By Philip Klein on 11.28.06 @ 10:31AM
E.J. Dionne is out today with a predictable column arguing that the GOP needs to find its center. He opens with this:
That was Richard M. Nixon, about a week after Barry Goldwater's
landslide defeat at the hands of Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964.
Dionne argues:
The flight from a solution-oriented politics designed to deal
with the pressures on working-class and middle-class families had
the final effect of driving many of the one-time Reagan Democrats,
the "security moms'' and disaffected men over to the Democrats, who
enjoyed strong gains in the large swath of households in the
$30,000 to $100,000 annual income range.
Dionne ends the piece by arguing that the GOP should learn from Bill Clinton, but the party has been triangulating for six years, and it has nothing to show for it. If anything, Dionne's own column demonstrates that it's futile for the GOP to embrace big government solutions to the nation's problems--because no matter what the party does to "moderate," liberals will never like them.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Conservatism, Medicare
Philip Klein is The American Spectator's Washington correspondent. You can follow him on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/Philipaklein
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