|
Edited on Sun Jan-20-08 05:50 PM by Two Americas
Since the 60's, the two parties have based their respective power on coalitions - self-contradictory and unlikely coalitions - that show many signs of breaking apart now.
Bith parties have used the culture war issues - all of them originated, defined, and injected into the political discussion by the right wingers, we should never forget - to drive people into their camps.
The Republicans put together a coalition of "values" voters (developed as an interest group by the religious right for their own access to power) and big business interests (and their sycophants and apologists.) That coalition is splitting badly now. Huckabee and McCain and Giuliani represent one side of that coalition, but not the other.
Big money interests in the Republican party were more than willing to use the religious right to advance their interests but have no real interest in the religious right or its positions other than that. Many rank and file everyday Christians are all through with tossing away the New Testament teachings of charity and compassion, and are realizing that the Republicans are turning them into serfs and using them and have no moral foundation.
Romney is the candidate that best represents both sides of that coalition.
The Democrats put together a coalition of upscale liberal cause-oriented people, and old line authoritarian Labor.
The problem is that the upscale liberal cause-oriented people are deeply conservative on the issues of power and wealth, on economic disparity and injustice. They are Republicans on everything except the cultural war issues. Rank and file Labor people are realizing that the old hierarchical union leadership is selling them down the river, and there is a growing revolt happening there.
Clinton best represents the old coalition.
The possible realignment would look like this:
Blue collar people, represented by those who find Huckabee attractive, come back to the Democrats. The upper crust of the Democrats - that small percentage of people who control the party and the narrative of the party, and who are very much pro-big business and upper class - move over and become moderate Republicans.
This would re-align the parties back to where they once were. Sooner or later this will happen, because the current positions and methods and coalitions each party is depending upon are unstable.
We now have two parties representing two different factions of the upper class, who only disagree with each other over matters of personal values and lifestyle choices. The other 90% of us have no party and have no representation. That cannot last for much longer.
Keep in mind that only 10% of the population enjoy household incomes of $90,000 and up, and the party leadership is looking after those people, and the most domineering and controlling people in the party from the local level on up and right here at DU are from that privileged group. They do not want to give up their privilege. Their "liberalism" is a matter of demanding for themselves the same perks and privileges that the super-wealthy have, and the Hell with the rest of the people. "Let them eat cake if they are too stupid to be beautiful successful liberals like we are."
The relative handful of upscale people controlling the Democratic party at all levels would rather have a Republican win than an FDR. The wealthy and powerful people—the upper 1% - who own the Republican party would rather have Clinton win than Huckabee.
|