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he
XFL got all the news, but the real smashmouth ugliness was on display
elsewhere.
The
new Democratic party, under the tutelage of Terry
McAuliffe
looks a bit like the new football league though without any
redeeming entertainment value.
Instead, it's merely sleazy, in-your-face and on a search and destroy
mission. There we have it, the ultimate legacy of the Clinton administration.
McAuliffe obviously would like to be Vince McMahon, the hyperbolic
entrepreneur magnate that has made the World Wrestling Federation
one of the great success stories of the 1990s. McAuliffe has been
entrepreneurial in fundraising, managing to become a millionaire
himself while raising millions for Democrats. Of course, one of
the reasons why the WWF has become a success is that, in addition
to selling the "sport" (wink, wink) of pro-wrestling, McMahon creates
storylines of "good" wrestlers vs. "evil" wrestlers verbally bashing
each other in as outrageous ways as possible, scantily clad women
and double-entendres from announcers.
It's a tawdry spectacle yet it sells. Remarkably, this is
quite similar to what passed for political debate in the 1990s.
Bill Clinton and the Republican party engaged in a death-match for
the better part of that period. Thanks to Clinton's own lusts, an
endless array of women kept popping up to provide titillation for
the masses. His affair with Monica Lewinsky, being the proverbial
straw that broke the camel's back, helped create a climate where
discussions of DNA and stained blue dresses became regular around
America's dinner table and fodder for late-night comics.
Of course, Bill Clinton thrived in this environment. He was able
to "sell" himself to the public, while "selling" (with McAuliffe's
help) the White House to favored donors. Despite everything, he
departed office with the highest approval ratings of any president.
Of course, the public also disliked him as a person a sentiment
which is likely to grow as attention continues to focus on gifts,
pardons and what not. But, hey, Bill Clinton has always had a target
on his back. Match the "He Hate Me" nickname that adorned XFL running
back Rod Smart's jersey Saturday. Clinton has thrived on the contempt
of his enemies while demonizing them.
It is that last tactic that Terry McAuliffe has adopted as chairman
of a Democrat party that has neither the presidency nor at least
one chamber of Congress for the first time in nearly half a century.
Refusing the hand of bipartisanship that George W. Bush has extended,
McAuliffe asserted a scorched-earth approach:
He declared that the Republicans had stolen the election. "If Katherine
Harris, Jeb Bush, Jim Baker, and the Supreme
| McAuliffe
is planning on keeping Democrats in a perpetual state
of grievance. |
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Court hadn't tampered with the results, Al Gore would be president!"
Democrats must seek "
victory after denial, democracy after
Florida
and justice after the United States Supreme Court."
Someone would undoubtedly note that if there is any "denial" going
on here, it's from Democrats. That aside, this is a menacing development
in the American political process. It's not quite the hardball politics
that we've gotten used to over the years. Just like the XFL, this
looks like football, but it's really a whole different league.
McAuliffe is planning on keeping Democrats in a perpetual state
of grievance. Tactically, this is cunningly smart. Liberals have
mastered the status of victimization in recent years, thus Democrats
would be predisposed toward it. There is energy in aggrievement.
However, in the context of what is good for the country, this is
repugnant.
The focus of the grievance is not simply against the Bush administration
which many Democrats regard as lacking legitimacy
but also against the Supreme Court. McAuliffe doesn't care that
members of the liberal part of the group found the recount unconstitutional.
He charges the entire body with acting as a partisan tool of the
Republican party. It's a smashmouth slur, that, as Jim Gilmore stated
this weekend, questions the legitimacy of an equal branch of the
republic.
No, this doesn't quite reach the standard of treason, but McAuliffe
is dancing rather close to it. Of course, Democrats should be worrying
more about their new leader. McAuliffe doesn't have the Vince McMahon/Bill
Clinton talent for making demagoguery entertaining. Add the fact
that McAuliffe will undoubtedly be asked (as he was on Meet The
Press) constantly about possibly illegal Teamster/DNC fundraising
during the '96 presidential campaign.
The Democrats and the country are in for a long few years.
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