By Jeffrey Lord on 8.15.07 @ 12:10AM
Furious at Karl Rove's smarts, Democrats ignore their own history.
His name was Louis McHenry Howe, and he was Franklin D.
Roosevelt's Karl Rove.
Running through the various intemperate and seething remarks
from liberal outposts at the departure of White House Deputy Chief
of Staff Karl Rove was a common theme. Rove, spluttered the Washington Post, was
guilty of "working the anger points…that
deepened the country's polarization…"
My, my.
Return with me now to those transformative days of the 1930s as
the Democratic Party and the fortunes of Franklin D. Roosevelt were
on the rise. For 72 years, Democrats had not fared well in
elections against Abraham Lincoln and his political heirs. Of the
18 elections from 1860 to 1928, Democrats had won but four. By
1932, the Great Depression, the supreme crisis of the day, was at
hand. It rendered the re-election of President Herbert Hoover an
impossibility, and gave FDR and Howe at long last not just the keys
to the White House but the potential to set up a decades long
dominance of American politics by the Democratic Party.
That FDR did so is historical fact. But how he, his top aide and
their Democratic successors managed this feat is worth remembering
as the much-maligned Mr. Rove makes his own departure from the
White House.
Louis Howe had been at Franklin Roosevelt's side since 1910 when
FDR was first elected to the New York State Senate. Believing at
once that Roosevelt was a future president of the United States,
Howe, a sickly, small reporter who was frequently referred to as
"gnomish," devoted his life to the task of making FDR president --
and making America a Democrat-majority country. Under his tutelage,
FDR learned to, well, work the anger points. And he did it with
gusto not only while Howe was alive and at his side but well after
Howe's 1936 passing.
Republicans were relentlessly portrayed as "economic royalists"
and "privileged princes of economic dynasties" who wished to impose
upon their fellow Americans an "industrial dictatorship." Bluntly
playing the class warfare card and openly appealing to envy, Howe
saw to it that his candidate learned to toss off casual
characterizations of his opponents as " a small group (who) had
concentrated into their own hands an almost complete control over
other people's property…" The answer to all of
this dastardly behavior by those nasty Republicans was to not just
elect and re-elect (and re-elect and re-elect) FDR and his
Democratic compatriots but to slowly get Americans to OK the
transfer of their rights wholesale into the hands of the federal
government. A federal government run, of course, by Democrats
intent on making that government bigger and bigger and bigger
still.
Republicans rebelled at this portrayal to little or no avail.
Fully aware that FDR's New Deal was dependent in part on the
support of die-hard Southern segregationists (FDR refused even to
support an anti-lynching bill for fear of angering his supporters),
they were taught an immutable lesson in just how Democrats played
hardball politics.
For decades a portrait of Republicans as callous, cold-hearted,
and mean spirited was painted as if by rote by Howe's prize pupil
and his political descendants. Objections drew this response from
FDR: "They are unanimous in their hatred for me -- and I welcome
their hatred."
None of this history makes the news these days of course. As
Grover Norquist, the head of the Americans for Tax Reform
accurately noted yesterday in the Post, foaming
liberals are vested in calling Karl Rove names (and before him it
was the late Republican National Chairman Lee Atwater followed by
House Speaker Newt Gingrich) while insisting that his political
victories are "divisive." The implication, of course, is that
Democratic politics are some version of, as Norquist notes,
"Kumbaya."
Louis McHenry Howe was many things. Brilliant, passionately
loyal, the premiere political aide of his day, he was Franklin D.
Roosevelt's man and a liberal Democrat to his core. He most
decidedly did not believe in the politics of "Kumbaya." The idea
that he was being "divisive" would have undoubtedly brought a
gasping smile from a man famous for his asthma. If there is in fact
such a thing as "working the anger points," it is Louis Howe who
gets the credit for transforming American politics in this fashion
-- not Karl Rove. FDR's fabled young protege, Congressman Lyndon
Johnson, took note of how the master worked his magic. And with the
help of his own White House aide Bill Moyers saw to it that his
1964 opponent, Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater, was dutifully
painted as a racist war monger, an unstable cowboy who was only too
eager to drop nuclear weapons. In 1972 it was George McGovern's
turn, comparing President Richard Nixon to Hitler.
So what lesson have conservatives learned from Louis Howe and
his Democratic Party descendants? After being beaten repeatedly for
decades because of a refusal to draw the political line in the
sand, conservatives learned to stop trying to be the party of what
Ronald Reagan once called "pale pastels." Most importantly, they
ceased to campaign as if they were running for president of the
local country club. They reached out to the natural majority of the
center-right that is in fact the political governing majority of
America, making plain what the differences were between liberal and
conservative philosophy on issues ranging from war and peace to
taxes, spending, guns and the social issues.
And they learned something else, too. As a former colleague of
the late Lee Atwater, it always amazed me how so many liberals
failed to recognize that Atwater was not only a skilled politician,
but extraordinarily well-read. He knew his history, feeling as
comfortable discussing his latest visit to a World Wrestling
Federation event as he did ruminating about the politics of South
Carolina's John C. Calhoun. Quite obviously, today's smug liberals
have made the same mistake with Karl Rove. You really have to
wonder if they know anything at all about Louis McHenry Howe and
his transformation of the Democratic Party.
Now that Karl Rove has some time on his hands, maybe they can
ask him.
Jeffrey Lord is the creator, co-founder and CEO of
QubeTV, a conservative online video site. A former Reagan White
House political director and author, he writes from
Pennsylvania.
topics:
Taxes, NATO, Nuclear Weapons