http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=it_wasnt_about_coakleyIt Wasn't About Coakley
Democrats aren't framing the political debate with any success, and their equivocations leave them open to right-wing attacks and progressive suspicion.
Tim Fernholz | January 20, 2010 | web only
It's laughable to see the same party that just six years ago saw its presidential candidate and congressional slate trounced deciding that the "Obama era" is over after losing one Senate seat, even as a Democratic president and congressional majorities remain in office. George W. Bush never had it so good.
That's not to minimize what is an embarrassing setback.
Losing a long-Democratic seat in a special election when a (barely) filibuster-proof majority hung in the balance illustrates a sense of complacency among national Democratic operatives that must be avoided if they wish to protect their majorities come November. Martha Coakley's lazy and gaffe-ridden campaign was inexcusable. Nonetheless, if progressives are serious about governing, this is not a time for complaint but for rededication.
More important than the post-mortem hand-wringing is taking a lesson from the loss: Democrats aren't framing the political debate with any success, and their equivocations leave them open to right-wing attacks and progressive suspicion.snip//
Republicans passed their tax cuts with a simple majority through the budget reconciliation process; if Obama and his party fail to pass health care through that path or another, then they'll demonstrate that they don't think the reforms they campaigned on are worth fighting for -- and show voters that Democrats aren't worth electing.
If progressives or Blue Dogs in the House refuse to swallow their objections and pass the Senate health care bill when the chips are down, they'll deserve the shellacking they take next fall. Senators like Max Baucus should take a good, hard look at where the summer's fruitless negotiations with Republican members got them, and what conclusions should be drawn.
Of course, Democrats could listen to the likes of Bayh and spend the next year trying to 'moderate' their congressional agenda by combining it with the anti-tax, anti-government nihilism endorsed by today's GOP, supporting policies that do nothing in response to the great challenges of our times. All this will do is signal to voters that Democrats can't be trusted with power.
If Democrats remain assertive and fight for their policies, Scott Brown has an eleven-month term ahead of him. If they don't, well, remember how much fun 1994 was?