GOP's advantage in
wartime. Hillary as the nominee, with 45 percent of the
country saying it would never vote for her and the
nation given eight months to reflect on whether they
want to watch a four-year rerun of the Bill and Hillary
Show, would also work to GOP advantage.
Republicans may not have The Gipper
around to unite them, but they do have Hillary, which is
an excellent second-best.
Moreover, of the front-running
Republican candidates, all are fresher than Hillary. All
could campaign as a "change agent" in the current
cliché. But they would need to jettison the Bush legacy:
open borders, globalism, interventionism and Big
Government Conservatism.
While the battleground states will be
the same, the battleground constituency in 2008 is
independents and Democrats earning $25,000 to $50,000.
Before Bush embraced
neoconservatism, they used to be known as
Reagan Democrats. Though alienated, they are not yet
lost.
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.