Democrats Need a Karl Rove

What follows here is an op-ed I wrote for The Hill newspaper today that makes the case for Democrats to adopt a conviction politics of principle, courage and tenacity.

With all of the damage that Bush and Rove do to America, they are uncompromising, aggressive and single-minded in pursuing their agenda while Democrats are in a state of perpetual retreat on matters of first principle.

From Sept. 11, 2001, until today, the Bush and Rove strategy has been to relentlessly pound a state of fear into the American people to justify seizures of executive power that are unprecedented in American history. Congress as an institution and Democrats as a party have failed to champion a politics of courage, and in fact, have become fearful and timid themselves.

In recent weeks the Democratic Congress has surrendered to the Iraq escalation before the Memorial Day recess and surrendered to the expansion of presidential power and domestic eavesdropping without the battles that could have and should have been fought and won.

Even now, elements of the Democratic national security establishment such as Kenneth Pollack and Michael O’Hanlon, with a history of being dead wrong in their support of the Iraq war from 2002, are again counseling capitulation with their advice to Democratic leaders to continue the Iraq escalation well into 2008.

There is a deadwood in the national security establishment generally, and in the Democratic national security establishment, which is trapped in old thinking and old politics, and is often allied with a Democratic consultant class in Washington that counsels capitulation in the face of the onslaught of fear politics by Bush and Rove.

It is high time and long overdue for Democrats to show courage, clarity, and principle and to directly challenge the politics of fear and to directly join the debate that should have begun long ago. What follows is the op-ed as it was published in the paper today:

Democrats need a Karl Rove

By Brent Budowsky
August 15, 2007

The Bush-Rove vision is so daring it is breathtaking.

George Bush and Karl Rove seek one-party domination of American politics, with executive domination over the legislative and judicial branches of American government.

They move to pack the Supreme Court with unitary power believers, bully the Congress into submissively accepting executive branch encroachments, destroy the system of checks and balances and impose radical changes in the American government that are the antithesis of what the Founding Fathers intended.

They seek to change the very psychology of Americanism, pounding fear into the American people, courts, Congress and Democratic leaders since Sept. 11, 2001.

Posing the choice as submitting to Big Brother or being exterminated by mushroom clouds, they have pummeled the republic for six years with a non-stop, 24/7 propaganda campaign of fearmongering that is unprecedented in American history.

George Bush is a lame duck? With an iron will Bush negated the 2006 election by pushing through an escalation of the Iraq war, expanded executive powers over Congress and new powers for foreign and domestic surveillance.

Congressional Republicans were reduced to sycophantic supporters while they groused in the cloakrooms that Bush could destroy their party. Prior to the Memorial Day recess, Congressional Democrats offered unconditional surrender on the Iraq escalation, and just before the August recess they followed with unconditional surrender on eavesdropping.

Bush and Rove are conviction politicians with an iron will to turn their convictions into policy and power. They are fearless when pushing their program even in the face of the American Constitution, federal law and national elections.

By contrast, Democratic leaders surround themselves with cadres of consultants, pollsters and career operatives who are not conviction politicians, but are tactical maneuverers without any core of substance or steel.

The Democrats’ leading presidential campaign strategist lost every presidential election from 1972 until 2004, and has advised a long list of major Democrats to send to troops to die in Iraq for reasons of political calculation.

If national Democrats disclosed the private advice of their consultants and operatives over the last five years, who would be more embarrassed — those who offered this advice or those who followed it?

Even today, it is the breed of Democrat who advised leaders to support the Iraq war in 2002 who advise them to support the escalation into 2008.

Democrats lost in 2000, 2002 and 2004. They finally won in 2006 and immediately began surrendering their authority, unable to resist one of the most unpopular presidents in history, with the predictable result that the Democratic Congress is one of the most unpopular in history.

Democrats need a Karl Rove, someone who can outline a grand vision and pursue it with the toughness, tenacity, courage, fearlessness and will to win that Rove possesses.

Democrats need what Americans want: a conviction politics that is principled, fearless and tenacious and projects
confidence and strength to voters hungry for change.

The vision is clear: a realigning election in 2008 with a Democratic president and Democratic Congress to establish one of those great eras of American optimism and reform.

Democrats could run a national “Morning in America” television ad that attacks the Bush failures and abuses, the Republican obstructionism that blockades change; and offers an uplifting panorama of the America that will be, with change.

However: Leaders lead, and the battle must be waged on the floor of Congress with a courage and tenacity that is lacking today.

Democrats can defeat the politics of fear and inspire the nation to bravery, but only if they demonstrate bravery themselves and challenge Americans to be larger and more noble than the darker impulses of the Bush and Rove era.

A Democratic Rove would know that it is not enough to oppose the falsehoods; it is now imperative to trust the people with the truth. For Democrats: no more surrenders, no more fear, no more retreats, no more maneuvers.

Democrats represent a majority of the country, with a majority in the Congress. If they fight with the focus and determination of Bush and Rove, they will win a victory worthy of Kennedy and Roosevelt.

Tags Conviction Democratic Party Dismissal of United States Attorneys controversy George Bush George W. Bush Karl Rove Karl Rove Karl Rove in the George W. Bush administration Person Party Plame affair timeline Politics Politics of the United States The Truth United States

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