The Republican Kerry
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Democrats focus on the Tea Party movement because it represents a kind of wish fulfillment. Conservatives delighted in the ideological exuberance of Howard Dean’s progressive youth, and they were unprepared for Barack Obama’s slickly post-ideological campaign that drew on the left’s energy while running a disciplined centrist campaign. We’ll see if history repeats itself. Like a lot of people, my gut tells me that Sarah Palin or perhaps Mike Huckabee will be the Howard Dean of 2012. Of course, that would suggest that the Republican nominee in 2012 will be the right’s answer to John Kerry, which is a prospect too disturbing to contemplate for very long.
It might be amusing to speculate on who would be the Republican Kerry of 2012, and I think Romney has to be the leading contender for that special dishonor, but missing here is an acknowledgment of what made Dean into the candidate of progressive activists and the netroots and what made Kerry the drab establishment candidate favored by party insiders. Dean tapped into the strong antiwar sentiment of Democratic rank-and-file, and it was opposition to the war, not his original signature issue of health care reform, that defined Dean’s candidacy in is exciting early phase and its dramatic flame-out phase. After all, Dean may have been coming from Vermont, but he was centrist not only by Vermont standards but also by national Democratic standards. He was an unlikely leader of progressive protest, but he exploited the establishment candidates’ initial support for the war to drive a wedge between them and the party’s activists. When the race began, he would probably have been seen as being slightly to the right of Kerry on domestic issues, but his positioning on the war ended up identifying him with the party’s left.
The split between Obama and Clinton was similar to the split between Dean and Kerry, but a crucial difference was that Obama had built up his own organization alongside of the netroots and activist groups and was able to match and outperform Clinton on the ground, especially in all those caucus states she took for granted. Dean relied so much on the netroots and activists that when it came time to get his voters to turn out that he simply didn’t have the campaign infrastructure to translate tremendous fundraising and media coverage into votes. In this and other respects, Ron Paul’s campaign in 2008 was already the right’s answer to Howard Dean, and McCain was in many respects the Kerry of last year.
What the war was for Democrats in 2004, health care legislation and bailouts will be for the Republicans in 2012. Romney fits the Kerry mold perfectly, and like Kerry he will be forced by the strength of the primary challenge from some Dean-like representative of the “Republican wing of the Republican Party” to run away from his record on health care and bailouts. In fact, Romney has already been trying to make people forget that he favored the bailouts when it mattered, and no doubt he will engage in some of his typical dishonesty when confronted with the question of his record of support for health care mandates. Like Kerry, he will have zero credibility in opposing most of the President’s agenda, which means that Romney’s already fairly strange focus on foreign policy and national security may have to become the centerpiece of his campaign to distract attention from his record of signing off on universal health care in Massachusetts and endorsing deeply unpopular bailouts of Wall Street. For all of the ridicule he received, Kerry nearly won, but I doubt that Romney would be able to do as well as Kerry did unless economic conditions worsen severely.
Filed under: politics



Amazing that you can remember all of this. Nice work.
I know this is mainly about the nomination, but I couldn’t resist linking South Park’s spot-on analysis of the ‘04 general election. NSFW.
Very nice piece of analysis.
I think you’re right to emphasize Dean’s policy/ideological placement reasonably in the middle of Democratic party (my summary is that he is a technocratic neolib/liberaltarian – which I don’t think is a such a bad thing), quite in contrast to Paul, who is rather far from the middle of the Republican party. Note that, IMHO, if the various votes to give the Axis of Neocons a free hand (AUMF Iraq, etc.) had been secret ballot, I think rather more Dems would have voted “no” (e.g. Edwards) – would you agree? This speaks to the cowardice of all too many Dem congressbeings (and the courage of Paul), but again that’s a difference between Dean and Paul vis a vis their respective parties (unless you also think many more GOP congressbeings would have voted against TARP etc. on a secret ballot – I don’t think so but I’d be happy to be shown evidence that I’m wrong).
Let’s assume, as seems plausible, that “what the war was for Democrats in 2004, health care legislation and bailouts will be for the Republicans in 2012″. Do you really think that anyone who will turn out to be a meaningful contender for the GOP nomination will have cast a single vote in favor of any Dem health care bill? I don’t. (compare Gephardt who was the damn Dem sponsor of HR114, also Lieberman, and as lesser evils – in that regard – Kerry and Edwards). Agreed that Romney to some degree can be tarred on healthcare, but unlike you, I don’t seem him as a real contender – I see him as more the Gephardt of 2012.
So it seems that if the 2012 primary campaign is to be a battle over issues (which strikes me as very unlikely – battles over Palinesque cultural resentment posturing and who will quintuple Gitmo and bomb bomb bomb Iran seem more probable), it will have to be over the many and various bailouts (to include TARP) and stimulus bills (the latter to include mock refusal of stimulus $ for governors). To me a more likely live issue is if the corporatocrats can’t keep a lid on the immigration restrictionists.
Your thoughts?
I have some measured optimism on foreign policy. Not that the GOP will suddenly become Paul style non-interventionist, they won’t, but that they may adopt a more sensible and less reflexively bellicose position. Foreign policy pretty much fell off the radar screen in the Presidential campaign in 2008. The right did not primarily campaign against Obama as weak on defense and someone who was insufficiently committed to the “war on terror.” They said he was a socialist who liked to hang out with radicals. Foreign policy tough talk only sells within the movement con bubble. And I think they are beginning to realize that. Bomb Iran or whoever sentiment is not animating the angry tea partiers and a lot of non-interventionist sentiment is to be found among them. Foreign policy bellicosity totally falls on deaf ears outside the bubble.