I have an electoral death-wish; I've only voted for a single winner in the presidential elections since 1960 and that was my vote for James Earl Carter, Jr. (D-GA) in 1976. Along with former Congressman Tim Roemer (D-IN), I have had my fill (and then some) of the Moron-in-Chief. However, as I look among the Jackass hopefuls, I am not inspired. I watched Senator Ken Salazar (D-CO) on a talking head news show yesterday. He was bloviating about the current "gas crisis" and I found him inarticulate and banal. However, Salazar is a rocket scientist when compared to Senator Pat Roberts (R-KS) who made the news show circuit during the flap about illegal wiretapping done by Dub's minions at the NSA. Senator Roberts is a featherweight champeen in his own right. This AM, former Congressman Roemer offered a campaign slogan for the Jackasses in 2006 and 2008. However, I don't see a Harry S Truman among the potential Jackass presidential nominees. If the Dumbos nominate Condi (What a thought!) to face The Hillster as an estrogen counterpoise in 2008, I will look toward the Vegetarian party or some such source of loony amusement. I wouldn't vote for either of the distaff frontrunners because they are both inauthentic. If this is (fair & balanced) ennui, so be it.
[x NYTimes]
Enough Already
By Tim Roemer
Americans have clearly had enough of the Bush administration's record: 7 in 10 say the nation is headed in the wrong direction. But with the 2006 Congressional elections fast approaching, Democrats must not get so irrationally exuberant that they lapse into old, bad habits.
In January, President Bush's adviser Karl Rove outlined the issues he believes will lead Republican candidates to victory in November: national security, the economy and taxes, and the courts. Democrats cannot allow Republicans to define the terms of the debate. Instead, they should take a page from history and from a different Karl.
In 1946, Karl Frost, an advertising executive, suggested a simple slogan to the Massachusetts Republican Committee: "Had Enough? Vote Republican!" Frost recognized that these simple words could unite his national party and blame its opponents, who controlled Congress, for causing or failing to solve the many problems facing the country, including meat shortages, economic difficulties and labor unrest. The strategy worked: in 1946, both houses of Congress flipped.
Sixty years later, Democrats would be smart to turn Karl Frost's slogan on Karl Rove's strategy.
"Had Enough? Vote Democratic!" is a slogan that spotlights the many mistakes in Iraq, the mismanagement of Hurricane Katrina and the mangling of fiscal responsibility with "bridges to nowhere." Indeed, you can see and hear Democratic candidates rallying their voters at Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinners with a passionate and rhythmic chorus:
"The administration said Iraqis would greet us with roses as liberators, yet our soldiers are attacked with homemade bombs and rocket-propelled grenades. Had Enough? Vote Democratic.
"The administration said it was prepared for a hurricane in New Orleans, yet our government's feeble response prompted Bangladesh to offer us $1 million in aid. Had Enough? Vote Democratic!
"The administration said it would bring competency to our federal budget, yet our nation faces catastrophic deficits. Had Enough? Vote Democratic!"
And if you want to fire up the base, you can string together references to Jack Abramoff, Abu Ghraib and the Dubai ports deal. "Had Enough?" works well on classic campaign materials like buttons and bumper stickers while its simplicity makes it a cinch to "go viral" on the Internet.
"Had enough?" will speak to both Democrats and disillusioned Republicans. Liberals can use "Had Enough?" to reach out to voters enraged over the incompetent management of Iraq. Moderates might use "Had Enough?" to persuade swing voters on fiscal issues. And the implicit rejection of neoconservative politics will appeal to all voters who seek to spurn tainted Republican candidates.
"Had Enough?" also pre-empts Democrats' worst habits. Too often we've made campaigns complicated and policy-heavy. We love to unveil 40-page position papers and wonky diagrams. "Had Enough?" clears a broad path through such minutiae. "Public sentiment is everything," Abraham Lincoln said 150 years ago. "With public sentiment, nothing can fail; without it nothing can succeed."
Karl Frost's simple words can serve as the cavalry charge to help win the coming electoral battles — something Democrats are in an incredibly strong position to do. But make no mistake: new ideas matter. Democrats will also need the artillery of a disciplined, focused set of core proposals to complement their criticism of Republican excesses.
As we head into the midterm elections, Democrats should finally understand, as Lincoln and Frost did before, that you must win the majority before you can make public policy.
Tim Roemer is a former Democratic congressman from Indiana. and he was a member of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, better known as the 9/11 Commission.
Copyright © 2006 The New York Times
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