“It’s Morning Again in America.”
Obama
consistently posed the same question Ronald Reagan asked in this landmark
television commercial from his winning re-election campaign in 1984, “Why would
we ever want to return to where we were less than four short years ago?”
Seven
elections later, America has responded the same way: we don’t!
We’ve re-elected a president who has faced a multitude of more complex
issues than the economic issues Reagan based this TV commercial on. And been confronted with a congress dedicated
to the goal their House Leader, Mitch McConnell, stated at the outset, “The single most important thing we want to
achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.”
As so
many Republicans claimed following the 2010 congressional elections, “The
American people have spoken!” Indeed
they have.
The
Republican failure was not due to a uniquely brilliant Obama campaign, although
it did resonate on several important core issues. Nor did they fail because of a lack of
spending, or a lack of focus on key swing states. The Republican failure was
not because of tactical mistakes, as Newt Gingrich is asserting. Nor do they need to reassess their strategy,
as he is urging – at least that is not their primary problem.
Romney
lost because the majority of Americans rejected fundamental Republican values
and the very things they stand for.
Obama’s
re-election is a testament to the outright rejection of a set of positions and
values that run counter to everything America once stood for, rejection of a
party whose platform was dragged too far to the right, and whose stance on big
business, the economy, immigration, taxation, women's rights, government's role
in our society, education, global warming and green energy, same-sex marriage,
a trickle-down economic theory that has already failed dramatically,
twice, catering to the rich, foreign policy, short-term responses to long-term
issues and more - all of them rejected by the majority of Americans, and
most of them long before this season's campaigning even began.
The
rejection of a man who was willing to say absolutely anything – including
outright lies - to appease the current political flow, as he saw it - first the
Tea Party and later the center right - all of it seemingly guided by a single
ego-driven compulsion to be crowned president. And a myopic would-be
underling who preached Ayn Rand without fully realizing what she stood for (or
that the vast majority of his supporters would likely not know who he was
talking about), and went on to contribute his own set of lies to the party
platform.
The
rejection of a once great grand old party whose legitimate conservative values
have been corrupted by emotionally-charged extremists who haven't the
first clue how to fix anything they have complained about.
A
rejection dramatically underscored by the defeats Todd Akin, Linda McMahon,
Scott Brown, Richard Mourdock. Amplified by the fact that neither Romney
nor Ryan carried their own home states! Underscored by the fact that
virtually every voting demographic out there went for Obama, except one - older
white men. In fact if you compare the demographic and psychographic
makeup of the states Obama won vs the states Romney won, well, they differ
dramatically, and say a lot about the glaring chasm between the two parties and
our country. So does the fact that Obama dominated with urban voters,
Romney with rural.
This
country would benefit, again, from a healthy balance with a Republican party
that once upon a time was center-right, and committed to solving issues, thru
compromise when necessary, and who at least represented a reasoned
alternative - not the party they are today, openly committed to limiting
Obama to a single term, no matter the cost. Well, it didn’t work, so
now what?
Obama
has us on the right track, generally - his intentions are certainly honorable -
and now his efforts have been re-endorsed by much of America, even
though many of us are hoping he'll be able to do a lot more than he's done
to date. The single primary reason he hasn't been able to, and won't be
able to, is if the Republican congress continues to be beholden to a Tea Party
and Norquist mentality and refuses to consider reasonable solutions and
compromises. If they continue to dig their heels in, the Republicans are
destined to remain the minority party for a long time to come. Obama has
demonstrated a willingness to compromise. Are the Republicans?
Had
Romney won we would have owed the rest of the world an apology, an explanation
that what he represents is not America, nor do Akin, McMahon, Mourdock.
As it stands, we should still apologize for allowing them to get so
damned close.
Above
all, we remain a divided nation. The senate gets a bit more Democratic,
likely given their broader constituencies, the house a bit more Republican,
probably a result of narrower, more isolated bases. I agree with the description
of Obama's re-election as not so much a mandate as one of renewed hope that
he'll be able to take better advantage of this second chance.
Hope,
indeed, that they've all gotten the message.
Tim
Arnold
Croton
on Hudson, NY
7 Nov
2012
www.possible20.com
tim@possible20.com
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