Karl Rove made a habit of employing this strategy in the salad days of the Bush revolution: draw out the more voluble, more controversial, more trigger-happy Democratic voices and use them reductively, cutting off more legitimate debate with more legitimate Democrats. Rove had two goals in mind. Calling out liberal bugbears is like using cattle prods on the hindquarters of the conservative base. It wakes them up, gets them paying attention, and helps them rally around the protagonist. Rove was also focused on Americans with fewer partisan attachments; nothing pulls independents away from the center like an opposition party that's lost its moorings. And this worked for a while.
One of the reasons why Barack Obama's political team is so confident -- "arrogant," as Rove would say today, in their success is that even while some of Obama's signature policies are viewed with healthy skepticism, Republicans are still splashing around in a fetid wading pool. Obama has room to maneuver because Republicans are giving him room. And while Rove was a master at strategic communications, his lessons didn't seem to stick. Take the appearances in the public square of Dick Cheney and Rush Limbaugh. Cheney remains the principle exponent of Republican national security policy. A lot of Republicans now disagree with the Cheney Doctrine, but because President Bush left no real political heirs, and because no real independent, conservative foreign policy voice has emerged, Cheney's grumbles echo. (Sen. Dick Lugar is a voice, but he is not a partisan persuader. Rudy Giuliani has been fairly silent since the demise of his presidential campaign.) The Democratic National Committee could not be more delighted to treat Cheney as the primary political enemy and foil. Each time Cheney opens his mouth, the DNC -- or Robert Gibbs, if he's in the mood -- finds a way to reduce Republican opposition to President Obama's plans to the words of someone who is very unpopular with most Americans. (A side note: Cheney, smarter than the average elephant, understands this. He has his legacy to defend. He is worried not about criminal prosecution; rather, if the Obama mindset over next four-to-eight years sets in, Dick Cheney, a guy who most Americans don't like, will be the Dick Cheney that Andrew Sullivan knows: truly infamous and even wretched; someone who sanctioned torture; someone who abused executive power with relish. Obama's Justice Department may soon renounce the legal foundations upon which Cheney's policies were constructed and may even cite the former administration's lawyers for misconduct. If they do this -- once they do this -- the edifice will be nothing but dust.)
And since the GOP is a PINO -- a Party In Name Only at this point, other Republicans unwittingly pile on. When Rush Limbaugh told the Conservative Political Action Conference audience that he wanted Obama to fail, Republican Senators rebuked him, thus extending the story. The chairman of the Republican National Committee, Michael Steele, called Limbaugh "incendiary," later apologized, and later, in a trendy, post-modern way, said that he meant what he said all along. Limbaugh's ratings have surged since the White House made him the subject of their derision, which is exactly what the White House wanted. The more Republicans identify with Limbaugh, the better; the more Republicans apologize for Limbaugh, the better. To the Obama team, Limbaugh embodies Clinton-era conservatism to most Americans. I would bet that the DNC has polled on this, although I don't know for certain.
When Cheney insisted that Obama's policies were making America less safe, conservative House Republicans like Zach Wamp were frustrated that "the people who led us yesterday" still seemed to represent the Republican Party. But as Wamp knows, the bench is short and uncomfortable to sit on.
So as Democrats focus on Limbaugh, Cheney and Rove, the result is a twofer; remind independents of why they voted for change and continue to perpetuate the Republican identity crisis.
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Mar 27 2009, 12:07 pm







well, duh. also, the minute the Bush administration co-sign on the bailout, the Republican was effectively over ideologically. Obama has had an open look at the endzone for months.
Well said.
The departurre of the Republican party has been a long time in the making and their presence will be missed. Fortunately, the country will strongly benefit by their absence. We have much repair work to do ranging from our global standing to our looted economy.
One can only hope that we never allow ourselves to stand behind the elephant again as it always leaves a mess for others to clean up.
It's an old tactic but few work better. And the Republicans seem so determined to cooperate. Cheney, Rove, Beck, Limbaugh, Hannity, Coulter, Palin, to name but a few. Even their iconic spokesmen always come off as fat, red faced, elderly blusterers(Haley Barbour, Bill Bennett) or shrill harridans with heavy makeup (Bachmann, Coulter, Matalin). These people look and sound angry and ugly. They really do. Why anyone lets them get near a TV screen as spokesmen for a political party is a mystery to me. Even the younger/ethnic ones come off as either loopy (Steele) or the sort of young men who have perspiration on their upper lips. And it doesn't end there. What were they thinking with that budget stunt yesterday....the democrats will be mocking this for six months. At the end of the day whose going to toss out Obama and the democrats to replace them with these grotesques and buffoons.
What in the world does this mean:
"To the Obama team, Limbaugh embodies Clinton-era conservatism to most Americans."
As though Bush-era conservatism were popular and respected now? Or the conservatism of Republicans at the current moment?
It says something alternately peculiar and pathetic that the "voices" of conservatism today are not office-holding Republican politicians (with a few odd exceptions), but are instead talking-head entertainers: Limbaugh, Hannity, Coulter, O'Reilly, Beck, North, Levin, Ingraham, Savage, et al. These so-called commentators have absolutely nothing to lose by ranting and raving incoherently, and everything to gain. The more extreme the rhetoric, the higher their visibility, and hence their ratings, and hence their earnings. They have absolutely no interest in actually governing anything. They exist only to perpetuate the paranoid notion that we are all being systematically victimized by the forces of evil and corruption on The Left: gays, feminists, labor unionists, environmentalists, secularists, over-educated journalists and lawyers, east- and west-coast urban intellectuals, smarty-pants musicians and movie stars, godless abortionists, civil rights and civil liberties activists, community organizers. They have no solutions to anything, because they don't actually think about anything. Their purpose in life is to construct a surreal Opposition to all things good, decent, and "American", and then slander them with venom, vitriole, and naked fear. They're complete morons. And the only actual politicians currently associated with the whole sorry "movement" - Palin, Gingrich, Huckabee, Steele, Bachmann, Brownback - are cartoon characters. Conservatives who are actually capable of thinking coherently about something - Lugar, Hagel, Will, Wills, Brooks, Sullivan - are either virtually invisible or are villified as traitors to the "cause" by the chucklheaded true believers. It's truly the Dark Ages for the Republican Party and conservatism in general.
Eloquent and incontrovertible.
The problem of conservatives is much closer to home. It's in the mirror. It's in the language attempting to villify anyone who would spend the time listening to them. It's in this very article, convinced that someone else is 'doing it' to them. I ask you all, where is the party of accountability? The death spiral began the moment GOP resorted to machiavellian tactics to win at any price, even if it meant the death of America. Neo conservativism was a usurpation of a legitimate seat at the table, and in emergency conditions, we now have a one party system because... the GOP cannot acknowlege it's own illness.
The 'sorry' movement is meaningless when they collectively persist in the crime. They disqualify themselves from participating in the process when they're unwilling to recognize what about their ideology has failed abysmally. What Republicans remain in office are entirely empty handed at crucial junctures. Deductive reasoning forces me to choose between incompetance or passive aggressive tactics at the expense of all. I refuse to vote for either.
Constituent base of the right; blogs everywhere become plagued with nasty attacks repeating installed talking points. I hear nothing but irrational hatred directed at the other half of our fellow countrymen. Limbaugh et al is opium for your masses, undermining the valid principles of the GOP. The Republican party, I fear permanently, has reduced itself to the state of juvenile delinquent beligerence. Ankle biters. Entitled brats. Staunch defenders of robber barrons.
I do not enjoy delivering this news to any of you because the habit of shooting the messenger is entrenched. Obama won because he had constructive plans for the future. GOP lost because they chose stay the course. GOP is rotting at the root because their plans are destructive, clearly a projection of illness within a party than the reality of America and her global relations.
It is my sincerest wish the GOP get well soon, because We the People need the voice of sobriety, truth, and reason now more than ever. Obama can deliver what has been the specialty tool of traditional Republicans if need be, but in the state the GOP is in today, I cannot believe the inverse is possible. You're still wildly punching at ghosts, abusing everything you claim to hold dear in the process.
The Centrist~
Great article. It is an accurate assesment of the situation. But, where does that leave us? Partisonship is fine, but we have to find some common ground to work on the environment. I know I am dreaming, yet I see no other way.
Honestly, it still floors me that 30-odd percent of the country still suscribe to... and identify with... the current crop of Republican "stars". If these are the those on the far right hope to lead the country in 2012 (and beyond), they're in for a long, dark period of irrelevence.