September 22, 2009 11:06 AM

Hope Amid The Ruins

By
CBSNews
(National Review Online)  This column was written by The Editors of National Review.


All Americans should be glad that a black American has been able to make it to the presidency, and hope that President-Elect Barack Obama's time in office will redound to the country's long-term benefit.

We wish the outcome of yesterday's elections had been different. Liberals will shortly be in the driver's seat in Washington in a way they have not been since the Great Society. The Democratic majority in Congress will be slightly smaller than the one that greeted President Clinton in 1993, but much more homogeneous in its liberalism.

Yet the public has not embraced many of the central aspects of liberalism. President-Elect Barack Obama's record and positions put him well to the left of any president in the last four decades. But to judge from his campaign, he is a man who wants to cut taxes, defend an individual right to own guns, take a hard line on terrorists in Pakistan, reduce the abortion rate, allow people to keep their health-care plans, and keep trade free. The polls suggest that he was wise to run in this fashion: They show that the public remains as skeptical about federal activism and social liberalism as they have been for years.

The public has, however, clearly rejected the Republican party in its present configuration. It is always difficult for a party to maintain control of the White House after two terms in office. But both President Bush and Senator McCain made the task harder. Bush took too long to change course in Iraq and botched the response to Hurricane Katrina. McCain rarely stuck to one message or strategy. The financial crisis, for which we do not primarily blame either man, sealed the party's fate.

But Republicans have been so unpopular for so long, and their failure has been so sweeping, that it is a mistake to dwell too long on the flaws of specific men or the consequences of particular events. Neither Bush nor McCain nor congressional Republicans gave much sign that they understood the frustrations that average Americans have felt over the last few years toward the economy and Washington, let alone that they had solutions. The exit polls demonstrate this failure again and again: in the questions about which party and candidates voters consider the most sympathetic to regular people; in the questions about who would do best for the economy; in the breakdown of the vote by income.

Sen. McCain's principal economic message concerned spending and, more narrowly still, earmarks. Any winning conservative candidate would have to mention those themes. But it would also have to do what McCain did not, which was to link those issues to a bigger story about how government can hurt or help people as they seek to achieve their aspirations. Had McCain done more of this work early, he would have had credibility with the middle class when the financial crisis hit - and his attacks on Obama's radical associations would have had added punch because he would have established his solidarity with the great American middle.

In our first editorial of the year, we wrote: "Conservatives believe that American interests and values are threatened by familial instability, runaway government, and weakness and confusion in foreign policy. Those convictions will retain serious political strength for as long as they are rooted in reality." The contemporary conservative vocation, we added, was to breathe new life into those convictions. We stand by that judgment.

Conservatives should be willing to work with the Democrats in Washington where appropriate - assuming the Democrats are interested in having their help - but should be no more mealy-mouthed, apologetic, or timorous than the Democrats were after the 2004 election. When Democrats misread the election as a mandate for liberalism, and particularly when they betray the explicit and implicit commitments Obama has made during this campaign, Republicans should do everything they can to drive the point home, less in the expectation that they will change legislative outcomes than that they will move voters in advance of 2010 and 2012.

Recriminations have their place, and we look forward to a lively debate among conservatives about our future. But the most urgent task for conservatives is not to second-guess what decisions should have been made in 2003, 2005, or 2008. It is to devise an agenda - on health care, on taxes, on transportation, on energy - that Americans in the middle of the income distribution can be persuaded serves their interests going forward. If we can do that, we will not be, as so many pundits have said, at the end of a conservative era, but at the midpoint between two such eras. Doing that will take a great deal of wit. We will, alas, have plenty of time.
By The Editors
Reprinted with permission from National Review Online

National Review Online
Add a Comment
by markangeloo November 6, 2008 1:24 PM EST
Duh democrats are amerikans.

If they fail I fear the whole thing fails.

Sorry I dont think there will be

another chance for elephants if the donkey dies.
Reply to this comment
by stopkidding November 6, 2008 2:10 AM EST
Okay Editors, Without lying or just making it up, name even ONE of the "central aspects of liberalism" that the American public has not embraced. Thought so.
Reply to this comment
by imnho November 6, 2008 1:11 AM EST
I am very pleased with the election results. The fat lady sung and I really liked the tune.

The republican preformance reminded me of the lyric of an old Bob Dylan song:

must leave now, take what you need, you think will last.
But whatever you wish to keep, you better grab it fast.
Yonder stands your orphan with his gun,
Crying like a fire in the sun.
Look out the saints are comin'' through
And it''s all over now, Baby Blue.
The highway is for gamblers, better use your sense.
Take what you have gathered from coincidence.
The empty-handed painter from your streets
Is drawing crazy patterns on your sheets.
This sky, too, is folding under you
And it''s all over now, Baby Blue.
All your seasick sailors, they are rowing home.
All your reindeer armies, are all going home.
The lover who just walked out your door
Has taken all his blankets from the floor.
The carpet, too, is moving under you
And it''s all over now, Baby Blue.
Leave your stepping stones behind, something calls for you.
Forget the dead you''ve left, they will not follow you.
The vagabond who''s rapping at your door
Is standing in the clothes that you once wore.
Strike another match, go start anew
And it''s all over now, Baby Blue.

Reply to this comment
by kansas1946 November 5, 2008 10:35 PM EST
It will be interesting to watch the faces of those who elected Barack Obama - they will rapidly change from their wide-eyed wonder - to confusion, then to apprehension, then to disbelief, and finally to horror as they discover their new leader is as hollow as the promises he has made.Posted by

CBSisPravda at 06:39 PM : Nov 05, 2008
*******************************************

This is why Republicans lost and will lose until they start putting their country before their party. Because a Democrat won, you are hoping for his failure so that you can say, "I told you so." No matter if it harms your country.

This is a HUGE historic moment and even if Obama is a terrible president, electing him has already done tremendous good for our country. You are on the wrong side of history on this one. Get on board and maybe we can ride this boat to a better place for everyone.
Reply to this comment
by tawpdawg111 November 5, 2008 10:19 PM EST
and they will not have the luxury of blaming anyone else for their own failures.

Posted by CBSisPravda at 06:39 PM : Nov 05, 2008
..............

actually Bush and his backers will be held responsible for the coming depression for the rest of history.......sorry pal
Reply to this comment
by troutfisher4 November 5, 2008 10:02 PM EST
And this includes YOU, Liberal Media.

YOU are the ones that have betrayed America with this Trojan Horse Socialist imposter, Obama.

Posted by CBSisPravda



So sad to see you still in denial. Go look in the mirror and think about it.


Reply to this comment
by centerfall93 November 5, 2008 9:02 PM EST
Republicans: Spanked
Rush Limbaugh: Failed

If you neocons start tarring and feathering Rush Limpballs now, you''d be a lot better off.

Up to you. But apparently he has led you to a Very Bad Place.

Stay there as long as you like.
Reply to this comment
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