Worth reading every word...
http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/news/breaking_news/12434269.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jspPosted on Sun, Aug. 21, 2005
A split over war, the wimp thing, and how to win
By Dick Polman
Inquirer Political Analyst
At a time when the Iraq war is draining President Bush's popularity, you might think that the Democrats would have a consensus plan of their own for ending the bloodshed and winning the peace. But no such plan exists - because the party's liberal grassroots base and the cautious Washington establishment are too busy warring with each other.
The liberals, emboldened by growing antiwar sentiment in the polls, essentially want a timetable for pulling out the U.S. troops, but the centrists think that such a stance would enable Bush's spin team to once again paint the Democrats as national-security wimps.
<>As ex-Democratic strategist Paul Begala noted, "the popular memory" of the antiwar movement is not about Democrats being proved right on Vietnam; rather, it's "the indelible image of young Americans burning the American flag." So the concern today, among party centrists, is that if Democrats move left, Bush will tap those memories and paint them as cut-and-run defeatists. (This explains why top Democrats have steered clear of Cindy Sheehan, whose grief over her son has sparked the Crawford, Texas, antiwar protests.)
<>The net-roots liberals don't dwell on the polling history; instead, Sirota argued: "We have internalized the most dishonest stereotypes that the Republicans have propagated against us. It's like the kid who is bullied at school and starts to think of himself as a wimp, instead of fighting back. One way to turn things around is to start now."
And that means taking aim at all Democratic arguments that give aid and comfort to Bush. Here's one such argument, voiced on Aug. 13: "Whether it was a mistake or not
, we are where we are, and we ought to try and make this strategy succeed."
That was former President Bill Clinton, on CNN. During the '90s, Clinton managed to quell tensions between party liberals and establishment centrists. But with the war raging and the net-roots in revolt, he is no longer positioned to keep the peace. Right now, nobody is.