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in another era February 2001 the Democratic National
Committee's winter meeting in Washington was a rompin' stompin'
affair. There was plenty of drama surrounding a challenge by former
Atlanta mayor Maynard Jackson to Terry McAuliffe, the Clinton moneyman
who was a cinch to become chairman. After soothing Jackson's feelings
and giving him a big job title, McAuliffe won the campaign for chairman,
and he devoted his first big speech to an extended wail about the
2000 campaign. "We won that election," he shouted to an
audience made up of party activists. "If Katherine Harris,
Jeb Bush, Jim Baker, and the Supreme Court hadn't tampered with
the results, Al Gore would be president, George Bush would be back
in Austin, and John Ashcroft would be home reading Southern Partisan
magazine!" The crowd roared with approval.
McAuliffe promised
never to forget Florida. "We will transform the anger about
Florida into energy about politics," he said. "We will
prove there is victory after denial, democracy after Florida . .
. and we will show George Bush the door in 2004!" The crowd
roared even louder.
Last weekend
the DNC held another winter meeting, and it was a much quieter affair.
McAuliffe spoke again, beginning with a statement of war unity with
the Republican White House. "We stand side-by-side with President
Bush and our armed forces," he said, "in their effort
to root out terrorism and make the world safe for all freedom-loving
people." After
that brief show of unity, McAuliffe laid out a laundry list of complaints
against Bush on the usual Democratic economic themes. He also hit
Republicans for "unleash[ing] their attack dogs" on Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle. And he whacked White House aide Karl
Rove for suggesting that Republicans will benefit politically from
the administration's handling of the war on terrorism.
It was a textbook example of current Democratic strategic thinking,
in which it is politically permissible to go after the president
on domestic issues while declaring solidarity with him on the war.
But amid all the attacks on George W. Bush in McAuliffe's speech
Saturday, one issue was noticeably absent: Not once did McAuliffe
say the word "Florida." In fact, he made no reference
to the election of 2000 at all, and mentioned Al Gore just once,
almost in passing, when he praised the "values . . . that powered
the Clinton-Gore agenda."
Indeed, the
disputed election, which was such a crowd-pleaser just a year ago,
disappeared nearly completely from the podium on the final day of
the DNC winter meeting. House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt briefly
urged Democrats to make sure "that the kind of elections we
had in Florida and other places around this country last year in
2000 don't happen again." But otherwise, Florida was gone.
Even the T-shirt and button sellers didn't
seem to care, beyond pushing a few "Re-Elect Gore in 2004"
bumper stickers.
It was obvious
well before September 11 that the general public no longer cared
about the disputed election and the alleged illegitimacy of the
Bush presidency. What was striking about the DNC winter meeting
was that it was no longer necessary even to give lip service to
Florida when speaking before the party's hardest-core, most die-hard
activists. Yes, the war is a factor, but it didn't stop McAuliffe
from attacking Bush on taxes, Social Security, Medicare, and other
issues. Instead, it seems that McAuliffe and Democratic strategists
have realized that after public indifference, a fizzled media recount,
and failed books on the topic, there is simply no evidence that
even the party faithful care about Florida any more.
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