Newsweek media whore Jonathon Alter pontificates on the use of populism by the Democrats:
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Even before Howard Dean began his stump speech, before he thrashed President Bush for giving tax cuts to "Ken Lay and the boys at Enron" (a jab he repeated three times), Dave Pitz, a retired teacher sitting in the audience in Newton, Iowa, had the message down cold. "Bush has become the CEO of corporate America," Pitz told me matter-of-factly. A central question of the 2004 campaign is whether enough voters agree with Pitz that Bush is a fiscally reckless president devoted not to them but to wealthy special interests. If the issue is framed that way and the frame sticks, a responsible populist message could work, though it would be the first time in modern political history that it did so. The Democratic candidates differ little on domestic issues. Theirs is essentially a contest to see which one has the best variation on that theme.
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In 2000, Al Gore ran under the slogan "The people versus the powerful." But the Democrats held power, so the argument didn't resonate. This time the corporatist GOP runs Washington and the M.B.A. president seems to make every decision—from the environment to prescription drugs to immigration—according to the specifications of industry. The Teddy Roosevelt idea, accepted by both parties for a century, was that government should provide a check on big-business interests. Now, says John Edwards, the White House is "married" to those interests. The "creed of greed," says John Kerry, lets the lobbyists actually write the bills. Dick Gephardt says Bush is such a sellout he "makes me nostalgic for Ronald Reagan." Forget mad cow. Democrats have found a new kind of red meat that their audiences devour.
There's a scene in Ron Suskind's new book, "The Price of Loyalty," that illuminates the point in another context. In a 2002 White House meeting, Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill is arguing strongly against a second round of tax cuts for the wealthy. At first, the president seems to agree. "Didn't we already give them a break at the top?" he asks. Karl Rove reminds Bush that he must "stick to principle," and he does. The "principle" to which they have devoted their presidency is that the "top"—not the middle class or the uninsured or the grandchildren who will shoulder the cost—go to the front of the line every time.
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And in part because it rarely works. On one level, populism is doomed: half the population own stocks and the market is back up. Unemployment isn't rampant. Those without a college degree who suffer most don't vote and getting them to the polls has proved futile for Democrats in recent elections. Organized labor is shrinking fast. Everyone wants to be rich.
Of course, this last paragraph is just a perfect example of the corporatist capitalism lottery culture that has run amok in America.
So, will economic populism work? Is it a form of class war?
The media is leaking that during the SOTU speech, Bush will propose a new healthcare initiative. It may well be another tiresome tax credit, but if it is more, it may, in turn, precipitate more extensive healthcare proposals from the Democratic candidates. And how would they propose we pay for it? Increased taxes on the wealthy? SOunds good to me!
More of the article here:
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/3989850/