By Sean Higgins on 11.7.06 @ 12:07AM
They appeared with him last night -- Bill Clinton, Chuck Schumer, Harry Reid. And he didn't need John Kerry to be there.
ALEXANDRIA, Virginia -- "We are standing on the precipice of a
dramatic Democratic transformation in politics," said Rep. Jim
Moran (D-Va.), at an election-eve rally in northern Virginia.
Moran meant of course that he expected to see the Republicans
swept from office and his own party return to the majority in
Congress in the next 24 hours. But he could just as easily have
been referring to the amazing transformation of the man he was
introducing: Virginia Democratic Senate candidate Jim Webb.
Webb famously left the GOP to run for the Senate earlier this
year. But "former Republican" doesn't even begin to describe the
identities he left behind.
This was after all the highly lauded Vietnam vet /author who
literally wrote the book on the greatness of redneck culture. The
Navy Secretary who quit because he thought Ronald Reagan was going
soft. The gun lover who once seethed with anger over the "activist left," and
"cultural Marxists," who endorsed his current opponent, GOP Senator
George Allen, last time around, and who once said that President Bill Clinton presided over
"the most corrupt administration in modern memory."
You could go on and on...
Yet it was doubtful that many of the Democrats at Monday's rally
knew much of this, since surprisingly little of it has been an
issue in the race. What they knew was that Webb was a guy who
wanted the U.S. out of Iraq and George Allen out on his ass. And
that was good enough for them.
Webb certainly wasn't about to break the spell. He instead used
his stump speech to again hit the administration over Iraq, to
attack Karl Rove's campaign of "character assassination" against
him, and to make an appeal to old-time economic populism.
"The average corporate CEO makes $8 million a year and we
haven't raised in the minimum wage?" he thundered. "That's going to
change."
And that was it. While he can blur a hot button issue with the best of them, Webb smartly
decided he wasn't going to get into any of that on the last event
of his campaign.
He also incidentally congratulated himself on not changing any
of views during his campaign and noted that lots of people had come
up to him and thanked him for running such a clean campaign.
AS IF TO DISPEL ANY DOUBTS that he was truly one of them now, Webb
was joined on stage by literal who's who of Democratic leaders:
current Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, former Gov. Mark Warner, former
Senator Bob Kerrey, Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee
chairman Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Senate Democratic leader Harry
Reid, D-Nev., and the "rock star" of the event (Moran's words):
former President Bill Clinton.
You know he's a great speaker, but you still need to actually
see Clinton in person to realize how truly dazzling he can be. He
can cut so quickly and so smoothly you're not even aware that it
happened until the blood starts dripping.
One of his newer tactics is to make a point of how much money he
was made since leaving office thanks to his book and then complain
about getting a "tax cut for the rich" that he doesn't want.
"They're the ones waging class warfare. My class is winning, and
I don't like it," he said in that familiar, raspy voice of his. He
didn't say whether he cashed the tax refund or not though.
Interestingly, although he was urging people to elect Webb,
Clinton was too much the alpha dog to let the candidate's past
comments about him completely slide. Instead he threw a veiled barb
in Webb's direction.
"I was personally thrilled when Webb decided to run for the
Senate," he said. "After 9/11, we all had to let our personal
divisions go."
The question on your humble correspondent's mind was why they
were rallying in northern Virginia in the first place. One of the
initial rationales for Webb's campaign was that with his background
he could strike deep into the state's reddest areas and poach
Allen's votes. Instead they were closing out the race the way every
major statewide Democrat candidate does, trying to boost turnout in
the state's northern -- and most liberal -- regions.
Indeed, throughout the race Webb has mostly stuck to the
Democratic Party's standard script. It might still work, especially
this year. Polls show the race neck-and-neck and Allen ran
a campaign so cloddishly incompetent that even if he does survive
his presidential hopes are over.
If he does win, what type of senator might Webb turn out to be?
If the Republicans are lucky once Iraq is resolved he'll return to
his right-wing roots and become the next Zell Miller. If the
Democrats are lucky he'll become John Kerry 2.0: A liberal Democrat
who truly is immune to being called a wimp. Based on the campaign
he's run, option #2 seems more likely.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Iraq, NATO