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Karl Rove is very good at one thing. He sets up win-win scenarios for his clients. No matter the outcome of his political tactics, he has built contingencies on how to spin it to his client’s advantage. What he fears the most is the unscripted event that he has not planned for. Abu Ghraib is an example of this.
The political theater of these two votes yesterday, so close to the November elections is a classic Rove/Bush political set-up. The purpose is not to give the president some sweeping new power. They were already torturing and illegally detaining and would continue to do so no matter what the courts or Congress said or did. This is fundamental to their assertions of the power of the unitary executive, especially in times of war. To paraphrase a line from an old movie: “They don’t need no stinking badges.”
If the Democrats had voted as a block against both of these bills, as many here would want, it gives the Republicans all the ammo they need to further imprint the “soft on terror” meme that they have successfully branded onto Democrats through years of coordinated repetition. If they voted as a block for the legislation it allows them to say that “everyone supports the president” and remove the distinction the Democrats are trying to brand as central to their take back the Congress strategy. But if the Democrats voted piecemeal, as was likely and as they did yesterday, Rove knows he can splinter the activist, energized base of the Democratic Party. If yesterday’s hand wringing on this board is any example, many may be falling into this trap.
Most quickly forget how ephemeral legislation is. What is enacted today with one party in control can be reversed when another party takes the reigns, if not because of ideological differences, then purely to establish the new party’s legislative or executive dominance. The Eighteenth and Twenty First Amendments to the constitution come to mind. Even if you don’t think there is no longer any difference between the two parties, I can assure you that human nature and the realities of political power dictate that the party in power will always try to structurally crush its opposition, if only to maintain its power and control. The Republicans have been doing that with a vengeance for the last 6 years and the Democrats will return the favor eventually, whether they are both ruled by corporate interests or not.
I don’t believe in the party system. I think it is an antiquated, useless throwback that serves little purpose to a real liberal progressive. I believe in solutions to problems stripped of ideological baggage. But that is not the system as it is now constructed.
Rove wins if you feel defeated. Rove wins if you are arguing among yourselves when you should be getting out the vote or offering to help a Dem candidate in a close race. Rove wins if you don’t show up at the polls and pull a straight Democratic ticket in November.
He has set up another distraction, win-win scenario for Bush/Rove. The way you defeat it is to not act predictably. To do that you must strip your emotion out of the tactical equation. This is critical to effective political warfare. The way you defeat your anger and despair is to work twice as hard to gain at least one house of Congress, no matter what you think of yesterday's vote. We need one house. Like it or not, that is the only effective way to gain political push back against the current regime.
The Dems have the long knives sharpened, not because the parties are so different, but because they can be so similar...
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