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"A
little clarity, a little advice"
by
P.M. Carpenter
Democratic strategists and their presidentially hopeful candidates are
of two minds on how best to get out the vote in the coming electoral
blood fest. Briefly put, one camp believes in promoting "new ideas" while
the other prefers to exploit hardcore anger. This strategic divide may
come across as irreconcilable, but the two camps are, or at least could
be, much closer in message than usually thought.
In proposing new policies to replace the gazillion destructive ones
Bush has huckstered with deceptive rhetoric, or in merely denouncing
his record and leaving it at that, both camps, in effect, are playing
a variation on the same campaign theme: a determination to restore honor
and integrity to the White House. Bush made a mockery of those qualities
as he campaigned on them 4 years ago and, as can so easily be shown,
has maintained a perfect record of mockery since. In vowing -- with jackhammer
repetition -- to restore presidential integrity and in surveying -- again
with jackhammer repetition -- how Bush has forsaken it, the challenger
sets the agenda. By sticking to it, he throws the incumbent on the defensive.
At minimum, a glance at your local bookstore's current events section
testifies to the prevailing integrity gap. Well-researched volumes laced
with indisputable titles and subtitles such as Lies Bush Told Us..., Big
Lies, Weapons of Mass Deception, ... Mastering the Politics
of Deception and ... the Politics of Deceit in the House
of Bush seem to appear almost
daily. Bush's political trail by now is so littered with falsehoods and
fraud, muckraking authors can expose its obscenities with little effort
and in half the time. The book on this guy is literally on the street.
The problem, of course -- the reason George W. continues to hover in
the approval-plus column -- is that the informed, reading public dwells
in the minority. The greater number is too preoccupied with sweating
out health care coverage or getting "outsourced" to adequately appreciate
all of W's wonders. Political scribes on the left and even clear-eyed
Republican apostates such as Kevin Phillips can expose in print the president's
debasements till the cows come home, thus further invigorating an already
motivated but minority opposition, but the more important job of enlightening
the majority necessarily lies on the campaign stump and in the television
ads of the Democratic Party's chosen standard bearer.
It is in this realm that a synthesis of the party's seemingly divergent
strategies can come into play. The challenger can vent with all due anger
that after 4 years of presidential lies, the idea of commanding a White
House instilled with integrity is indeed a radically new one. With this
as the only new idea urgently needed, new and complex policy ideas could
be put aside for the time being. They're simply not what a challenger
wants as a political centerpiece anyway. Complexity is a loser. Democrats
have always had a hard time understanding that concept; but however unfortunate,
it's true. The electorate prefers hearing and tends to vote for broad
swaths of principle, not pinpoints of policy debates. Hence only one,
exquisitely simple cry should be heard from the Democratic hustings in
2004: W's very own 2000 mantra about restoring honor and integrity to
the White House. Only this time the pledge will actually mean something.
Obviously the candidate needs something to say in between repeated vows
to reinstate presidential integrity, and this is where venting anger
over recent history comes in. Here, the territory is so rich in blood-curdling
reality the candidate never need be tempted to bend the truth or stretch
it one iota. Do Americans really want a president who lies to them about
foreign policy? One who lies about environmental policy? Education? Energy?
Fiscal policy? Trade? Foreign threats? Corporate reform? Intelligence
findings? Give all the examples you want.
The script has already been written by George W. Bush. The script is
his record. The challenger just needs to read it to the public as comic
relief to the fundamental campaign theme of what W. promised 4 years
ago and delivered not -- honor and integrity. Let that be the simple,
clear message with which battle is engaged.
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