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Demagoguing
to distraction? Not so fast
by
P.M. Carpenter
George W Bush had barely finished endorsing a constitutional ban on
gay marriage before pundits, left and right, began hailing the gambit
as brilliant. Not only would W’s handiwork shore up his slipping base,
it would attract socially conservative Democrats, woo likeminded independents,
and regenerate a stumbling and besieged reelection campaign. At long
last, Mr. Bush’s Machiavellian machine was up, running, and firing on
all cylinders. That’s what the pundits said. But the pundits are wrong. Rather than
a brilliant political ploy, the White House’s constitutional gimmickry
served only to deepen its political troubles and spotlight its variously
self-imposed predicaments.
For starters, W’s show of moral strength was, in actuality, a sign of
weakness. In response to widespread and gut-wrenching worries about vanishing
American jobs -- the electorate’s number one concern, as shown in poll
after poll -- Bush-Cheney’s opening volley was to shout "Boo!" to the
already culturally frantic. Other than its tired mantra and failed panacea
of more and more tax cuts, the White House hasn’t a clue on what to say
about joblessness. Its amendment advocacy merely emphasized that.
The White House is, of course, content to let jobs sail overseas, but
it can’t really say that (though it did, ever so briefly). So the best
it can do is lecture Americans in classic Hoover-speak to be patient
and hope things improve. That, and give His Rotund Pomposity, the Rev.
Jerry Falwell, a pat on the butt as a political distraction.
It won’t work. Democratic candidates have grabbed the jobs initiative,
and with it, the voters’ attention, which is properly fixed as well on
the unalleviated crises of shrinking health care coverage, underfunded
education, daily carnage in Iraq and unconscionable deficits. Oh, and
then there is Alan Greenspan’s suggestion that the indigent elderly should
start doing more for the boys down at the yacht basin.
Demagoguing the same-sex-marriage bugaboo to the Falwell crowd -- a surly
bunch whose real frustration in life, one suspects, stems from lame-sex
marriage -- won’t distract working Americans from their real problems
for long.
What’s
more, 43’s cultural kriegspiel is little more than warmed-over-41-redux-déjà vu
all over again. In 1992 Papa Bush tried to placate the right and distract
other social conservatives from noticing a sickly economy by playing
a similar cultural-values game. The light emanating from the bomb that
it was only illuminated Republican intolerance, not valid social concerns.
Most Americans voted their pocketbook then, and there’s little political-demographic
data showing they’ll do any other now. In fact, one pollster told the
New York Times that research "suggests that voters are extremely cynical
about the president’s motives [regarding same-sex marriage]." It’s the
economy. The economy, ok?
Other voters -- heretofore Bush supporters -- are more than just cynical.
They’re history. Influential (and gay) columnist Andrew Sullivan, for
one, has expressed outrage at Bush’s tactical wedge and now vehemently
opposes the president’s reelection. And Log Cabin Republicans, who claim
one million gays voted Bush’s way in 2000, say their 2004 votes are at
risk. What the White House gains from one group, it loses in others.
Last, most Americans simply dislike social engineering and especially
dislike using the U.S. constitution as a tool to accomplish it. The constitution
may be a living document, but it’s not a day-by-day work in progress
for cynical politicians to abuse as an opportunistic prop. (Well, Republicans
don’t mind. A National Annenberg Election Survey shows them favoring
an amendment by 57 to 35 percent, while Democrats and Independents are
opposed 57 to 34 and 52 to 37 percent, respectively.)
Despite what pundits have trumpeted with near unanimity, Bush’s call
for constitutionally banning gay marriage was anything but brilliant.
Quite the contrary. Post-election analysis will show it to have been
a shortsighted, desperate, futile and -- above all -- self-defeating act.
That's my prediction. Then again, I also predicted Dick Gephardt would
win the Iowa caucuses.
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