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Hendrik Hertzberg: Electoral Dissonance

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-08-10 10:13 AM
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Hendrik Hertzberg: Electoral Dissonance
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2010/11/15/101115taco_talk_hertzberg

Electoral Dissonance
by Hendrik Hertzberg
November 15, 2010

snip//


As for “the American people” themselves, it seems clear enough that their rejection of the Democrats was, above all, an expression of angry anxiety about the ongoing economic firestorm. Though ignited and fanned by an out-of-control financial industry and its (mostly) conservative political and intellectual enablers, the fire has burned hottest since the 2008 Democratic sweep. By the time the flames reached their height, the arsonists had slunk off, and only the firemen were left for people to take out their ire on. The result is a kind of political cognitive dissonance. Frightened by joblessness, “the American people” rewarded the party that not only opposed the stimulus but also blocked the extension of unemployment benefits. Alarmed by a ballooning national debt, they rewarded the party that not only transformed budget surpluses into budget deficits but also proposes to inflate the debt by hundreds of billions with a permanent tax cut for the least needy two per cent. Frustrated by what they see as inaction, they rewarded the party that not only fought every effort to mitigate the crisis but also forced the watering down of whatever it couldn’t block.

Part of the Democrats’ political problem is that their defense, confusingly, depends on counterfactuals (without the actions they took in the face of fierce Republican opposition, the great slump would have metastasized into a Great Depression), deferred gratification (the health-care law’s benefits do not kick in fully until 2014), and counterintuitive propositions (the same hard times that force ordinary citizens to spend less money oblige the government—whose income, like theirs, is falling—to spend more). Another part of the problem, it must be said, is public ignorance. An illuminating Bloomberg poll, taken the week before the election, found that some two-thirds of likely voters believed that, under Obama and the Democrats, middle-class taxes have gone up, the economy has shrunk, and the billions lent to banks under the Troubled Asset Relief Program are gone, never to be recovered. One might add to that list the public’s apparent conviction that illegal immigration is skyrocketing and that the health-care law will drive the deficit higher. Reality tells a different story. For ninety-five per cent of us, taxes are actually lower, cut by around four hundred dollars a year for individuals and twice that for families. (The stimulus provided other tax cuts for people of modest means, including a break for college tuition.) The economy has been growing, however feebly, for five straight quarters. Most of the TARP loans have been repaid and the rest soon will be, plus a modest profit for the Treasury. And the number of illegal immigrants fell by close to a million last year, thanks in part to more energetic border enforcement. The health-care law, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office says, will bring the deficit down.

But why don’t “the American people” know these things? Could it be because the President and his party did not try, or try hard enough, to tell them? Obama’s still loyal supporters—his “base”—are, most of them, disappointed and depressed. This year, more Democratic candidates seemed to apologize for the health-care law—notwithstanding its imperfections, their party’s greatest accomplishment in generations, the fulfillment of a century-long dream—than to proclaim it. Compromise, timidity, and the ugliness of the legislative process—not all of it unavoidable—have exacted a steep toll. Even Obama’s temperament has become a political liability. In 2008, his calm was a synergistic counterpoint to the joyous excitement of the throngs that packed his rallies. In the tidy, quiet isolation of the White House, his serene rationality has felt to many like detachment, even indifference. For him and for the country, the next two years look awfully bleak. Capitol Hill will be like Hamburger Hill, a noisy wasteland of sanguinary stalemate. There will be no more transformative legislation; it will be all Obama can do simply to protect health-care reform from sabotage. The economy, like the climate, will be left to fend for itself. And the world will watch, wonder, and worry.


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Vincardog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-08-10 10:33 AM
Response to Original message
1. IT is not Obama's attitude that caused the losses it was his COMPROMISE WITHOUT ANYTHING IN RETURN
IT was his perceived LACK OF FIGHT on the PRINCIPALS.
Before the 'party over policy' brigade show up, your side won for the last 2 years
You need to take your share of the responsibility TOO.
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-08-10 10:35 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. No,
Edited on Mon Nov-08-10 10:36 AM by ProSense
it wasn't

IT is not Obama's attitude that caused the losses it was his COMPROMISE WITHOUT ANYTHING IN RETURN
IT was his perceived LACK OF FIGHT on the PRINCIPALS.
Before the 'party over policy' brigade show up, your side won for the last 2 years
You need to take your share of the responsibility TOO.


Were those valid reasons for allowing Republicans to win?

Why is it that the people most distraught by this election were those Democrats who believed voting should be used a tool to punish the Democratic Party?





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Vincardog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-08-10 10:42 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Who said anything about 'valid reasons for allowing Republicans to win?' I am talking about the REAL
reason they won. I voted and not for a single GOP candidate.
Why can't the post Morten deal with facts?
Why do you assume ' the people most distraught by this election were those Democrats who believed voting should be used a tool to punish the Democratic Party'?
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-08-10 10:46 AM
Response to Reply #3
4. "Why can't the post Morten deal with facts? "
The real reason they won is because more Republicans voted in a lot more races. A lot of House Democrats in traditional red states lost and a lot of blue dogs lost.

That is the reality.

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Vincardog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-08-10 10:49 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. The OP was an attempt to give the reasons for that, as was I. What are you trying to do?
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