By Jennifer Rubin on 2.25.08 @ 12:08AM
Democrats are poised to put up the most liberal nominee since George McGovern.
Forget all the pundit chatter about post-partisanship, maverick
candidates, and New Media driven campaigns. The 2008 presidential
race is shaping up to be a nice old-fashioned race between a
conservative and a liberal, indeed an ultra-liberal who makes the
conservative seems more conservative with each passing day.
On the Democratic side, Barack Obama is pulling away to victory.
In perhaps her final contribution to Republican solidarity Hillary
Clinton called Obama's bluff and did the GOP a great service. By
ridiculing his empty rhetoric and messianic style of politics,
Clinton forced Obama to show his hand.
After his victory last week in Wisconsin and again at the Austin
debate, Obama revealed himself to be the most liberal candidate
since George McGovern. He is not thrilled with building a border
fence. He wants to meet with Raul Castro. He will raise taxes and
spend a boatload of money on new programs. He will exit Iraq pronto
and spend that money on domestic programs. He opposes any
restriction on partial birth abortion and thinks the District of
Columbia's total handgun ban is a "common sense" regulation.
This is no "third way" and, other than a few rhetorical
flourishes, there is no sign of "reaching across the aisle."
By comparison, John McCain is running as a conventional
conservative. He at least is interested in border security first.
He has offered a no-new-taxes position. He will stay in Iraq as
long as needed to achieve a stable, functioning state which does
not harbor terrorists. He will appoint conservative judges. He
reaffirmed his commitment to the Second Amendment by signing on to
the Congressional amicus brief to the Supreme Court urging the
District of Columbia handgun ban be struck down.
If not exactly the embodiment of Ronald Reagan, he is at least
on a par ideologically with all the Republican presidential
nominees since Reagan.
HOW DID WE ARRIVE at this very familiar political alignment? On the
Democratic side, the answer is quite simple. Just as in 1972, in
reaction to a war intensely opposed by the Party's base, the more
dovish liberal got the upper hand.
Obama was clever, attractive and verbally adept enough to
disguise his underlying philosophy in a haze of rhetoric about
"turning the page" and "change." However, it is increasingly clear
that the departure he intends to make is, in main part, one from
the Clintonian "triangulation."
There is a reason why Obama gained Ted Kennedy's endorsement: He
is the perfect messenger for an agenda Kennedy has been waiting 40
years to enact.
On the Republican side, McCain's platform of fiscal discipline
and national security evoke more Barry Goldwater than Reagan.
Although he broke with conservatives on a variety of issues from
immigration to campaign finance reform, McCain's nomination should
not disguise an underlying fact: the Republican Party remains
conservative (and unified) on big ticket items like taxes, national
security and judges. It is not surprising then that the nominee
would carry a lifetime American Conservative Union rating of over
80.
The contrast between the two men belies one of the premises of
Obama's candidacy: that Washington is full of "good ideas" waiting
to happen that are maliciously put to death by impersonal forces
("partisanship") or the ever-present evil lobbyists.
In fact, there is little agreement on what is a good idea in
Washington and the two parties still represent two strikingly
different views of public policy. Low or higher taxes, less or more
spending, more aggressive or more timid foreign policy, and less or
more activist judges. These are real differences and consequential
ones for the country.
So it should not be surprising that despite puddles of ink
spilled in the media and millions spent in campaign ads to convince
us that these candidates depart wildly from past contenders, we
face a very familiar choice.
It may not be a sea "change" in American politics, but it is
healthy to have clear choices, a robust debate on the merits and a
definitive mandate from the voters on the country's direction.
That, it seems, is what we will get.
topics:
Taxes, Foreign Policy, John McCain, Barack Obama, Abortion, Supreme Court, Iraq, Immigration