By Patrick J. Buchanan
Friday, May 9, 2008
"I have a much broader base to build a winning coalition on" than
Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton has told USA TODAY.
She cited an Associated Press article "that found how Sen. Obama's
sup****t among working, hard-working Americans, white Americans, is
weakening again, and how whites in both states who had not completed
college were sup****ting me."
"There's a pattern emerging here," said Hillary. "These are the people
you have to win if you're a Democrat in sufficient numbers to actually
win the election. Everybody knows that."
The Democratic Party can't win with just "eggheads and
African-Americans," Paul Begala added helpfully.
What Hillary and Begala are saying is politically incorrect, but it is
also patently true. Hillary was describing what may now fairly be
called the Hillary Democrats -- a.k.a. the ex-Reagan Democrats who did
not vote for Obama and may defect to John McCain.
If Obama can win over these voters who gave Hillary big victories in
Ohio and Pennsylvania, he is the 44th president. If McCain does not
win a goodly slice of these Democrats, he will lose.
Who, exactly, are the Hillocrats, half of whom said in the exit polls
from North Carolina and Indiana that, if she loses the nomination,
they will stay home or vote for McCain?
They are white, working- and middle-class, Catholic, small-town,
rural, unionized, middle-age and seniors, and surviving on less than
$50,000 a year. They are the people most belittled by the
condescending commentary of Barack behind closed doors out at Sodom on
the Bay.
"You go into some of these small towns in Pennsylvania, (where) the
jobs have been gone now for 25 years. ... And it's not surprising then
they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people
who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade
sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations."
In 40 years, two Democrats have won the presidency, Jimmy Carter and
Bill Clinton, and both did so only after connecting with these folks.
People forget. In 1976, Carter ran as a Naval Academy grad and nuclear
engineer, a born-again Baptist and peanut farmer from Plains, Ga.,
who, in Philadelphia, talked about preserving the "ethnic purity" of
the neighborhoods. Clinton first ran as a death-penalty Democrat.
It was Ronald Reagan who cemented the GOP hold of these Nixon-Agnew
New Majority Democrats, who are now headed back home.
And it was George H.W. Bush and Lee Atwater who turned a 17-point
deficit as of Aug. 1, 1988, into an eight-point lead Bush never lost
on Labor Day -- by eviscerating Michael Dukakis on the social and
cultural issues: Dukakis' veto of a Pledge-of-Allegiance-to-the-Flag
bill, his opposition to capital punishment, his pride in being "a
card-carrying member of the ACLU," his weekend furloughs for convicted
criminals and killers like Willy Horton.
Bush lost the presidency in 1992 when, under fire, he retreated from
the social and cultural issues and sought to win on foreign policy,
and on the economy, where his approval rating was 16 percent.
In 1992, cultural, social and moral issues could have derailed
Clinton, which is why James Carville told the War Room to stay
laser-focused. "It's the economy, stupid!" Bush and James Baker deemed
social and cultural issues unworthy of a president. And so it was that
George H.W. Bush ceased to be president.
His son did not make that mistake. In the primaries and general
election in 2000, Bush embraced the Christian conservatives and their
agenda.
Since Pennsylvania, Barack has recognized this deficiency and sought
to ****tray himself as a reflexive patriot who enjoys a bottle of Bud
just like the next guy, a kid raised in poverty by a single mom, who
turned his back on Wall Street offers to fight for steelworkers laid
off when their mills closed in South Chicago and moved to China.
McCain, a war hero and POW, is a natural for Middle Pennsylvania and
Middle Ohio. His problems, however, are these:
He is failing to energize the Republican base, one-fourth of which is
still voting against him in primaries. On the great populist issues of
2008 -- outsourcing of American jobs to Mexico, Asia and China, and
the illegal alien invasion -- he stands foursquare with K Street --
for amnesty and NAFTA -- and against Main Street.
And like Gerald Ford and Bob Dole, McCain recoils from cultural and
social issues. He berated Tarheel Republicans for linking Barack, the
Rev. Wright and local Democrats, and denounced a conservative talk
show host who introduced him for mocking Barack's middle name.
This may solidify McCain's standing with his core constituency, the
liberal commentariat. But these folks will depart in the fall. And the
Republican base and the Hillary Democrats had better be there, or
McCain will do what moderate Republicans nominees do best. Lose
gracefully.
Keep an eye on West Virginia. The votes Hillary gets, and the way she
gets them, may provide a road map for how the GOP can hold the White
House this fall, if they are not too squeamish to follow it.
=================
Pat Buchanan is a founding editor of The American Conservative
magazine, and the author of many books including State of Emergency:
The Third World Invasion and Conquest of America .
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