Democrats Continue to Lose
[and Lose and Lose] Moderates
Part Three of Four
By Dave Andrusko
It was just a
coincidence--or was it? Three days ago the Los Angeles Times ran
a fascinating piece chronicling the near-obliteration of
Democrats in the South, fueled by defections since the November
2 election. Monday night, POLITICO broke the news that the
Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) is closing shop.
 |
|
Al
From, retired founder of the
Democratic Leadership Council |
Long holding on
financially by its fingernails, the DLC has bit the dust. There
are as many explanations for its demise as there are observers,
but the simplest answer is probably the most accurate.
While busy marketing a
"run to the middle" makeover, President Obama is a man of the
Left. Since the 1980s the DLC has positioned itself as the
sensible middle for a party that in the era of Reagan looked
like it was headed into the abyss. But as POLITICO wrote
yesterday, Obama was "cool" to the DLC, fatal to an already
financially fragile organization in these tough times.
Speaking of the [Los
Angeles] Times, Democrats have hemorrhaged elected statehouse
officials since its already huge losses November 2. "Since the
midterm election, 24 state senators and representatives have
made the switch in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and
Texas," writes Richard Fausset. "In some cases, the
ramifications have been profound: In Louisiana, defecting
Democrats gave Republicans a majority in the state House for the
first time since Reconstruction; in Alabama, they delivered the
GOP a House supermajority. Republicans have 65 votes to the
Democrats' 39, enough to pass constitutional amendments over
Democratic opposition." When Louisiana Atty. Gen. James D.
"Buddy" Caldwell switched parties last week, the GOP was in
control of every major state office in Baton Rouge.
The explanation by Ashley
Bell , a young African American lawyer, who spoke at the 2004
Democratic National Convention in Boston was common: "I think
the midterms showed you really can't be a conservative and be a
member of the Democratic Party." Bell has jumped ship.
Merle Black is a political
science professor at Emory University in Atlanta, and the source
that reporters universally use when trying to understand
politics in the South. "Decades ago in the South, he said, 'the
issues that hurt the Democrats were issues first introduced in
national politics.' In other words, 'the increased
liberalization of the Democratic Party.'"
It is also no accident
that in explaining his party shift, Bell said he "had serious
issues with the healthcare law."
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Part Four
Part One
Part Two |