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This article originally provided by
The Washington Post
February 4, 2006
Republican Wedge Issues, 2006 Edition
By Harold Meyerson
Saturday, February 4, 2006; A17
Old lies die hard. We grow inured to the administration's
howlers in defense of its Iraq policy, so much so that the
preposterous case the president made in his State of the
Union address for our continued presence in Iraq went almost
unnoticed. But he actually said this:
"A sudden withdrawal of our forces from Iraq would
abandon our Iraqi allies to death and prison, [and] would
put men like bin Laden and Zarqawi in charge of a strategic
country. . . ."
Is there one person anywhere inside the administration
who really believes that Abu Musab Zarqawi's murderous band
of outsiders would emerge as rulers over the vastly larger
and very well-armed Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish legions if we
pulled out? The same band of outsiders that tried to stop
the Sunnis from voting in December's parliamentary election
and held their turnout down, in some provinces, to a mere 90
percent?
We've heard this one before. Before the war, the
president told us that Saddam Hussein was an ally and
co-conspirator of Osama bin Laden -- all evidence to the
contrary. Now bin Laden is poised to take over the country
if we leave -- all evidence to the contrary.
I don't agree with it, but there is a serious case to be
made for our continuing presence in Iraq as a buffer and
negotiator between the Shiite and Sunni populations. But
George W. Bush said absolutely nothing on Tuesday night
about the real tensions that threaten to pull Iraq apart and
our role in trying to suppress them. Nearly three years
after he took us to war, the president's justification for
our intervention is nonsensical by every measure save one:
the political. The only issue on which even 50 percent of
Americans say Bush is doing a good job is fighting
terrorism, so the war in Iraq must be conflated with the war
on bin Laden.
By the measure of his past speeches, however, it was a
perfunctory case that the president made for the war on
Tuesday; indeed, we have to go back in time to BC (Before
Clinton) to find a State of the Union as spiritless and
themeless as this one. As conservatives promptly noted, what
was missing from the text was the laissez-faire zeal that
had previously suffused Bush domestic policy. Bush didn't
even make much of a case for his health savings accounts, to
which he devoted just a single sentence. Time was when he
would have said that Americans should handle their own
accounts. But Bush said that last year when he sought to
privatize Social Security, and his countrymen recoiled.
Indeed, the only case for which Bush summoned his
signature cockiness was his argument for warrantless
surveillance. "If there are people inside our country who
are talkin' with al Qaeda," he said (and the telltale
dropped "g" shows that Bush means business), "we want to
know about it, because we will not sit back and wait to be
hit again." This is, as Karl Rove made clear the week
before, the one issue on which the president intends to hit
the Democrats again and again. For a president given to
attack lines, it was really the only attack line in his
entire speech -- a point surely not lost on the increasingly
anxious Republican lawmakers in the room.
For, other than Bush's assertion that he's tougher than
the Democrats in the post-Sept. 11 world, his speech
provided precisely nothing on which Republican members of
Congress can campaign this year. Switchgrass? Opposition to
hybrid human-animal cloning? (Republicans Oppose "Island of
Dr. Moreau"!) Which means they have to come before the
voters running on what -- the war? The economy? Health care?
Anybody out there got a theme that won't immediately
backfire?
I fear they think they do. As their poll numbers continue
to decline, I suspect an increasing number of embattled
Republican incumbents will campaign for the criminalization
of the 11 million undocumented workers in the United States.
This will cause a rift with those low-wage employers that
are a mainstay of Republican finance (agribusiness and
restaurants among them), and won't overjoy party strategists
such as Rove, who fear the long-term effect of such
campaigns on Latino voting. After all, then-California Gov.
Pete Wilson's support for Proposition 187 in 1994, which
denied public services to undocumented immigrants and their
children, cost the party so much Latino support that the
Republicans have been marginalized in that state ever since.
But at the time, it also enabled Wilson, who had been
trailing in the polls, to win reelection. A war on
immigrants might backfire in the long run, but these guys
are on the ballot in November.
Warrantless wiretapping and immigrant bashing as the
Republican wedge issues of '06? Well, what else can they run
on?
Their competence? Their ethics?
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