By John Tabin on 2.1.06 @ 1:49AM
The President won big when Democrats sat on their little hands last night.
As State of the Union addresses go, last night's was pretty
good. Anchored by the ever-important restatement of the President's
bold foreign policy vision, the speech made the apparently
inevitable devolution into a domestic policy laundry list with
relative grace: Just as the foreign policy section pitted tough
engagement with the world against an isolationist foreign policy,
the economic policy section pitted "keeping America competitive"
against an isolationist economic policy. (Whether or not
isolationism really describes the dominant challenges to Bush's
policies is certainly open to debate; my point here is simply the
rhetorical elegance of the construction.) But the real political
strength of the speech was in how it forced the worst stereotypes
of the Democratic Party into the foreground by virtue of the
opposition's reactions.
Take the passage where the President threw down the gauntlet on
the NSA spying issue:
It is said that prior to the attacks of September 11th,
our government failed to connect the dots of the conspiracy. We now
know that two of the hijackers in the United States placed
telephone calls to al-Qaeda operatives overseas. But we did not
know about their plans until it was too late. So to prevent another
attack -- based on authority given to me by the Constitution and by
statute -- I have authorized a terrorist surveillance program to
aggressively pursue the international communications of suspected
al-Qaeda operatives and affiliates to and from America. Previous
presidents have used the same constitutional authority I have --
and Federal courts have approved the use of that authority.
Appropriate Members of Congress have been kept informed. This
terrorist surveillance program has helped prevent terrorist
attacks. It remains essential to the security of America. If there
are people inside our country who are talking with al-Qaeda, we
want to know about it -- because we will not sit back and wait to
be hit again.
The Republican half of the chamber rose in standing ovation.
What did the Democratic half of the chamber do? Stayed seated, with
Hillary Clinton shaking her head and smiling. Democrats are intent
on framing this issue as a case of Bush breaking the law to spy on
Americans. (Liberal writers routinely state flatly that the program
was illegal, as if this were a simple fact rather than a deduction
from speculation about how the program actually worked.) Democrats
very much do not want to be seen as arguing against
fighting al-Qaeda. Yet here they were, appearing to side against
the notion that we want to know about al-Qaeda's
communications.
There were other moments in the national security section of the
speech when Democrats stayed seated at politically inopportune
times, but the most striking moment of the speech was when they
simply handed the President a gift. Consider Bush's lines about
Social Security:
Congress did not act last year on my proposal to save
Social Security, yet the rising cost of entitlements is a problem
that is not going away -- and with every year we fail to act, the
situation gets worse. So tonight, I ask you to join me in creating
a commission to examine the full impact of Baby Boom retirements on
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
This commission should include Members of Congress of both
parties, and offer bipartisan answers. We need to put aside
partisan politics, work together, and get this problem solved.
On paper, this is a retreat: a tepid non-policy has replaced the
ambitious ideas laid out at last year's address. But the Democrats
clapped and hooted as soon as Bush said "Congress did not act last
year on my proposal to save Social Security," giving Bush an
opening to turn his bromide into a scathing attack: When he said
"partisan politics," he had a visual aid to point to.
Suddenly it was as if Bush said "we mustn't act like clowns,"
and the entire Democratic caucus had shown up in multicolor wigs
and greasepaint.
Though not in much danger of losing either chamber of Congress
this November, the GOP is playing defense this year against the
very real prospect of a diminished majority, and many congressmen
are reluctant to bring anything big and controversial into their
electoral fights this year.
There's no denying that the relatively small-bore agenda that
the President laid out last night was a sign of political weakness.
But if the scene in the Capitol was any indication, Republicans do
still have one thing going for them: They'll be running against
Democrats.
John
Tabin is a frequent online contributor to The American
Spectator and AmSpecBlog.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, Entitlements, Social Security, Medicaid, Constitution, Law, Medicare