Once again, prematurely sanguine Democrats are caught scratching
their heads over the recent drops in their poll numbers and the price of
oil. Darn the bad luck. What is an imploding opposition party to do?
Well, now that the well has gone dry on their portraying the GOP
as one giant oil cartel bent on gouging consumers, where can they turn?
How about national security? That's not such a slam-dunk either,
to borrow former CIA Director George Tenet's terminology, since sagacious
voters rightly see Democrats as offering no alternative agenda in the war on
terror. They do a masterful job slandering President Bush, but in the
process of undermining his prosecution of the war in every particular, they
don't inspire confidence about their fitness to lead the nation in war.
How about values issues? If they could narrow the gap here, they
might just ease back into control of Congress in November, no?
It seems that every other week since late 2004, when
presidential exit polls revealed that "values voters" were one of the
largest voter blocs and that they preferred Republicans, Democratic leaders
have been lurching for their Bibles and meeting with consultants to discuss
how to repackage their moral message to better connect with these ephemeral
Cro-Magnon types lurking in the bowels of red-state "Jesus Land." They are
doing it again this week.
Far be it from me to promote my new book "Bankrupt," but I must
confess that I devote two full chapters to this values phenomenon, detailing
how the Democratic leadership has been desperately trying to appeal to those
same Christian conservatives they have been ridiculing for years.
As noted, the Democrats' problem with values voters is not one
of semantics, linguistics or packaging. It is not one that can be cured, for
example, by John Kerry sauntering into a Midwestern gun store and saying,
"Can I get me a hunting license here?"
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Despite the backwardness of the dueling-banjo strumming,
reality-challenged among us, we know an authentic peddler of moral values
when we see one. Citing Scripture here and there isn't going to do the
trick.
The Democrats' failure to connect with values voters has not been the result
of a poorly articulated message. Their problem is precisely the opposite:
They have communicated their values message all too well. They don't have
much respect for traditional values, and even less for those who promote
them.
But don't take my word for it. Check out the voluminous citations in my book
to see how the left has indicted itself in this department.
I didn't include in my book Rosie O'Donnell's recent outburst comparing
Christian fundamentalists to Islamic fundamentalists because she didn't have
the decency to utter it before we went to print. But I do quote her soul
mate Maureen Dowd, columnist for The New York Times, saying the same thing
and also comparing Christian conservatives to "a vengeful mob revved up by
rectitude."
"Objection," you say. These enlightened ladies, these paragons of liberal
tolerance and inclusiveness are hardly representative of the Democratic
Party. Well, then, how about ole' Howard Dean, the very chairman of the DNC?
He said the GOP is a party of white Christians and that he doesn't have to
take moral lectures from us because we don't have any morals. We're the
Sadducees and the Pharisees.
Or how about the congenial Robert Reich, Labor Secretary under President
Clinton? Reich said the true battle for the 21st century is going to be
between modern civilization and the anti-modernists, between those who
believe in science, reason and logic, and those who get their truth from
divine revelation and religious dogma. "Terrorism," said Reich, "destroys
life, but it's not the greatest danger we face."
Senator Joe Biden admitted that the elites of his party look down their
noses at people of faith. How right he is. Yet in the next breath Biden
said, "Bush uses religion in a way to avoid having to know the hard things."
Other leftists, like political and theological scholar and actor Ben
Affleck, say Bush substitutes religion for learning and informing himself on
important issues, and "touting religion absent of any thought is almost
criminal." Bill Maher says Bush prays when he should be learning.
And these people wonder why liberal Democrats don't resonate with many
churchgoers?
So when you hear John Kerry waxing eloquent about Scripture and values - while telling us he is pro-choice despite believing life begins at
conception - ask yourself whether he would more closely identify with
Robert Reich, Maureen Dowd and Rosie O'Donnell on values, or us regressive
Neanderthals.