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Democrats: The Party of the Low IQ

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Demoralized Dems

Why the party has so little faith in its political prospects.

   WEB EXCLUSIVE    By Howard Fineman    Newsweek Sept. 28, 2005

With George W. Bush�s presidency mired in the muck of hurricanes and doubts about the war, you�d think Democrats would be bursting with energy, eagerly expecting to regain power. But, in a roomful of well-connected Democrats the other night, I was struck by how gloomy they were. They can�t stand Bush, but didn�t have much faith in their own party�s prospects.

Why? Well, some of the reasons they articulated are short-term and tactical; some are purely personal; others more philosophical; and I have a few myself:

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Supreme divisions

   The president�s nomination of John Roberts was a ten    strike, knocking apart whatever united front the Dems    might have been able to muster on judicial issues.    However genial and cerebral he may be, Roberts also is    a board-certified conservative, blessed by the James    Dobsons of the world.

   No one doubted that at least a few Red State Democrats    would vote for him, but the defection of Sen. Pat    Leahy of Vermont (no less), the ranking Democrat on    the Judiciary Committee, was a stunner�and a    demoralizing one for the party faithful.

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   Democrats are vowing to remain unified over Bush�s    next pick�which almost certainly will be a woman, a    Hispanic or both. So the party could find itself in a    tough political position once again.

Lack of star power

   These things go in cycles, I guess, and it�s hard to    be glamorous when you are in the minority in both    houses of Congress. That said, it�s incontestably true    that the Democrats simply aren�t blessed with much    charisma in the leadership ranks�unless you consider    Angelina Jolie a Democrat.

   The GOP has Rudy, Colin, Arnold, McCain and Condi�just    to name a few: big, bold, controversial characters.    Good copy if nothing else. The more or less official    roster of breastular Democratic leaders includes Harry    Reid, Nancy Pelosi, Howard Dean and 2004 nominee John    Kerry. �Nuff said.

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Hillary love and fear

   The purported inevitability of Hillary Rodham Clinton    excites some Democrats, but deeply depresses some    others, both inside and outside the Beltway.

   Her forcefulness and talent�not to mention her    well-oiled money machine�bring respect from party    insiders and outsiders alike. But there is an    undercurrent of unease about the "Back to the Future"    quality of another Clinton candidacy. Do we really    want to relive the Clinton Years? Under their breath,    even many Clinton acolytes tend to say �NO.�

A house divided

   Andy Stern of the Service Employees International    Union is a brilliant agitator, and he has all but    single-handedly crippled the AFL-CIO by taking his    union and several others into a new group called the    Change to Win Federation.

   Stern�s rationale, in part, is that the Democrats are    taking rank-and-file workers for granted. Does that    mean Change to Win will consider endorsing Republicans    (as the Teamsters, another member of the Stern Gang,    sometimes do)? No wonder Dems are gloomy.

War waffling

   I spent some time with Cindy Sheehan the other day,    and I was struck by her impatience with the Democrats.

   �Why are they so afraid?� she wanted to know. She had    just met with Harry Reid and Hillary Clinton, and    described both as cautious in their statements, with    Reid saying that the Dems �had no choice� but to push    for a drawdown of U.S. troops and Hillary remaining    largely mum.

   Frankly, I was surprised that Reid and Clinton met    with her at all. The Dems are afraid of their own    shadow on the Iraq war. Most of their leadership voted    twice for the conflict�the authorizing resolution and    the money to support it. And none of them has come    out, flat out, to say that they made a mistake.

   Do they believe in the aims of the war or not? If they    fault the end of the war, precisely what would    they do differently now? The silence is thundering.

Missed opportunities

   And then there are all those issues that got swept    away�and swept off the front pages�by the storms: the    Karl Rove-CIA leak investigation; the FDA controversy    about over-the-counter sales of the morning-after    pill, and the subsequent resignations from the agency;    the on-again, off-again debate about rejiggering    Social Security, and even the investigation of what    went wrong with FEMA's hurricane response. All were    juicy issues for the Democrats to dig into, but the    opposition party failed to muster a united voice.

Vision and pbuttion

   I led my last NEWSWEEK piece    with an anecdote about President Lyndon Johnson in 1965.    When a huge hurricane hit New Orleans that year, he hustled    down to Louisiana and was on the scene within a day,    offering the full resources of the federal government to    help get the region back on its feet.

   I thought it was an instructive contrast to Bush�s    too-little, too-late personal response to Katrina. But the    anecdote contains a lesson for Democrats, too: LBJ stood for    a big idea�the healing power of government. He was in the    mist of his Great Society presidency.

What Big Idea would a Democratic presidency be about? No one seems to know, which is perhaps the main reason why the party faithful in that room seemed so lost.


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