February
1 , 2005
Sen. Clinton Shows How Democrats Can Woo 'Heartland'
By
Mort Kondracke
In 1991,
defense-hawk Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) caught the presidential
bug, abandoned his record and opposed the first Persian
Gulf War - a big mistake. Has the same thing happened to
Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.)?
Last
week, Bayh - one of the four lead sponsors of the resolution
that authorized the 2003 Iraq war and chairman of the centrist
Democratic Leadership Council - was one of just 13 Senators
to vote against the confirmation of Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice. The others were all liberal Democrats, plus Independent
Jim Jeffords (Vt.).
Bayh,
who was on the short list for vice president in 2004, is
an all-but-certain presidential candidate in 2008 - possibly
the leading moderate in the race.
So,
was his "no" vote on Rice a bid to win favor with
the anti-war mainstream of the Democratic Party? Significantly,
the arguable Democratic frontrunner, Sen. Hillary Rodham
Clinton (N.Y.), voted for Rice - and also, taking a page
directly from the centrists' post-2004 playbook, went out
of her way to show respect for foes of abortion and other
"values" voters.
Bayh's
vote mystified some of his friends in the DLC. "He
does strange things sometimes," one of them said. Another
speculated that Bayh, normally cautious, is eager to "raise
his profile" and "step out" on national security
issues.
Bayh's
staff insists that positioning for 2008 had nothing to do
with his vote - that he remains a supporter of the war,
but believes that the Bush administration has badly mishandled
it and that Rice, as a principal manager, does not deserve
"promotion."
In
the absence of further evidence of caving to the left, I'm
inclined to accept that explanation.
Still,
politicians' actions have political consequences, and I
think Clinton's were more appropriate to her party's current
predicament than Bayh's. A Northeast liberal, she's tilting
toward the center to make her profile more resemble that
of her politically successful husband than, say, Sen. John
Kerry's (D-Mass.).
Clinton's
speech in Albany to New York family-planning providers was
a political masterstroke - simultaneously sticking to fundamental
Democratic abortion-rights principles, expressing respect
for the values of anti-abortion voters and whacking the
Bush administration.
The
speech, along with Clinton's support for the Iraq war and
recent expressions of religious faith, constitutes a near-perfect
playing out of the wisest set of recommendations yet issued
for Democrats post-2004.
Right
after the election, the DLC published a "Blueprint"
with articles by its top officials, Al From, Bruce Reed
and Will Marshall, that urges the party to widen its appeal
beyond "blue" and "battleground" states
to the "heartland," especially the nine that Bush
won by margins of less than 10 percent: Florida, Ohio, West
Virginia, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Colorado, New Mexico
and Nevada.
As
From and Reed put it, reflecting on the 2004 defeat, "when
Democrats do not compete in three-quarters of American soil,
we have no margins for error in presidential elections -
and we're almost certain to be a permanent minority in Congress."
They added that, "competing nationally ... would force
Democrats to develop a national message that would have
broader appeal to swing voters in both red and blue states."
The
formula? Marshall, president of the Progressive Policy Institute,
the DLC's think tank, advised that Democrats need to "close
the confidence gap between the two parties on national security,"
detach the party from "the rancid anti-Americanism
of the conspiracy-mongering left" and "reassure
working families that Democrats share their values,"
including religious values.
"Democrats
should keep in mind that Bill Clinton won a dozen red states
in 1992 and 1996 with essentially the same [policy] positions
as John Kerry. But Clinton's humble origins, overt religiosity
and cultural empathy with working families allowed him to
bond with middle America in a way the Massachusetts Senator
couldn't."
Sen.
Clinton lacks her husband's "humble origins,"
but she goes out of her way to express religious faith,
and she was one of the key architects of the "third
way" agenda adopted by President Clinton and British
Prime Minister Tony Blair.
In
her Albany speech last week, Clinton said that pro-choice
activists could "find common ground" with anti-abortionists.
She also noted that, as first lady, she'd often advocated
"'teenage celibacy' ... I think it's a synonym for
abstinence," a favorite conservative cause.
"Research
shows that the primary reason that teenage girls abstain
is because of their religious and moral values," she
said.
Unlike
most liberals, who automatically disparage "abstinence
only" pregnancy-prevention programs, Clinton said that
"the jury is still out." But she also stuck to
the Democratic perspective by advocating greater access
to family-planning services and over-the-counter sales of
"Plan B" emergency contraception.
Clinton
also was unswerving in her support for Roe v. Wade and blasted
Bush's inaugural address for talking up freedom as the defining
goal of America while the president seeks to deny women
here and abroad the freedom to make choices about reproduction.
Bill
Clinton led the way in political "triangulation,"
plying the vast ground between the right-wing GOP base and
the left-wing Democratic base. Other Democrats could profit
by his example. One of them obviously "gets it."
Mort
Kondracke is the Executive Editor of Roll Call.
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