At Real Clear Politics, Sean Trende writes, “You only get to elect the first black President once, and governing a coalition of suburbanites, poor blacks, and upper class liberals isn’t easy. It is hard to keep that enthusiasm up. And with the Jacksonian wing of the party gone, if that enthusiasm dissipates, or if one of the coalition groups becomes disgruntled and starts to shuffle out the door, the party isn’t left with much”:
The historical base of the Democratic Party for two centuries has long been what Jay Cost and I call Jacksonians: Culturally conservative, hawkish, and populist whites located throughout the South and Border states. They began breaking away from Democrats in the 1950s and 1960s – their reaction to the Party’s embrace of unions, blacks and liberals is a story is so well known there’s no need to rehash it here.
But this group remained at least in play for the Democrats. Clinton inherited a coalition consisting of minorities, liberals, urban voters, and a decent remnant of Jacksonian voters in the Ohio River Valley and the South, who still preferred a moderate-to-conservative Democrat to a Republican. This coalition became a majority coalition when Clinton used a combination of fiscal conservatism and social moderation to bring suburban voters on board. This was a huge innovation for Democrats; suburbs like Nassau County, NY, Orange County, CA and Fairfax County, VA had fueled the rise of the Republican parties in those states. Clinton moved them substantially toward his side. This coalition allowed him to win by eight points in 1996; absent Perot and a last-minute fundraising scandal, he probably would have won by more.
Clinton intuited that suburban voters are, generally speaking, culturally cosmopolitan – they don’t like it when you call someone “macaca,” and aren’t crazy about the religious right. But they’re generally not particularly socially liberal either, and are fans of “law and order.” They like taxes low and appreciate economic growth, but like good schools and a clean environment. Having to balance a bunch of spending priorities with somewhat limited income in their daily lives, balanced budgets are the ultimate “good government” indicator for these voters.
Clinton delivered on all of these issues, keeping tax increases fairly small, and balancing the budget for much of his term. In so doing – and this is very important – he re-branded the Democrats as the party of fiscal responsibility, economic growth, moderate taxes, and smart government.
So much for that last idea, Jim Hoft of Gateway Pundit writes: “Obama’s October Deficit LARGER Than Bush Deficit For ENTIRE YEAR of 2007″:

Meanwhile, Andy McCarthy writes that President Obama is playing to his radical leftwing base, not the center, with his decision to prosecute Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in a New York-based civilian trial:
Today’s announcement that KSM and other top al-Qaeda terrorists will be transferred to Manhattan federal court for civilian trials neatly fits this hidden agenda. Nothing results in more disclosures of government intelligence than civilian trials. They are a banquet of information, not just at the discovery stage but in the trial process itself, where witnesses — intelligence sources — must expose themselves and their secrets.
Let’s take stock of where we are at this point. KSM and his confederates wanted to plead guilty and have their martyrs’ execution last December, when they were being handled by military commission. As I said at the time, we could and should have accommodated them. The Obama administration could still accommodate them. After all, the president has not pulled the plug on all military commissions: Holder is going to announce at least one commission trial (for Nashiri, the Cole bomber) today.
Moreover, KSM has no defense. He was under American indictment for terrorism for years before there ever was a 9/11, and he can’t help himself but brag about the atrocities he and his fellow barbarians have carried out.
So: We are now going to have a trial that never had to happen for defendants who have no defense. And when defendants have no defense for their own actions, there is only one thing for their lawyers to do: put the government on trial in hopes of getting the jury (and the media) spun up over government errors, abuses and incompetence. That is what is going to happen in the trial of KSM et al. It will be a soapbox for al-Qaeda’s case against America. Since that will be their “defense,” the defendants will demand every bit of information they can get about interrogations, renditions, secret prisons, undercover operations targeting Muslims and mosques, etc., and — depending on what judge catches the case — they are likely to be given a lot of it. The administration will be able to claim that the judge, not the administration, is responsible for the exposure of our defense secrets. And the circus will be played out for all to see — in the middle of the war. It will provide endless fodder for the transnational Left to press its case that actions taken in America’s defense are violations of international law that must be addressed by foreign courts. And the intelligence bounty will make our enemies more efficient at killing us.
Clinton’s first two years in office were nearly as bad as Obama’s first year has been; it was only the election of a center-right GOP to both houses of Congress that curbed his excesses. But at least he had actual executive experience as governor before winning the White House. Obama has had none, and his lack of experience, and inability to make decisions, is beginning to snowball against him, and badly.





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6 Comments
1. David Thomson:“…their reaction to the Party’s embrace of unions, blacks and liberals”
I have encountered very few whites who react negatively to blacks per se. No, that’s not the problem. They are concerned, however, with radical non-violent blacks who have every intention to stick it to them good and hard. This is not an example of racism—but legitimate self preservation! The Democratic Party’s leadership have encouraged a “get whitey” attitude to increase its power. These race hustlers have no real interest in improving relations among the different races. It most certainly would not work out to their benefit.
Nov 13, 2009 - 1:47 pm 2. democratsarefascists:I wonder.
Nov 13, 2009 - 2:08 pm 3. Tom L.:If Hillary ran again, Ted Kennedy style, would the PUMAs vote for her, or have they learned their lesson and given up on the Commiecrat party as last?
The trial isn’t playing to a base. The trial is: Look over here! How pissed are you about this? Pissed enough to not pay attention to Deathcare monstrosity? Good! That was the whole point.
Shiny objects no longer work. They now have to do things that will make you so outraged and angry that you forget everything else but the outrage du jour to keep your focus AWAY from healthcare. The 9/11 trials are not going to transform and cripple this country like Deathcare trail wreck will. Better to have you focused on something considered “smaller” than the big turd being rammed down your throat.
Nov 13, 2009 - 2:33 pm 4. Eric A:I think McCarthy’s analysis is slightly off. It is a simple defense,”it wasn’t me, prove otherwise”. Don’t take the stand. It is doubtful that very much in the way of evidence is allowed in. The rest I think I agree with. Assuming that this survives miranda, what was obtained with a warrant? Anything gained in captivity will likely be tossed due to the interrogation techniques. What is the documentation of the chain of evidence? Was it secure at all times? Did anyone have access to it? Do you have any eye witnesses that can actually prove any of this? And of course bringing every military and intelligence officer who has ever remotely had anything to do with anything to the stand to explain the basis of their knowledge, their tactics, methods, in detail and comparing them to the requirements for the NYPD. I am seriously suspicious that they could obtain a guilty conviction. And that of course would be Bush’s fault.
I am also afraid that Tom L may have a little bit of a point. I really hope that I am wrong about this.
Nov 13, 2009 - 2:56 pm 5. John:Clinton might have tried to be Jimmy Carter, but the voters cut him off at the pass in 1994, electing the Republicans to power in Congress. Once that was settled and Clinton acknowledged the voters’ decision by following Dick Morris’ plan to triangulate back to the center, the fiscal conservative/social moderate voters in 1996 felt safe to re-elect Clinton, because they knew there was a check on any creeping Hillaryitis in the form of the U.S. House and Senate.
But Clinton’s path to Carterism was a slow stroll compared to Obama’s who’se heading there at the speed of Steve McQueen’s trip in his Mustang through San Francisco in ‘Bullet”. Every time you hit refresh in your browser window there’s another act of either incompetence or maliciousness to deal with. And Clinton, unlike Obama had already been thrown out of office once by Arkansas voters for campaigning in the middle and then governing left, so he knew what was coming in 1996 if he didn’t change course. Obama seems oblivious to the resentment he’s creating with his policies and has never lost a major election, so even a rebuke in the miterms might not make him change course (especially if Democrats maintain narrow majorities in the House and Senate).
Nov 14, 2009 - 4:22 pm 6. JabbaTheTutt:From a legal, moral, constitutional and national security point of view, this KSM decision is a huge self-inflicted wound. From the political point of view, for the GOP this decision will be the gift that keeps on giving. This trial will be acid dripping on the Obama Administration for the rest of its life (3 years). This acid will turn the Democrat Party into a broiling kettle of bubbling, steaming, rotten meat. The Democrat Party has turned into a suicide pact and they’re trying to take the rest of us with them. There are going to be a lot of people killed because of these policies and it’s going to take a hell of a lot to recover.
Nov 15, 2009 - 4:16 am