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September 24, 2011
The Democrat Handbook: Playing Like It's 1936 All Over AgainBy James W. LucasIt is now clear (as if there was ever any doubt) that the Democrats will be reverting to their traditional narrative for the 2012 elections. President Obama's tax-the-rich fiscal proposal and Democrats' congressional district by-election campaigns this year show that the Dems will be relying on class-warfare demagoguery. However, we're at a point in history where the Democrats actually have good reason to go to their good old class warfare demagoguery playbook.
The last time a Democrat president won reelection with unemployment as bad as predicted for 2012 was in 1936. With the New Deal having failed to solve the Depression, Franklin Roosevelt resorted to a virulent anti-business campaign, denouncing "economic royalists" as responsible for the Depression's persistence. In 1936, the strategy was spectacularly successful. Roosevelt won by a large margin over Republican Alfred Landon, the Democrats made large gains in Congress, and Democrats have been using the class warfare playbook ever since.
Today we face a situation with many similarities to 1936. We are in the worst economic downturn since the Depression, a Democrat program of Keynesian big-government spending and regulation has failed to solve it, and the Democrats are resorting to their old demagogic tactics to try to preserve their power. How can Republicans avoid -- and indeed, reverse -- their fate from 1936?
One answer is to use the Democrats' own narrative against them. After all, Democrats are the party of the fat cats. It is the Democrats who cynically and hypocritically pretend to attack big business while actually promoting centralized government power in which only wealthy and powerful interests have a voice. See for yourself:
Since the facts and economics are on their side, conservatives tend to focus on careful quantitative arguments. However, these have little impact if they are not embedded in a broader explanatory narrative. In my book, Timely Renewed: Amendments to Restore the American Constitution, I use the example of organic farming to illustrate how big-government regulations made for and by big agribusiness suppress the local organic farmers beloved by all true back-to-the-earth progressives. I highly recommend organic farming guru Joel Salatin's book Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal: War Stories from the Local Food Front for more on this example.
The narrative is short and sweet. Power to the people means getting power close to the people. Special-interest-loving, Democrat-dominated Washington, D.C. is as far away from the people as you can get.
However, a counterpoint to the false traditional Democrat "Big Government is the Friend of the Little Guy" narrative is not enough. There needs to be a new narrative. What does R stand for? Many positive words come to mind -- "resurgence," "revitalization," "renewal." However, the one I like is "restoration" (I like it so much I used it in the subtitle of my book). R stands for the restoration of a Republic where government lives within its means, where entrepreneurs are free to invent and build, where our posterity's future is going to be better than the present.
The Democrat demagogues will reply that such an R actually stands for "reactionary." But we do not apologize for reacting against a present based on loading future generations with unbearable debt, ever-expanding government power, and social hostility to private entrepreneurship. We are for recovery of our Republic through the restoration of its founding principle of limiting and controlling the power of the state.
Of course, to accomplish this, Republicans will have to give up their own hypocritical participation in the Democrats' corrupt system. And this they must do, for the sake of the real little guy: the people.
James W. Lucas is an attorney and the author of Timely Renewed: Amendments to Restore the American Constitution. He blogs at www.timelyrenewed.com.
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