A Crisis Republicans Should Not Waste

April 16, 2010 06:19


My own reckoning is that the passions of this season will endure: that the Hand of Justice will pass over the house of Democrats and leave very few standing. Even Democrats who voted against Obamacare will not be spared, for the public seems to have been brought to the threshold of a judgment so binary that the choices before us now require the sweeping away of any Democrat. A vote for any Democratic candidate is a vote to keep in power Pelosi and Reid and the rest of the people who imposed this scheme on us.

BY Hadley Arkes at The Weekly Standard

The points of caution have already been noted by conservative commentators: The public anger over the passage of Obamacare may well subside by November, especially if the economy continues its healing. And so the Democrats, having desperately gone for broke, may be delivered from their danger and find themselves surviving with wreckage vast, yet not terminal.

But the tawdriness that attended the ramming through of Obamacare has had a mind-clearing effect for the public. Academics might find their surety in theories ever more inventive, but ordinary people, anchored in the world, trust in common sense: They cannot believe that their medical care will really be better when managed in the style of the Post Office or the IRS. They cannot believe that a new entitlement will lower costs and not raise taxes, that it will not lead to price-controls and rationing.

My own reckoning is that the passions of this season will endure: that the Hand of Justice will pass over the house of Democrats and leave very few standing. Even Democrats who voted against Obamacare will not be spared, for the public seems to have been brought to the threshold of a judgment so binary that the choices before us now require the sweeping away of any Democrat. A vote for any Democratic candidate is a vote to keep in power Pelosi and Reid and the rest of the people who imposed this scheme on us.

The current conflict may have brought us to one of those rare crises that produces a recasting, or realignment, of the political parties. At a similar moment, Margaret Thatcher destroyed Britain’s Labour party as a socialist entity, forcing it to abandon its schemes, long cherished, for nationalizing major parts of the economy. And so it should not be beyond imagining that today a conservative leadership, with wit and nerve, could bring an end to the Democratic party as it was recast in the days of the Vietnam war and George McGovern. The election of 2008 swept the American left into power with swollen majorities. The Democratic leadership was emboldened enough to offer an unalloyed version of its politics: antiwar, suspicious of American interests abroad, weak on protecting the lives of Americans, antireligious, pro-abortion, pro-racial preferences, beholden to the whims of the plaintiff bar and the teachers’ unions, and ever inclined to keep extending the reach of governmental controls and reducing the freedom of ordinary people to make their livings. These things have been revealed so clearly that it is not unthinkable that the public might be moved to do something decisive in November.

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