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The Triangulation of Hope

Barack Obama's vague campaign of Hope and Change has created contradictory expectations for his administration. Rasmussen Reports found that 61 percent of Republican voters expect their taxes will go up, compared to just 17 percent of Democrats. While 39 percent of white voters expect to pay higher taxes under Obama, 39 percent of blacks say they'll pay lower taxes.

Obama's repeated promise that 95 percent of Americans will receive tax cuts -- at the expense of the richest 5 percent -- created an unusual perception: A tax-cutter who's also a redistributionist. If he fails to keep that promise, Republicans will batter him as a liar. If he keeps the promise, however, Obama will add to a budget deficit already swollen by $1.1 trillion in bailouts (with perhaps more bailouts to come). And Obama's budget math won't benefit from any Laffer-curve effect, since his neo-Keynesian formula is the exact opposite of the reductions of top marginal rates favored by supply-siders.

Karl Rove noted today that the self-reported ideological affliation of the electorate remains unchanged from 2004 --  34% say they're conservative, 21% liberal and 45% moderate. Nonetheless, they elected as president the most liberal member of the Senate, with Obama getting the votes of 20% of self-described "conservatives" and 60% of "moderates."

What does this mean? It means that two decades of rhetorical fudging and policy incoherence have obscured the meaning of our political lexicon. George Bush the elder promised a "kinder, gentler" conservatism, raised taxes and signed onto a minimum-wage increase. Bill Clinton cleverly (and duplicitously) "triangulated," promising a middle-class tax cut he never delivered, vetoing welfare-reform twice before signing it, taking credit for a balanced budget that was mostly the result of a reduced military and Republican opposition to his spending proposals. The "compassionate conservatism" of George W. Bush has introduced still more confusion. In what sense are the No Child Left Behind Act and Medicare Part D "conservative" policies?

Considering that the Republican 2008 candidate, John McCain, had opposed tax cuts, collaborated with Russ Feingold on campaign finance regulation that helped Democrats achieve a decisive fundraising advantage, and collaborated with Ted Kennedy on an amnesty bill that infuriated conservative voters, it isn't hard to see why Obama so easily veiled his liberalism behind vague platitudes.

Philip Klein's report from today's gathering of the conservative movement's senior leadership indicates that these leaders understand how Republicans have squandered the ideological clarity of the Reagan era. Obama has succeeded by inspiring unrealistic notions of what he (or any president) can accomplish. Mixed messages from Republicans made it easier for Obama to convince Americans that he is a moderate -- what does "moderate" mean, if "conservative" has lost its meaning?

Beginning Jan. 20, Obama must stop promising and start delivering, and with his army of online "progressive" activists demanding that he and the Democratic Congress enact liberal policies, what he aims to deliver won't be easily mistaken as "conservative." Republicans have triangulated themselves into the wilderness, and they'll stay there a long time, if they support Obama's agenda.

Comments

Captain America| 11.6.08 @ 10:32PM

The strangulation of the dopes

M. Tobias| 11.7.08 @ 12:22AM

Most false prophets are eventually hauled down by their most ardent supporters, when they fail to meet the expectations of the masses. This could very well happen here. Unfortunately, it will take twenty years to correct the damage. If it can be corrected.

Craig Goodrich| 11.7.08 @ 6:11AM

Part of the difficulty is that conservative policies, being fact-based, take a while to explain. Liberal policies, being based on feelings and dreams, do not -- in fact, they don't withstand explanation.

But neither a description of the role of marriage in human society nor an exposition of the importance of distributed knowledge in the free market fits on a bumper sticker; "Ouch!" does. This is a problem conservatives will once again have to address -- as RR did.

J David| 11.7.08 @ 8:11AM

It is now time for the RINO Party to stop "rising above ideology", and stop the surrender monkey *bi-partisanship*, and the politeness toward America-loathers; to re-educate the masses to the imminent dangers of communism, and disavow the political pragmatists.

tony| 11.8.08 @ 8:51AM

Anyone who has listened to Rush 0ver the years would have seen this coming from a mile away when McCain was nominated. Republicans running as conservatives win, whereas republicans running as moderates lose.
We need to clean up our primary process so we as a party and as conservatives control the selection of our nominee.

WendyG| 11.8.08 @ 10:10AM

So what did Obama do with all the goodwill and "hope" he generated? He held a 7 question press conference during which time he managed to insult the wife of Ronald Reagan, who is a sick old lady now. He was of course immediately forced to apologize. Hey, stay classy Obama! :)

It's safe to say the bloom is now very much off the rose. And it didn't take long.

Kevin| 11.9.08 @ 9:31AM

When I call McCain a moderate my friends call me a liar. When I say Obama is far left they call me a liar. When I say Bush and McCain are fiscal liberals they continue with their broken record. They know that Obama is the moderate and Bush and McCain are so far right that they can't even see the center. No wonder my friends don't see me, I can barely see McCain he's so far to my left.

When I was young I liked the wording of compassionate conservatism until I realized what it stood for. Someone who believes in god, country, and welfare.

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