Nov. 18, 2008
2004 Loss Turned Out Great For Democrats
New Republic: John Kerry's Loss In 2004 Was The Luckiest Thing To Happen To Democrats In 40 Years
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John Kerry during his 2004 concession speech. (CBS)
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Photo Essay Celebrating History Supporters cheer victorious candidate at huge Chicago gathering.
After the 2004 presidential election Democrats were crushed. Four more years of George W. Bush seemed unthinkable, disastrous. But now that the Obama era is beginning, Democrats should view John Kerry's defeat as something else entirely: the luckiest break the party has caught since at least the 1964 election, which yielded the presidency of Lyndon Johnson and two-thirds Democratic congressional majorities. (Those 1964 victories made possible the passage of a long list of legislation backed by northern Democrats, including federal aid to education, Medicare, and the Voting Rights Act.) Indeed, had Bush lost in 2004, the Democrats simply wouldn't be anywhere near as powerful as they are now.
Of course, many will assert that a second Bush term is a very steep price to pay for today's success. But consider the pattern of events that likely would have followed Kerry's election. He would have faced a Republican Congress substantially weighted against him and hell-bent on disrupting his legislative agenda. That means no universal health care coverage and no elimination of Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy. Past experience also indicates that the electorate probably would not have blamed the Republicans for the congressional gridlock. For example, in the months leading up to the 1994 midterms, the Senate GOP used the filibuster to frustrate almost all of the proposals the Democrats sought to pass, but it was President Clinton and his party who took the blame. In fact, only three times since 1900 has the party of a sitting president failed to lose House seats in a midterm election, and given the political conditions, there's little reason to think President Kerry would have bucked the trend.
The Congress starting in 2007 probably would have been even harder for Democrats to navigate. Some version of the current financial crisis probably would have occurred. (Given that further regulation of the financial system was never part of candidate Kerry's '04 campaign, he probably would not have measurably changed government oversight of the financial sector.) But again, it would have been the Democratic president who got the blame, saddling him with a significant burden come reelection time. We might either have seen Kerry narrowly reelected along with a hostile GOP Congress, or a restoration of unified government under the Republicans.
Instead, the Bush administration survived, and the public grew increasingly disenchanted with its performance and the Republican brand. We see this not just in the net gain in House seats (51 since 2006) and in the Senate (12 more Democrats, and up to three extra depending on the outcomes of the unresolved races in Alaska, Minnesota, and Georgia), nor merely in Obama's crushing White House victory (the first Democrat to win more than 50 percent of the vote since Carter, and the largest popular vote percentage for a northern Democrat since Franklin Roosevelt), but also in the party's new, mammoth fundraising advantage. The Democratic Party apparatus spent more than a million dollars in 38 House races; the same was true for the Republicans in only four contests. Similarly, the Democratic Senate committee spent more than $8 million in five races; the most the GOP spent in any Senate contest was $6.5 million. According to exit polls, in 2004, 37 percent of the electorate identified themselves as Democrats, and the same proportion said they were Republicans. In 2008, the Democrats had 39 percent, while the GOP had only 32.
The Democrats under President Obama now have a working governing coalition for the first time since 1965-66. (President Jimmy Carter had large Democratic majorities in Congress, but they had little value for governing because of internal divisions and Carter's visible contempt for politicians. Clinton had narrower majorities than Carter, and he squandered his possibilities through poor strategic decisions and an unwillingness to work with congressional Democrats on major bills.) They hold at least as many Senate seats as they did when Clinton was elected, and almost as many House seats. Democratic-leaning legislation that has a good chance of passing now--from major health care reform to new energy policies to a shift in the tax burden--almost certainly would have looked hopeless had Kerry won in 2004.
To be sure, the "alternate history" of a Kerry victory discussed here involves probabilities, not certainties. It is difficult to predict precisely how events would have unfolded. For example, opinions of Bush suffered greatly from his handling of Hurricane Katrina; perhaps Kerry's approach would have been a big boost. Also, the situation in Iraq might have been very different, and that could have affected election results and governance. But even accounting for these uncertainties, it still seems extremely likely that Democrats are now far, far better off than they would have been under President Kerry.
It will take time to discover whether the developments in 2006 and 2008 constitute an enduring pro-Democratic shift in the electorate, rather than just a transitory negative reaction to Bush and the GOP. But the benefits the Democrats have realized from 2006 and 2008--the ample mandate and the majorities the Democrats now possess--have put the party on the path toward substantial progress in its policy goals. And if John Kerry and John Edwards had found their way into office four years ago, they would have found a much more difficult, possibly impossible, road ahead of them.
By David W. Rohde
Reprinted with permission from The New Republic.
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- That''s true. In case anybody had any doubts after the first four years of Bush, but 2008 all doubts were gone. Everyone knew he was an idiot and the Republican congress supported his idiot regime. The Republicans have only themselves to blame. They should have been bucking Bush a long time ago.
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- This isn''t new in our history and in fact is terribly predictable. This nation was born out of RADICAL Liberalism yet the founders wanted ALL views included thus they allowed the Right, which had fought for the King, to become involved in our government. The result has been we move ahead for a period of time, trying new ideas and new directions, then we hit a period where we look back to the past. As is always the case though, when you look to the past you remember ONLY the good parts. The PROBLEM is the BAD will aways rise to the top as well. That is the Problem with the Republican Party today... they are now left with the vile people who looked upon those bad parts as being good.
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- Be careful what you wish for. When the country takes a dramatic turn to the left, the middle of the road people will again rise up and what they givith they will take away. So be cautious.
Of course CBS will not ever criticize the chosen one. They have rooted for him all along and will be lock step with anything that he says, no matter how left he goes.
Posted by Platteman at 01:30 PM : Nov 18, 2008
I find it absolutely amazing how people like this can take ANY subject you want to discuss and turn that into some Conspiracy against the fascist party! I''m telling you folks IF the Third Reich had these losers behind them they would NEVER have lost!! - Reply to this comment
- A Kerry presidency may not have been successful in terms of a progressive legislative agenda, but some things would have certainly been different.
The Iraq war would have been ended long ago. Domestic warrantless spying would have remained a Bush/Cheney dream, as would torture by US agents. Obscene tax cuts for oil companies and rich people would have gone by the wayside, and we probably would not be in the depression we are now entering.
Yeh, George Bush was a real Godsend. Gag, puke. - Reply to this comment
- Maybe I just don''t see it like how you see it. The reality of it is that we as a country had to suffer 4 more years of G.W. Bush. I just lost my job under his
watch. It was more than just a job to me! It was my lifeline. Is Bush going to come to Indiana and give
me back my job! All I''ve seen is he really didn''t care about anybody else just his war and the top 10 percent of the population. In the almost 8 yrs I never once seen him help people like myself! - Reply to this comment
- Having worked hard for Democratic Party elections from 2003 as an American Abroad, I find this article wise and inciteful.
Obama plus all the governors and Congresspersons could never have been elected without the ground-breaking 50-state work of Howard Dean and grassroots'' Democrats who kicked into action after the theft of Florida in the 2000 election. - Reply to this comment
- "Of course CBS will not ever criticize the chosen one. They have rooted for him all along and will be lock step with anything that he says, no matter how left he goes."
Don''t think so. Katie Couric''s abysmal "interview" with wingnut moron Sarah Palin left so many openings for follow up questions that were never exploited as to be laughable. CBS'' "opinion" section of their website points to right wing rags like the New Republic and the Weekly Standard but rarely feature commentary from progressive sources. CBS isn''t Fox Noise, but neither is it the bastion of liberalism you indicate. The right will still complain when anybody does a story that casts any bad light on conservatives, yelling liberal media, but the way I see it, the media has bought into that empty argument and now tilts to the right. Lack of any reporting of substance of George w. Bush shredding the Constitution is hardly liberal. - Reply to this comment
- ''...and Carter''s visible contempt for politicians.''
Finally!! I knew if I searched long enough I''d find something I liked about Carter. - Reply to this comment
- Be careful what you wish for. When the country takes a dramatic turn to the left, the middle of the road people will again rise up and what they givith they will take away. So be cautious.
Of course CBS will not ever criticize the chosen one. They have rooted for him all along and will be lock step with anything that he says, no matter how left he goes. - Reply to this comment

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