OPINION

Echoes of 1996

Misunderstanding the persistence and importance of legacy America had much to do with the Democrats’ failures in 2016

The Democrats have assembled a field of candidates for 2020 as large as it is unimpressive. From slick Robert "Beto" O'Rourke, media creation Kamala Harris, and Woody Guthrie wannabe Bernie Sanders to fake folksy chameleon Joe Biden, it's amazing such a large group of candidates is so devoid of charisma, intellect, or interesting ideas.

I've loathed the Democratic Party since junior high school, but even I could recognize the common touch of Bill Clinton and the coolly disciplined demeanor of Barack Obama. Even Hillary Clinton was obviously bright, though so haughty and mechanical that she lost an election she was supposed to win.

It is telling that the best the Democrats of 2020 can come up with is retread Biden, whose 1987 run for the presidency ended in disgrace when news broke of his plagiarism. He and the rest are not exactly the stuff dreams are made of, even with demographic tailwinds that spell disaster for the Republican Party and the republic before long.

Misunderstanding the persistence and importance of legacy America had much to do with the Democrats' failures in 2016. They thought the coalition of the ascendant would take them over the finish line. They learned instead that lots of Americans were sick of being force-fed nonsense about transgenderism and being bullied about white privilege as they struggled to maintain a middle-class existence.

Most elections since 1988 have the same basic feel. The South is mostly Republican. California, Illinois, and the Northeast are Democratic. The Midwest typically swings between elections, along with the mercurial bellwether of Florida, whose people

are an amalgamation of the rest of the country.

Clinton won in 1992 by being a popular moderate Southern governor. The addition of Ross Perot and a modest recession combined to keep the prize from the incumbent, George H.W. Bush. The elder Bush also had the demerit of being seen as a fair-weather friend to "movement conservatives," who dominated the Republican Party after Reagan.

From 1992 to 1996, the white-hot passion with which Republicans loathed Clinton cannot be overstated. His style, support for abortion and gun control, uneasy approach to the military, and push for national health care made him unpopular with ideological conservatives and Republicans.

With the demise of the Soviet threat--a common enemy for all conservatives--Clinton became the substitute bogeyman. He was cast as an extreme liberal, which appears exaggerated in retrospect. He was merely a moderate, hated as much for who he was and his style as for any of his policies.

The Republican Party of the 1990s, like the Democrats of today, had a problem. Although the party was united in opposition to Clinton, it was divided internally between the establishment and its own far right, exemplified by Pat Buchanan.

George H.W. Bush was no Ronald Reagan, and Buchanan challenged Bush in the 1992 Republican primary and pioneered a nationalist vision for the post-cold-war GOP. Buchanan was critical of Israel, free trade, mass immigration, and interventionism, and addressed other issues that make up the "national question."

He was ahead of his time. Most of the effects of mass immigration and globalization would only be felt more fully in the future, and small government, pro-business, and low-tax views remained the consensus view among Republican voters.

In 1996, Buchanan at first represented a formidable force. He won the New Hampshire primary and scared the Republican establishment. It had several possible candidates to choose from, including Lamar Alexander, Steve Forbes, and Richard Lugar. But Bob Dole, a longtime U.S. senator from Kansas and previous presidential contender in 1988, had everything the establishment wanted: experience, predictability, and, it was thought, electability.

Dole was a mainstream Republican with a distinguished war record, a long career in the Senate, and many friends and allies. He eventually became the nominee, and lost miserably to Bill Clinton.

Clinton won because he did not do a bad job his first term. After 1992, the economy emerged from the recession and shifted into high gear during the dot-com boom. He ended the pointless Somalia intervention and dragged his feet on getting involved in the Bosnian quagmire.

While the military shrunk with the reduction of our Cold War commitments, the modest tax hikes of Clinton's first term led to balanced budgets and eventually a government surplus. Employment went up, and many of the concerns of the era--tax rates, Monica Lewinsky, and welfare reform--seem picayune compared to today's threats of Islamic terrorism, the hollowing out of American industry, or illegal immigrants pouring over our Mexican border.

Clinton carried more Southern states than is typical for a Democrat--along with his native Arkansas, he won Tennessee, Louisiana, and Florida--but also took the midwestern battlegrounds of Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, and Iowa. These states are moderate and practical, defined as much by their largely German American population and concern for order and efficient government than the more libertarian tendencies of the Deep South and the Mountain West. These folks are not especially ideological or consistent in their voting patterns. They are the quintessential swing districts.

The objective facts favor Donald Trump's re-election for many of the same reasons Clinton was a favorite in 1996. The economy is doing well, and his tax cuts and regulatory reforms appear to be at least part of the reason.

He has not delivered on his main campaign promises, but appears to his supporters to be trying, even in the face of bipartisan resistance. His deviations from promises appear aligned with, rather than opposing, public opinion.

Also, Trump defeated ISIS' caliphate in Syria, but has so far avoided calls for getting involved in another Middle Eastern war. Even Obama could not avoid this temptation, in spite of running as the "peace candidate" in 2008.

Everything feels normal, prosperous, and predictable.

The gap between the Democratic Party's hatred of Trump and his results mirrors the chasm between the Republican Party's Clinton hatred and the modest evils of Clinton's first term as president. Then as now, there is outrage fatigue among ordinary Americans, who are not nearly as partisan or engaged as the political press, volunteers, and donors who follow politics like a sport.

More importantly, by combining this background of ideological fervor and a ho-hum candidate, Dole failed to excite the base, even as Republican rhetoric alienated those in the middle and within the Democratic Party.

The Democrats seem to be undertaking a similar strategy, coalescing around Joe Biden.

Obama's vice president is avuncular and superficially moderate, having slowly followed his party as it moved further leftward while maintaining a connection to the Democratic Party's past. He comes from working-class roots and makes much of his connection to middle America.

The modern Democratic Party is radically different from that of yesteryear. It underwent a shift to more identity politics, reflecting both the leadership of Obama and the party's increasingly diverse voter base. But Biden's status as a frontrunner demonstrates a combination of realism by Democratic primary voters arising from their desire to defeat Trump at all costs, as well as his exploitation of the divisions among the others.

The alternatives each only capture a portion of the party's primary electorate. Sanders gets the alienated anti-corporate left, Harris presumably garners a strong swath of diversity voters, and O'Rourke appeals to the romantic spirit of Obama's 2008 "hope and change" campaign.

Elizabeth Warren has been flummoxed with regard to her Indian heritage, even though she otherwise would have been a compelling voice for economic populism. So if Biden wins the nomination, he will do it for reasons similar to the ones that led Republicans to unify around Dole.

Biden would be a familiar, older, predictable figure in a party unified in its hatred of the Republican president but strongly disunified on ideology and much else. He would face an objectively similar presidential legacy. The economy is doing well, and no new wars are underway. Clinton won by saying, bluntly, "It's the economy, stupid." Its fortunes are attributed to the president, as irrational as this may be.

Biden's attack on Trump will focus chiefly on his character and demeanor, his style, and scandals familiar to partisans, just as Republicans obsessed over Slick Willie and his Whitewater and travel office imbroglios. Republicans deemed Clinton the apotheosis of baby-boomer self-absorption, but his record was not bad by any objective measure.

Biden also has to fashion a positive policy message now that the failing Iraq War or the media-generated romanticism about Obama can no longer can be the centerpiece of Democratic campaigns. This will be a problem, as the Democrats' redistributionist message thrives on economic anxiety.

But Trump's hybrid policies--standard Republican approaches to taxes and regulations coupled with aggressive negotiating with trading partners--appear to be working.

Criticism by Biden of Trump's immigration and border policies would also alienate middle-of-the-road voters in both parties. Even Trump's tariffs would prove a wedge issue, as they are pro-worker and were once a popular Democratic issue, particularly among the party's working-class voters in the industrial swing states of the Midwest. Tariffs also have garnered respect among Republicans, who are increasingly aware of the national defense aspects of our trade conflict with China.

Further, no Democratic policy agenda can easily unify the identity and economic factions of the Democrats, while simultaneously appealing to the woke capitalism of Silicon Valley and Wall Street while also appealing to moderate swing voters in Ohio, Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Florida.

The Democratic coalition is full of ideological diehards who may stay at home when too much is done to appeal to opposing factions within that coalition. There is inherent tension between urban career women, destitute welfare cases, ethnic chauvinists, and cozy government workers, and whatever unites them may prove too much for the fringes and swing voters to bear.

Clinton touted his economic achievements and the absence of foreign policy failures in his 1996 re-election campaign. In so doing, he could appeal to objective facts. Dole and other Republicans could only invoke highly abstract ideological arguments against him or appeal to some risk of a future economic or national security disaster.

Dole had the benefit of being familiar and well liked within his party. But like Dole, Biden also has the demerit of not appearing to stand for anything in particular and failing to inspire his party's ideological fringes. Biden's message, like Dole's in 1996, seems to be that it's his time and that he can win.

A safe candidate appears to make sense. But, for the same reasons, it also makes sense for voters to retain an incumbent when the country objectively is better off than ever before.

Editorial on 06/23/2019

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