By W. James Antle, III on 8.26.08 @ 3:21AM
Ted Kennedy passes the torch. But can liberalism return to Camelot?
DENVER -- Ted Kennedy's speech to the Democratic National
Convention, complete with an introduction by Caroline Kennedy and a
tribute video by Ken Burns, may as well have been called the
liberal lion in winter. Except in this version, there is little
doubt as to who he wants to inherit the throne: Barack Obama.
After hours of rumor and will-he-or-won't he speculation,
Kennedy walked slowly to the podium to drape the 2008 Democratic
nominee in the mantle of Camelot. The point was twofold. The first
part of his message was aimed squarely at the liberal base,
reminding Hillary Clinton dead-enders in the audience whose legacy
they would be letting down if Obama lost the election. The second
was intended to restore liberalism to its lost glory, when it was
at its moral apogee and perceived as the politics of the common
man.
There is no question that Kennedy's appeal to rank-and-file
Democrats was a smashing success. An audience that could barely be
bothered to listen to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, much less the
procession of nobodies who opened the proceedings, sat with rapt
attention throughout the Kennedy salute and exploded with cheers
when the senior senator from Massachusetts himself spoke. People
waved blue-and-white Kennedy signs as if he were the presidential
candidate.
Hardly an eye in my section was dry as Kennedy recalled the
legacy of his slain brothers John and Bobby. "And this November the
torch will be passed again to a new generation of Americans," he
vowed. The main bearer of that torch would be Barack Obama,
fulfilling his brothers' aspirations for America.
Kennedy was reciting a creed in which millions believe, in which
presidents FDR, JFK, and LBJ can deliver us from poverty, and
government can give the masses meaning and money. When Uncle Teddy
once again roared that universal health is a fundamental right
rather than a personal privilege, the crowd nodded and cheered. A
young woman in an Obama t-shirt rubbed the back of a woman old
enough to remember the Kennedy administration. Middle-aged men
dabbed their eyes.
For the assembled, Kennedy's "new hope" is the liberal shining
city on a hill. But it is also a throwback to the time when the
Democrats were America's party and liberalism was more often
associated with God, family and country instead of acid, amnesty,
and abortion. Adherents of what James Burnham would call the
"ideology of Western suicide" once defeated Hitler and resisted
communism.
"But we have never lost our belief that we are all called to a
better country and a newer world," said Kennedy. Similar sentiments
were later echoed by Michelle Obama, when she said striving "for
the world as it should be" is "the great American story." While
these are fundamentally liberal pronouncements, they are closer to
the closing lines of Ronald Reagan's first inaugural than Jimmy
Carter's malaise and self-doubt: "And why shouldn't we believe
that? We're Americans."
There was always a contradiction between this can-do spirit and
the notion that average Americans could not get a fair shake
without powerful Ted Kennedys fighting on their behalf, one that
grew more obvious with each new failure by a government program.
But when liberalism traveled from Selma to San Francisco, when it
went from appealing to American ideals to being seen as blaming
America first, it predictably lost the country.
Can liberalism go home again? It is doubtful. Even Kennedy's
rousing call for a united "America of high principle and bold
endeavor" seems to exclude those who take seriously his own
church's teachings on social issues. Obama's 2004 Democratic
National Convention speech was inspiring and unfailingly patriotic,
yet four years later many of his countrymen don't feel he shares
their values.
Ted Kennedy has always been a symbol of the highs and lows of
American liberalism, from civil rights to quotas, from decency to
decadence and depravity, from Camelot to the counterculture and
Chappaquiddick. As the ailing Democratic icon enters the final
phase of his long career, he says he seeks "not merely victory for
our party, but renewal for our nation." To pass the torch
successfully will also require the restoration of an older
liberalism, if that is still possible.
topics:
Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, Hillary Clinton, Abortion, NATO, Communism