A Time For War

Filed in Delaware, National by on November 5, 2014

First off, I must admit, I was wrong. I was wrong in my national predictions. With all the polls in the competitive races close, within the margin of error and most within 2-3 points, I wrongly assumed our superior GOTV operation would make up the deficit like it had before. But our voters just did not turn out. And I am very pissed about that. Some of them are emo-progressives who feel it is their right to punish the party by not voting whenever they feel like the party has not been pure enough. Others of them just cannot be bothered unless the only politician that they know of, i.e. the national leader, i.e. the President, is on the ballot. To all of them I say, fuck you. I am almost tempted to argue that the Democrats in Washington should immediately repeal the entire social safety net, all regulations, everything that they take for granted, FDA, EPA, etc. etc. etc. and then let them all suffer horribly, just to prove to them that these elections matter, and that you actually are voting for policies and not people. Then I pull myself back from that. Because I know it is what the GOP wants. Not out of any respect or concern for my lazy and/or purist colleagues.

We lost last night for a very simple reason: we did not turn out our base voters. Now, why they did not turn out and what to do about that can and will be debated. But the only reason we lost is that we did not turn out. The proof of that was the Virginia Senate race and the Maryland Governor’s race. Neither were supposed to be close. Reputable polling firms on both showed clear Democratic leads. And yet, we lost one and almost lost another.

The good news about losing simply because our base did not turn out is that it is something entirely within our control to fix. And it makes the loss less devastating. Indeed, the pendulum is already starting swinging back to the left as we speak. And if the GOP wants to speed up the swing of that pendulum, then all they need to do is pretend that GOP policies (which they did not campaign on) were endorsed and vindicated last night. Go head, try to repeal Obamacare, try to pass more tax cuts for the rich, try to pass national abortion bans. Try to impeach the President. I dare you. You will be rudely awakened.

But I digress.

No, the real devastating losses are those when you do turn out your base, but the GOP also turns out theirs, and they win. That is depressing. That is when you question everything. That was what happened in 2004. It is a dark few months after that election. And as history showed, the light came round again.

And I was wrong in my local predictions. I thought the same voters voting for Chris Coons, John Carney and Matt Denn would also vote for Sean Barney and Brenda Mayrack. I kinda understand Barney losing. After the embarrassment that was Flowers, some voters may have just tossed the GOP a bone and said, hey look, let’s not go with another newcomer. But Wagner just mystifies me. He doesn’t do his job, and is an aging gadfly. And he wins. It is obvious the job is his until he dies or retires.

I correctly predicted, much to the protest of many of our Sussex colleagues, that Atkins (41st RD) and Venables (21st SD) would be go down to defeat. And I am not at all displeased with that outcome. It is preferable to have actual Republicans filing those seats rather than Democrats who always vote Republican on any issue of importance. Even if it denies the Democrats the super majority. I also correctly predicted that Kevin Hensley would win in the 9th. My only incorrect prediction in the General Assembly was that Rob Keesler would upset Gerald Brady in the 4th RD. He got 40%, forced Brady to campaign for the first time in years, and I predict he will be back.

Now… as for my President and the Democrats in Congress, which includes are Triple C Troika of Carper, Coons, and Carney, I have a few words for you. Instructions and demands, really.

First, Nancy Pelosi. Dead. Steny Hoyer. Dead. Chris Van Hollen. Dead. Harry Reid. Dead. Dick Durbin. Dead. Every single member of the Democratic Congressional Leadership must resign their posts today. Not their seats in Congress, but their leadership positions. They have had a nice run. The House Dem Leadership above held a majority for four years (2006-2010) after four years in the minority (2002-2006). Now they have had an additional four years in the mixed minority/majority (2010-2014) and we are poised for two more at least. Twelve years is enough for this entire leadership team. No, Steny and Dick and Chris, you all don’t promotions now that Harry and Nancy are out. You all are out. Time for a complete blood transfusion.

Second, running scared, away from issues, away from other people in your political party, does not insulate you in a negative political environment. It makes you look weaker than a wet noodle with a heart condition. Seriously, when you run away from past votes, from your very own political party, it makes you voters know you can be swayed. Stop running away from your party’s successes. Obamacare is the obvious example, and Allison Lundergan Grimes in the obvious candidate we are talking about here. She refuses to admit that she voted for Obama. She refused to campaign on Obamacare/Kentucky Kynect, the latter of which is the state exchange set up under Obamacare, which is immensely popular in the state and that has insured 400,000 Kentuckians. AND SHE RAN AWAY FROM IT, AND REFUSED TO SAY SHE VOTED FOR OBAMA. I am glad she lost and I want her and her entire campaign exiled from the Democratic Party for all time. If I can deport them to Mars I would. Damn wimps. The simple answer to that disqualifying question (and yes, Chuck Todd was right, it was disqualifying) “I was proud to vote for Barack Obama, who stands up for the middle class, who protects our Social Security and Medicare, and who is fighting to bring affordable health insurance to Kentuckians through Kynect. So I am damn proud of my vote and I would do it again if I could.”

That is how a real Democrat answers. And if some smarmy consultant you pay too much tells you that that answer will hurt you in the polls, after you punch that consultant directly in the face, you then fire that consultant. If you lose an election than you lose an election. But I’d rather lose as a Democrat going down fighting for what I believe in, than as some poll tested false representation of myself designed to obfuscate the fact that I am a Democrat. I mean, if you win by hiding what you believe, then your mandate is what exactly? To only behave like the guy or gal you just beat? To make all the sacrifices that are necessary in running for public office, you better do it standing for what you really believe in, rather than in what you do not.

Third, Brian Beutler lays out what the President must do now, and a replay of 2011 is not on the menu.

The concessions seemed then [in 2011 after the GOP won the House], and still seem to this day, like an error. But there was at least some logic to them. The Republican wave in 2010 was genuinely historic. In its wake, Obama had good reasons to wonder whether the voting public would still have his back if he resisted Republicans without giving their agenda a hearing. Counterfactuals are a tricky business, but as foolhardy as Obama’s 2011 strategy seems in hindsight, he and the Democrats recovered and won a satisfying victory in 2012.

None of that logic holds today. The past six years have given Obama no reason to believe Republicans are good faith bargaining partners. But even if they had, his political salvation, and the best interest of his allies isn’t in cutting conservative-leaning deals with the fully Republican Congress. It’s in the kind of partisan governing and campaigning he embraced after Republicans nearly sabotaged the economy in July 2011.

Republicans had an excellent night Tuesday. But they didn’t roar through the gates like they did in 2010. The argument that the 2014 Senate midterms, clustered heavily in the south and plains states, are a grand repudiation of a presidency that, while extremely productive, has been in check for four years, rings hollow. [..]

But he has no reason to concern himself with whether conciliation or combat is a wiser re-election strategy. His twinned political responsibilities now are cementing his own legacy, and shoring up his political base, so he can hand it off to the next leader of the Democratic Party. He can’t do that by undermining his own achievements and sidestepping the issues his core supporters care about.

And this is where Congressional Democrats’ reflexive tendency to recoil from Obama when he’s down will come into tension with their own best interests. Running away from Obama might—might—make sense for Southern Democrats running in a midterm. But in 2016, the Democratic nominee, and the Democrats riding her coattails, won’t have that luxury. Obama’s base is still vast and loyal, and won’t necessarily vote with the same enthusiasm for a Democratic Party that tries to pretend he and his presidency aren’t particularly relevant.

Running away from Obama did not make sense in a midterm. All who did lost anyway. If they did not run away, then maybe the base turns out, and then maybe they win. So Southern Democrats can go fuck themselves.

It is time to go to war.

The first thing the President can do is name Tom Perez as his next Attorney General and demand confirmation hearings and a vote during the lame duck session. Yes, the Republicans will scream. Who the fuck cares? If the Republicans were in the same boat, it is what they would do. Democrats need to be as cutthroat as Republicans. The current Senate is in office until January 2, 2015. Use it. Who cares if the Beltway elite bellow about it. Pass anything else you want during the lame duck too. Any other nominations. Any legislation that will not be filibustered. Present it as cleaning up the business of the old Congress. Which is what Mitch McConnell already wanted to do before his Majority Leadership began. Accept his offer and proceed. Any Democrat who disagrees can leave the party or resign.

Second, the reason why the economy is a concern for the public despite the enormous progress and success the economy has witnessed since 2009 is because the middle class still feels squeezed due to income inequality. Hillary and Obama should do a pow wow on this. She has already indicated it will be a campaign theme of hers, and he can position his coming vetos (and there better be many of them) on fighting for the middle class and against income inequality.

Third, the Democrats will now pick up the tool of obstruction. Every bill must get 60 votes. Every piece of legislation. The rules Republicans employed must be the same that we now employ. Any Democrat that disagrees can leave the party or resign.

They will do best not to fracture on the assumption that the public just gave the hushed Republican policy agenda a vote of confidence, but to oppose it with confidence that when it’s laid against the Democratic agenda two year from now, the public will reject it. That means standing pat if and when Republicans try to slash taxes, weaken environmental regulations, damage Obamacare, and maximize the deportation of low-priority offenders. It means not voting in politically expedient ways and hiding behind Obama’s veto, but borrowing from Majority Leader-designate Mitch McConnell, who famously boasted that during Obama’s first term, Republicans “worked very hard to keep our fingerprints off [Democratic] proposals, because we thought—correctly, I think—that the only way the American people would know that a great debate was going on was if the measures were not bipartisan.”

That the new Democratic minority will be more liberal than the outgoing majority will make this task easier, as will the fact that the next Senate election will be nearly as daunting for Republicans as this one was for Democrats.

Embrace the Veto. Coordinate with Hillary. Obstruct like a Rethug. Fight like you believe in something. Stop running scared.

Do all that, and hell, you may even win the House back with the Senate in 2016.

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  1. Jason330 says:

    Overall. Yes. I agree.

    But – good luck keeping Carper, Coons and Carney’s fingerprints off Republican proposals. Two of them just ran and won and being willing… no eager…. to get ass-fucked by the GOP.

    Also, it seems all to obvious that Obama will have to fight. And yet I only give that about 50/50 odds of happening.

  2. cassandra m says:

    Actually, the first person who needs to lose a job is Debbie Wasserman-Schultz. Bring back Howard Dean or get someone in there who know how to bring the ruckus.

  3. ben says:

    I dont think the Dems can get away with being cuthroat. You need good, strong, UNIFIED messaging in order to do that, and the Chris Coons of the world will be the first to jump ship as soon at Alex Jones starts screaming tyranny.
    I dont know what the answer is. The GOP is that school bully who the principle never sees, but comes down hard on you the first time you stand up to the abuse. It’s insane and unfair, and i dont think there is a way out of it without some sort of national conscienceness shift.

  4. SussexAnon says:

    “Embrace the Veto. Coordinate with Hillary. Obstruct like a Rethug. Fight like you believe in something. Stop running scared.”

    And stay on the fucking message. If Ds practiced fact based message discipline like Rs do with falsehoods, imagine where this nation would be.

  5. Joanne Christian says:

    Well, if this helps in your GOTV. A very nice, maternal sounding conversation woman had phoned here twice from the Dems (she did identify) (and it may have been the same woman), asking if we were voting, did we need help with a ride etc..It was as if she would be running an errand, did we need anything…..very pleasant. Never sounded scripted. It’s 6 days later and my husband is still talking about that very nice, unhurried woman, who calmly and friendly-like made her assigned GOTV calls SUPERBLY. Now, that left a nice note—and we are ticket splitters.

  6. JeremyF says:

    Regarding Barney and Mayrack… reasonable people want balance in government, and those are the two statewide offices that most cry out for some form of balance. Democrats that I know who voted a split ticket used that as their reasoning, and I agree with it.

    I am optimistic that Delawareans now understand that each party should have a role in how the state is governed.

  7. Delaware Dem says:

    That’s nice to know Joanne… I will be at Dem HQ tonight and will pass that along.

  8. Jason330 says:

    “…the first person who needs to lose a job is Debbie Wasserman-Schultz. Bring back Howard Dean or get someone in there who know how to bring the ruckus.”

    Yes.

  9. Delaware Dem says:

    Good sign that the President has wisely followed my and Brian’s advice, from a liveblog of the President’s press conference:

    But Obama also says that he is sure Congress will pass bill he “cannot sign” and that he will take “actions” that Congress “will not like.” Nonetheless, he says he wants to find common ground when possible. Two examples: Tax reform to increase investment in our infrastructure and exports.

  10. Delaware Dem says:

    Excellent:

    Obama says he is requesting this Congress to provide funds to fight Ebola, an AUMF to fight ISIL, and a spending bill to fund government through the end of the fiscal year, which ends in September 2015. By this Congress, he means the current one, before Republicans take over two months from now

  11. Delaware Dem says:

    More excellent. The President seems to be in the right frame of mind:

    President Obama isn’t necessarily sounding combative here, but he isn’t adopting the “I took a shellacking” pose that he did in 2010, at least not in his prepared remarks. Now we’re on to questions.

    The first question is about the “devastating” election results from last night. The president reminds the questioner that he was elected too—and that he was elected by the whole country. “The key is to find areas where the agenda that I put forward […] the key is to make sure that the ideas that I have overlap somewhere with ideas that Republicans have. There’s not going to be perfect overlap.” When there’s a disagreement, “I’m going to keep on arguing” for my view, says Obama. Nice.

  12. Delaware Dem says:

    Says Republicans should “put forward a very specific agenda” and then move forward with him on areas where “we agree.” This is definitely not a tail-between-my-legs posture. It’s saying that if Republicans will work with me, I’ll work with them. But if they won’t, I can’t.

    Again: “The American people are better off than before I was president.” 100% correct, and bound to piss off the GOP. And definitely not tail-between-my-legs posture.

  13. Delaware Dem says:

    “I am not going to wait.” — Obama on executive actions.

  14. Delaware Dem says:

    “In terms of immigration, I have consistently said that it is my profound interest and preference to have Congress act on a comprehensive immigration bill.” Talks about Senate bill as being a good bill to demonstrate what he’d like to see Congress do. However, he says, Boehner told him he couldn’t get it through the House—even though Boehner, Obama says, wanted to pass it. As a result, Obama says he told Boehner that in the absence of Congressional action, he would take executive action to do as much as he can to deal with the immigration problem. “That’s a commitment I made to John Boehner, that I would act in the absence of action, so before the end of the year I will take whatever lawful actions” are possible.

  15. ben says:

    It seems he is daring them to start Impeachment proceedings. I say bring it.

  16. pandora says:

    He’s daring them to govern (impeaching him is a given 😉 ). Pass the popcorn, because I don’t see that happening. The real winner last night was Ted Cruz.

  17. Bane says:

    “My only incorrect prediction in the General Assembly was that Rob Keesler would upset Gerald Brady in the 4th RD. He got 40%, forced Brady to campaign for the first time in years, and I predict he will be back”

    Not sure if you’re talking about the same Gerald Brady I’ve met, but that guy is always campaigning. Even when he doesn’t have a strong opponent.

  18. bamboozer says:

    Or in short: This is war, stop pretending it’s not and fight, fight , fight. And while your at it fight smart and marginalize the weak and foolish elements of the party, thus sidelining the whole Delaware delegation. I could not agree more, and yes, I voted for Bernie August. Might I add with glee.

  19. puck says:

    There is the tantalizing possibility that an immigration bill could be better with compromise. Democratic social activists want amnesty; Republicans and corporate Dems want a flood of new high-tech and other highly paid immigrants. If both sides give up a portion of those demands, we might end up with a good bill. Most likely though we’ll end up with both and call it compromise.

    Unfortunately “comprehensive immigration reform” still doesn’t include rules for good corporate citizenship and accountability.

  20. Tom Kline says:

    So many excuses flying around here. Let’s face it Obama fucked up big time…

  21. puck says:

    What did Obama do that was so egregious? I was very disillusioned with his first term, but in his second term he seemed to pull his head out of his ass. While he is no FDR, I have not much to complain about. Given the state of our Congressional Dems, Obama may be one of the best Democrats in elected office.

  22. The real question to me is: What the fuck’s the Democratic Party, and why am I still a member?

    The Delaware Democratic Party does not reflect the reasons that I have been a Democrat for my adult life. It doesn’t stand up for the little guy, those who are down on their luck, those who have not been given a fair shake. Instead, we have ‘reach across the aisle’ greedy cash cows who can’t wait to emasculate Social Security and who belong to Chamber of Commerce front organizations masquerading as public policy think tanks. Oh, and elected officials (Carper) who heap more misery on those forced to declare bankruptcy b/c MBNA said so.

    Let’s face facts. The Delaware Democratic Party and, to an even greater degree, whatever passes for the national Democratic Party, stands with, instead of up to, corporate greed. Gotta fund those campaigns somehow.

    While there are many worthy Party members, the Democratic Party is, like the R’s, a corporate enabler, just w/o the loonies.

    Why should a progressive or a liberal even have reason to belong to this Party moving forward?

    For me, it is only in the oft-chance that someone like Howard Dean, maybe Elizabeth Warren or Amy Klobuchar, runs a real populist campaign. Otherwise, Hillary in 2016? Talk about an enthusiasm gap. The R’s could well win the White House.

    FWIW, I’m tired of hearing how we should join the local committee and…what? Overthrow whatever elected corporate D who is serving in the General Assembly? Good luck. Been there, done that. For years and years. Even the one group of progressive Dean D’s, PDD, was effectively taken over by those who would promote themselves at the expense of creating an inclusionary progressive movement.

    I’m tired of criticism about how we should fightfightfight for the soul of the Party. That soul has been bought and paid for. We’ve been marginalized. I won’t vote for those bastards any more. And anyone who would presume to criticize those of us who won’t might do well to ask themselves why they still call themselves Democrats.

  23. John Manifold says:

    Democrats underperformed badly among older voters and blue collar whites.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2014/11/05/what-really-went-wrong-for-democrats/

    Amy is not far from TRC on the vote chart.

    http://www.nationaljournal.com/2013-vote-ratings

  24. Norinda says:

    “We’ve been marginalized. I won’t vote for those bastards any more. And anyone who would presume to criticize those of us who won’t might do well to ask themselves why they still call themselves Democrats.”
    I agree.
    It’s like Picking the ‘best’ of 2 Evils. What’s next for 2016? Things may only get worse before they get better.

  25. Jason330 says:

    El Somnambulo nailed it.