Booman Tribune

Bob Kerrey the Concern Troll

by BooMan
Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 12:45:12 PM EST

I have a question for former Nebraska senator Bob Kerrey. When would a landslide Democratic election create a "mandate for all their policies"? How many seats would it take to create a mandate for liberalism? 100? 200? 435?

I understand that successful presidential candidates can sometimes overestimate the public's thirst for their brand of change. I think it's fair to say that Bill Clinton made that mistake in 1993 and George W. Bush made it in 2005. Both presidents lost Congress after pursuing unpopular or unsuccessful post-election agendas. One reason that candidates should be clear about their agendas is to assure that their election represents a clear mandate for their legislative priorities. Obama has been clear that he wants to get our troops out of Iraq and that he wants to provide health insurance to all Americans. He's been clear that he wants to give 95% of the people a tax-cut, but that he wants to increase taxes on the top five percent. If he wins this election and the Democrats pick up a lot of congressional seats in traditionally Republican areas, I think it will be clear that he has won this argument and has a mandate for change.

By contrast, George W. Bush did not win reelection because he won the argument over whether to privatize Social Security. He won it by making his opponent unacceptable. And Bill Clinton won a fairly small plurality of the vote in a three-way race. The size and resoundingness of an electoral victory matters. If the people elect Barack Obama they will do it expecting him to do big things. And they're fairly clear on what those big things are. That's why I don't like Bob Kerrey's concern trolling.

This election is not over. But it's not too soon to envision the dangers and opportunities should Obama win.

My worry is not with increased threats from abroad. I am convinced those threats will be reduced with Obama's election and the beginning of a much more sensible and trustworthy American foreign policy.

By my lights, the primary threat to the success of a President Obama will come from some Democrats who, emboldened by the size of their congressional majority, may try to kill trade agreements, raise taxes in ways that will destroy jobs, repeal the Patriot Act and spend and regulate to high heaven.

It's hard to take this as serious rhetoric. It should be obvious that our trade agreements have led to a huge outflow of manufacturing jobs, that Bush's trickle-down economics and non-existent regulation have killed even more jobs, and that the Surveillance State has gone too far and must be rolled back. It seems obvious enough to the people, anyway, if the polls can be believed.

Kerrey's brand of centrism has failed every bit as thoroughly as Bush's brand of governance. Accommodating and compromising with the Republicans led to bad legislative outcomes, bad policy, a ruined economy, a tarnished national reputation, and electoral losses for the Democrats. Success only came when Democrats, led by their liberal activist wing, stood up to the Republicans and said 'No'. As long as we were taking the advice of Harold Ford, Jr. and Mark Penn, we lost. Their advice brought defeat and national disaster. It wasn't what Democrats wanted and it wasn't effective on a national level.

Now, it's true that electoral success doesn't automatically translate to successful governance. But, as Joe Cocker said about kicking his drug habit, if you bang your head against a wall long enough, eventually it hurts. Eventually you learn to stop banging your head against the wall. Bob Kerrey hasn't learned this, yet.

Last, I believe this [that Obama will pursue a centrist strategy] is likely because Obama understands that to succeed, he must make peace with John McCain just as he has done with Hillary Clinton. When this historic election concludes, I expect the two to sit down, without precondition, and negotiate an agenda of reform.

I wish this were a joke. It's as if Bob Kerrey hasn't noticed the complete crack-up of the Republican Party. If John McCain were going to return to the Senate as the de facto leader of the GOP, then Kerrey's advice might make sense. But, if this election goes off as predicted, McCain is going to be blamed for contributing to a decimation of the Republican Party's representation in Washington. He was hated by more than half of his Republican colleagues before he ran this joke of a campaign. How much more will they hate him when they find themselves with 39-41 seats in the Senate and a huge deficit in the House? Why would a President Obama want to involve John McCain in anything? I'm not even sure that McCain will return to the Senate, or that he will stay to serve out his term. If McCain loses this election, he'll be a political zombie...the walking dead.

And what kind of reform could Obama and McCain agree on? Kerrey's analysis is fatuous. There is real value in Barack Obama reaching out to the stump of the Republican Party. He already has support from the foreign policy moderates (Lugar, Hagel, Powell), a segment of the conservative intelligentsia (Chris Buckley, Christopher Hitchins, Andrew Sullivan, Francis Fukuyama), from political moderates (William Weld, Lincoln Chafee, William Milliken, Arne Carlson), both the Eisenhower and Goldwater families, and even some neo-conservatives (e.g. Frank Gaffney Ken Adelman). That's a pretty broad coalition for Obama to work with, without getting his hands dirty empowering a disgraced John McCain.

I really can't express how much contempt I have for Bob Kerrey's mind.



Display:
Kerrey is only the start of the Sensible Washington Establishment douchebaggery that will start in long and loud on November 5.

Everyone in the Village Idiot club, left, right, "sensible" center, will be saying how Obama now needs to immediately do whatever the hell the GOP wants to do as a "bi-partisan effort".

There will be a good two months of pressure for Obama to:

  1. Keep as much of Bush's cabinet as possible, especially Robert Gates and Michael Mukasey, if not Condi Rice.
  2. Drop all charges/pretense of charges/hints of pretenses of charges against Bush and quash any investigations.
  3. Drop any notions of reversing controversial Bush policy at all:  PATRIOT Act, Gitmo, torture, wiretapping, etc.  Kerrey's already asking for this.
  4. Show he "reaches across the aisle" by giving into more bad GOP legislation from the wingnuts.
  5. Abandon progressives, period.  Obama will be pressured to prove he's not a liberal, and will be advised to "distance himself from Pelosi/Reid".
  6. Enact McSame's economic, health, and military plan rather than his own.
  7. Escalate wars in Afghanistan and start one in Iran.

In other words, Obama will be told to be McSame, because he doesn't have a "mandate like Bush did."

More at Zandar vs. The Stupid.
by Zandar1 on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 02:02:31 PM EST
I see that Bob Kerrey is worried about a tax increase.  First of all, Obama can't just unilaterally increase taxes-- he has to work things out with Congress.  Second, he's proposing an increase in taxes for those making over $200K a year; those are the same people who have cashed in as the tax burden was shifted from the wealthy to the middle class beginning in the Reagan era.  What else is he supposed to do?  We're $9 trillion in debt, for chrissake.
by eagleye on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 12:58:10 PM EST
I don't like Bob Kerrey's concern trolling...I really can't express how much contempt I have for Bob Kerrey's mind.

I don't like Bob Kerrey period, and I can't express how much contempt I have for Bob Kerrey.

but then, what do you expect from a war criminal?

John Mccain Called his wife WHAT??

by brendan on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 01:19:44 PM EST
Wasn't he married to Debra Winger at one time?  What the hell was she thinking?
by Calvin Jones and the 13th Apostle on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 05:16:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Kerry won't be the only one battling the Ghosts of Republicans past. We may find that their brand of fear has created a Stockholm syndrome that will prove hard to shake for Dem leadership.


by mainsailset on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 01:43:42 PM EST
the republicans have been political zombies for quite some time now ... eating brains and shitting stupid. good riddance to them and anyone who'd follow them.

i'm glad you asked
by aarrgghh on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 01:45:08 PM EST
FRANK GAFFNEY supports Obama?!! I may have to rethink my vote. Anyone that raving mad neocon recommends scares me.
by Joyful Alternative on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 02:55:02 PM EST
Oops.  No.  Got my neo-cons mixed up.  It's Ken Adelman that supports Obama.  Not Gaffney.
by BooMan on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 03:37:43 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Nothing new... Kerrys brain has always been too big for his ass.  
by John Brown (ruptured_duck@notmail.com) on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 03:31:29 PM EST
I think the best thing Obama could do as far as 'bipartisan' strategy is concerned is to create a framework within which real and rational conservatives can better differentiate themselves from the extremist crazies who've hijacked both the GOP party itself and the 'conservative' label.

I'm certainly no fan of conservative ideology, even the so-called rational form it used to represent. I view it as a criminally negligent form of democracy; at odds with our constitution, but more importantly, at odds with the simple concept that in the end, the only legitimate reason for government to exist is to serve the best interests of the people, and to protect and where possible help improve the lives of the people, all the people.

Yet, despite having no love for conservatism, I nevertheless see enormous value in being able to incrementally separate the more extremist authoritarian loonies masquerading as conservatives from the 'rational conservatives". I see this as an essential first step along any path that may lead to the repair of the broken mechanisms of our democracy.

As for Bob Kerrey, I have no clue what sent him off the rails into gahooneyland, but he is definitely seriously detached from reality where these political matters are concerned.


Denial is our most dangerous adversary.

by sbj on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 03:37:25 PM EST
I'm hoping that the effect Kerry's comments will have will make the recalcitrant "undecideds" and party-hopping sensible Republicans feel assured that a President Obama and a strong Democratic majority won't go crazy and turn us into France.

Of course, it's nonsense, but let them get comfortable with voting "D" on Tuesday, and if it takes Kerry's comments to make that happen, so what.

I don't have a problem with Kerry saying these things right now, because I'm confident that Barack is the kind of guy who wouldn't listen to this crap anyway, but it might sway the yokels.

I expect the Dems to do big things in 2009, but we've got to get past the post on Tuesday first, and it would be healthy for America to have it be a big, big win.

by PopeRatzo (PopeRatzo AT G Mail Dot Com) on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 04:13:00 PM EST
It's too bad.  I really love this guy for his unbelievable self-sacrifice for his troops in Viet Nam. And for standing up to public opinion when he lived with his girlfriend as Governor.  But he has become just an idiot of the right since the Gingrich days.  Very sad.
by baba durag on Thu Oct 30th, 2008 at 05:52:57 PM EST


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