Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Opinion

Can a 1960s-Style Liberal Like Obama Win?

May 16, 2008 01:46 PM ET | Bonnie Erbe | Permanent Link | Print

This week in politics, the House rejected an Iraq (and Afghanistan) war funding bill, the two remaining contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination sparked a dust-up over an endorsement from the nation's pre-eminent pro-choice lobbying group, and a Democrat picked up the last of three once reliably Republican House seats that were contested this year's special elections.

All that, and California's Supreme Court stamped a big "OK" on the right to gay marriage. Are we back in the 1960s, or am I having a flashback? Is the American public moving left, and, if so, does that boost election chances for almost-nominee and extremely liberal Sen. Barack Obama to win the White House in November?

Not so fast. Let's examine each of the above-mentioned phenomena individually before jumping to any rash conclusions. Yes, liberal politics ruled supreme in the late '60s and early '70s with gains in women's rights, civil rights and environmental protections. But America remains a conservative, God-fearing nation, and that hasn't changed, no matter how much difference one president makes.

In the House, the victory for antiwar Democrats was more procedural than substantive, according to the Los Angeles Times:

The funding portion of the bill failed in the House because Republicans were angry that Democrats wrote the bill without GOP input, bypassing the Appropriations Committee and putting the $184-billion measure on the House floor without giving GOP lawmakers much time to read it.

The NARAL Pro-Choice America endorsement of Obama riled feminist activists who wanted the group to endorse Sen. Hillary Clinton or stay mum.

But that doesn't address the larger question of whether pro-choice groups have regained the political muscle they used to wield. As recently as 2004, congressional Democrats ran like lemmings from abortion rights.

Which leads me to those three recent Democratic special election victories. Democrats in Louisiana, Illinois, and Mississippi won reliably Republican House seats, throwing the GOP into a frenzy over its prospects for the fall. But the victor in Mississippi, Travis Childers, veers right on social issues and avoids typical Democratic liberal social stances. As the AP reported:

Childers has spoken against abortion and for gun owners' rights—positions that are nearly identical to his opponent's.

The other Southern Democratic victor also adopted a socially conservative mantra. From Politico:

Cazayoux portrayed himself as a culturally conservative candidate in the Republican-minded district, citing his opposition to abortion rights and gun control measures and tough talk on border security.

Lastly, on gay marriage, opponents promise to run an antigay-marriage referendum on the November ballot that could overturn the court victory.

What does all this say about Obama's chance to move to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in early '09? At this point, I would answer:

"Unknown." The voting public clearly is disgusted with President Bush's leadership. Polls show more than 80 percent of Americans believe the country is on the "wrong track."

Just as clearly, presumptive Republican nominee John McCain has "a lot of 'splainin' to do," to borrow the words of "I Love Lucy" star Desi Arnaz. McCain has angered Christian conservatives, fiscal conservatives, and many in between.

But wait until the public views Republican campaign ads highlighting Obama's '60s-style liberalism. Obama was named the most liberal member of the Senate by nationaljournal.com and is way to the left of the American mainstream on almost every social issue. In Mississippi, GOP attempts to link Childers to Obama and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi backfired. But those same attempts might not backfire nationally. It's a cliché, but it's true in this case: Only time will tell whether Obama can win the White House with a '60s-style liberal social record.

Tags: civil rights | Democrats | presidential election 2008 | Barack Obama

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Reader Comments

Obama vs McCain

A longtime registered Democrat, I am distressed about the alternatives. I cannot stand the possibility of another 4 years of Republican rule.At the same time I am convinced that Obama is not only inexperienced, but unelectable.The Republican machinery will make mincemeat of his association with Wright, his lack of respect for the Flag, his lack of a goverment program, his voting record in the Senate, his inexperience in Foreign Politics.

Obama is ... a Rorshach test

Obama has no experience and so people see what they want in him. He's a big blank slate. He's not a JFK. JFK was in Congress for 12 or so years, not to mention the military. If you look at what Obama's done and not said, you don't have much to look at. He's clearly interested in helping the poor, as he spent a lot of time as a community organizer. His experience with what the middle class wants is ... lacking. Energy, foreign policy, trade, business, jobs? Everything he talks about is boilerplate, standard, run of the mill. He hasn't said anything unusual. There are no wow moments. I don't know that Clinton or McCain are well rounded either, but Obama is not the political messiah everyone has turned him into.

A new politics....right

Keep repeating the manta, "Its a new politics", "It's a new politics", "It a new politics" Maybe, since Obama is leaving behind a huge segment of the American voting public I wouldn't be so sure. It is a proven fact that voters do not always vote in their best interest. Most people in America will not delve deeply into the issues and for certain Obama will be portrayed as a very liberal candidate by the opposition. He will be fighting racism since we are not yet a trans-racial nation. What decides the election will probably be perception rather than reality so the chances of Obama being tagged in the minds of voters as too liberal is very real. The well educated Obama supporters can harp all they wish about the stupid, ignorant average Joe but there sure are a lot them who will vote. The idea that Obama can get elected without strong support from traditional Democrats is I think risky. Making up potentially large loses with the base through new registrations and students may be dreaming. Carp if you will about whether or not Obama is a 60's style liberal or a new 21st century liberal he is still a liberal and liberals have a difficult time getting elected. Running closer to the center is a far safer bet and is where McCain will attempt to position himself. The salient point is that it is too early to have any feel for who will win this election. I remember all too well thinking how could the American people possible reelect Bush in 2004. Got that one way wrong.

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About Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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