Progressive Activists Complicit in Iraq Disconnect
by Chris Bowers, Wed Apr 11, 2007 at 08:29:13 AM EDT
Now, let's put aside the merits of this plan. I'm just really confused. How is it possible for a major party Democratic candidate to continually promise donors an end our involvement in Iraq while simultaneously proposing a plan that will keep us in Iraq?Matt is absolutely correct about this disconnect. Democratic candidates are saying they will end the war, despite pretty much all releasing policy papers saying they will keep troops in Iraq. How are they able to get away with this seeming contradiction? Simple: it is because right now the public really does not seem to notice the difference, and progressive activists are complicit with maintaining this disinformation campaign. First, look at a recent poll that asks if people want "most" troops removed:
All of the candidates to a greater or lesser extent are doing this same dance, so this isn't meant to pick on Clinton so much as it is to point out that there is a large, weird, and dishonest chasm between elites making policy and activists supporting political leaders. I don't get it.
CBS News Poll. March 26-27, 2006. N=831 adults nationwide. MoE ± 4 (for all adults).Now, look at another poll conducted during the same week that asks the public if they want "all" troops removed (emphasis mine):
"Do you think the United States should or should not set a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq that would have MOST troops out by September 2008?"
Should 59%--37% Should Not
USA Today/Gallup Poll. March 23-25, 2007. N=1,007 adults nationwide. MoE ± 3.Public support for removing "most" troops and removing "all" troops is identical. Apparently, ending the war entirely and reducing it in size means exactly the same thing to the American public. It certainly seems to mean the same thing for many Democratic candidates.
"Would you favor or oppose Congress taking each of the following actions in regards to the war in Iraq? How about...setting a time-table for withdrawing all U.S. troops from Iraq no later than the fall of 2008"
Support 60%--38% Oppose
The problem here is that the Overton Window on troop removal from Iraq is in a completely different location for the American public than it is for progressive policy elites. For the American public, it has long moved passed being unthinkable or radical, and also long moved past being merely sensible or acceptable. Right now, removing all troops from Iraq in the next eighteen months is extremely popular, as evidenced by the Gallup poll quoted above. By way of contrast, for progressive policy elites, the idea of removing all troops from Iraq remains staunchly entrenched in the "unthinkable" or, at best, "radical" phase of the Overton Window. Just witness the number of progressives who, in the comments to my post on last night, quickly labeled Bill Richardson naïve and / or "unserious" about Iraq and foreign policy. Of course, just yesterday, Richardson brokered a weapons inspections deal breakthrough with North Korea, and back in January he brokered a cease-fire in Darfur, and oh yeah--he was our ambassador to the United Nations. But now, since he is advocating total withdrawal from Iraq, suddenly Bill freaking Richardson is naïve and unserious about foreign policy. That people would react that way to a man with more foreign policy accomplishments than the entire US Senate combined tells just how abhorrent the idea of removing all troops is to many progressive policy types.
In this environment, Democratic candidates are faced with opposing forces pulling them in two different directions. On the one hand, ending the war in Iraq and removing all troops over the next year or so is quite popular nationwide, not to mention among the Democratic base. Thus, they all say they are going to end the war in Iraq when talking to the general public. However, this idea is still unthinkable to the progressive policy elites staffing think tanks, congress, and presidential campaigns, and so they release policy proposals that merely reduce the scope of US military involvement in Iraq, not end it. This situation in not going to change, and ending the war will always simply mean reducing the war, unless grassroots, progressive activists stop allowing their favorite candidates to get away with this contradiction, and unless at least one leading Democrat takes up that cause and starts calling out their colleagues on this contradiction.
In this situation, we, and by "we" I mean the progressive blogosphere, are part of the problem. Because we like Edwards or Obama, we have no problem letting them slide on this contradiction, which makes it impossible for us to credibly call out candidates like Hillary Clinton on the contradiction. Further, because no one is credibly calling out our candidates on this contradiction, to the public withdrawing most troops and withdrawing all troops remains identical. Thus, we are left in a situation where basically no one is articulating an actual end to the end in Iraq, even though most people believe quite a few candidates are doing so. And yes, we are allowing this to happen. We can't end this contradiction if we are complicit with it. That has to change.
It cannot possible get anymore serious than this. A failure to end the war in Iraq under a Democratic trifecta will, by 2012, result in the greatest political disaster to befall the Democratic Party since 1968. Count on it. As a party, we can't run against the extremely unpopular Iraq war for three years, fail to end it when we are in complete control of the government, and not expect massive backlash.
Tags: Bill Richardson, Blogosphere, Democrats, Iraq, President 2008 (all tags)










42 Comments