Clinton's Embarrassing Flop in Iowa Exposes Dem Leaders' Folly
by Dave Lindorff
The real message of the Iowa caucus yesterday was that the long-operative Clintonian/Democratic Leadership Council assumption that the independent or unaffiliated voter bloc is composed of conservative-leaning, dim-witted and easily manipulated people has got it all wrong.
In fact, in Iowa, where unaffiliated voters are free to participate in either a Democratic or Republican caucus, 41 percent of those people voted not for the conservative, tough-talking “centrist†Hillary Clinton. They voted instead for the black, nominally anti-war candidate, Barack Obama.
Another significant percentage of independents went for another progressive-sounding candidate, John Edwards. Clinton only got an embarrassing 17 percent of the unaffiliated vote.
The implications of this failure on her part are enormous when it comes to next November’s general election.
If
Democratic voters in the upcoming primaries, especially in states like
Pennsylvania, where independents are excluded from the voting, end up
giving the nomination to Clinton, she will almost certainly end up
forfeiting much of the independent vote, just as both Al Gore and John
Kerry did in the last two presidential elections.
The reality
is that many, if not a majority of unaffiliated voters are not at all
conservative (or dim-witted). What they are is cynical about the
current state of Tweedle-Dum/Tweedle Dee politics in America. They see
both the Democratic and Republican parties as being of, by and for the
rich and often they don’t even see the point in voting. (They are, in
other words, in many ways more politically savvy than many registered
Democratic voters, who refuse to acknowledge this reality!)
Because
of the disastrous course of the last seven years under the Bush/Cheney
administration, these independents are willing, as they showed in 2006,
to give it a shot and vote for Democrats IF (and that word has to be
capitalized and put in italics for emphasis) the Democrats will stand
for something more than just Republicanism with frills.
Exit polls in
November 2006 showed that these voters (and a majority of Democratic
voters) were looking for Democrats to stand up forcefully for the
Constitution, and to put an end to the Iraq War.
They were
double-crossed. The Democratic Congressional leadership, under the
Clintonesque direction of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, have done none of those things, choosing
instead to simply pretend to be an opposition, while actually doing
nothing on either front.
It’s an approach that Hillary Clinton
clearly would continue to follow if she were somehow to manage to get
herself elected to the presidency: a fawning obeisance to the wishes of
corporate America and Wall Street, continued foreign wars and
occupations, continued “tough talk†on crime with little or no effort
to attack its causes (poverty, drugs, racism and hopelessness).
It’s
also an approach that almost certainly would assure us another four to
eight years of Republican control of the White House.
The truth
is that those independent voters who turned out for Obama and Edwards
are simply not going to vote for Hillary Clinton in November ’08. If it
were to become a choice between Clinton and McCain, Clinton and
Giuliani or Clinton and Huckabee, they will sit the election out—or
even vote Republican.
And she’s not going to get the other independents
either—the ones who really are conservative leaning. If they vote at
all, they’ll go Republican, offered the choice between Republican or
Republican lite with a few liberal bells and whistles.
Fortunately,
Iowa’s Democratic and independent voters have made it clear to the rest
of the country that voting for Hillary Clinton is to commit Democratic
Party suicide. Her whole campaign has been based upon the notion that
she is the most “electable†candidate in the Democratic field—a notion
that now stands exposed as a pathetic farce.
If Democratic
primary voters in the rest of the country are paying attention, they
will quickly send her packing back to New York, where she can continue
her role, with colleague Chuck Schumer, of Wall Street lickspittle.
The
rest of the Democrats seeking office or seeking re-election next fall
should take heed. There is a frustrated, angry and very large bloc of
people out there—independent voters—who are looking for progressive
candidates who will not just talk in buzzwords, but who will act to
restore some semblance of Constitutional government in America, and who
will end the damned war in Iraq. If they’re lucky, those voters might
give them one more chance despite the wretched betrayal of November
2006.
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