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Looking for a Democratic Tough Guy, or Girl


BigSqwert

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January 18, 2006

Op-Ed Columnist

Looking for a Democratic Tough Guy, or Girl

By MAUREEN DOWD

The Democrats were throwing haymakers at the White House this week, but

they will never succeed as long as they're perceived as the party in

skirts.

 

Al Gore, John Kerry and Hillary Clinton called the Bush administration

on its apparently bottomless store of imperial sins. They made a lot of

good points. They just didn't score any.

 

This trio, apparently jockeying for '08, are not the best messengers.

They're loaded down with baggage.

 

Two of them, who could have stopped W. and Dick Cheney before they

undid

230 years of American democracy, didn't, because they allowed

themselves

to be painted as girlie men. The other, a manly girl, has been so

cautious and opportunistic about weighing in on everything from Schiavo

to Alito and Iraq that when she finally sang out on Monday and railed

against W., she sounded more soprano than basso profundo.

 

It was easy for the Republicans to play their usual gender games and

dismiss the three Democrats as whiny, shrill and ineffectual.

 

After Mr. Gore and Senator Clinton went on the attack, Scott McClellan

rebutted: "I think we know one tends to like or enjoy grabbing

headlines. The other one - sounds like that the political season may be

starting early." He rubbed Mr. Gore's nose in the fact that he is not

the president fighting the terrorists, noting: "If he wants to be the

voice for Democrats on this debate over national security, we welcome

it."

 

To lead, and not just conduct campaigns that parrot the liberal elite's

editorial pages, you have to shape your own identity and political

destiny. And ever since the 2000 race, the Democrats have let

Republicans caricature them as effeminate. The Democrats have let the

G.O.P. give them their shape, and it's an hourglass.

 

There are moments in campaigns and policy debates when it's possible to

knock the sword out of your opponent's hand. Al Gore and John Kerry

whiffed. Mr. Kerry and Senator Clinton held the president's coat as he

rushed to war.

 

This all allowed the Bushies to use 9/11 as a shield and a bludgeon.

They made their own rules and cast themselves as renegade heroes.

 

If the Democrats are like the dithering "Desperate Housewives," the

Republicans have come across like the counterterrorism agent Jack Bauer

on "24": fast with a gun, loose with the law, willing to torture in the

name of protecting the nation. Except Jack Bauer is competent.

 

The Democrats' chronic impotence led to the Republicans' reign of

incompetence.

 

U.S. News & World Report features a menacing Dick Cheney - looking like

a man who just swallowed a country - on the cover this week, with the

headline "Tough Guy."

 

The story recounts how Mr. Cheney, as Bush I's defense secretary,

derided lawmakers as "a bunch of annoying gnats." Maybe that's why he

doesn't feel the need to pay attention to those silly little laws they

make.

 

How many things do you have to mess up in the country and the world

before you lose your reputation for machismo?

 

Al Gore, belatedly perhaps, made an uncharacteristically bold move. He

made the completely valid point that "the president of the United

States

has been breaking the law, repeatedly and insistently."

 

"To eavesdrop on American citizens without a warrant, imprison American

citizens on his own declaration, kidnap and torture, then what can't he

do?" he told an audience on Monday, denouncing Bush's power grab. He

warned Republicans that they should be wary of setting these extralegal

precedents because someday a leader with values abhorrent to them could

put all that power to use.

 

Mr. Cheney, lumbering around in unreality, continues to be unapologetic

as the chorus of Democratic complaints gets louder. Above the law is

exactly where he wants to be. Even when he can easily - and

retroactively - get snooping warrants, he doesn't want their stinking

warrants. Warrants are for sissies.

 

"When we get all through 10 years from now," he told U.S. News, "we'll

look back on this period of time and see that liberating 50 million

people in Afghanistan and Iraq really did represent a major,

fundamental

shift, obviously, in U.S. policy in terms of how we dealt with the

emerging terrorist threat - and that we'll also have fundamentally

changed circumstances in that part of the world."

 

Yeah. But not necessarily for the better. Whatever else you can say

about the Bush crowd, they stick to their guns, even when they can't

shoot straight.

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