April 24, 2005

THAT WHICH THE REST OF US REGRET AS INEVITABLE THEY BASE A PARTY ON:

Democratic Moral Values? (MATT BAI, 4/24/05, NY Times Magazine)

You can forgive Democrats in Washington for feeling somewhat vindicated by the way the controversy over Terri Schiavo played out. For years, after all, they waited in vain for the moment when Republicans might trip over their own arrogance while crusading for moral values, and finally, if polls are to be believed, it happened. Spurred by opportunism and more than a little genuine religious fervor, the heirs to Goldwater and Reagan seemed to forget how they came to control the values debate in America in the first place: not by interfering in the moral choices of families but by promising to stop government from doing exactly that. In truth, it had been a long time since Republican leaders paid more than superficial tribute to their libertarian creed, but it was only now, in the battle over a dying woman's wishes, that the public seemed to call them on it.

And yet, satisfying as it was for Democrats to watch Bill Frist and George W. Bush grow mute in the face of voter unease, they couldn't escape from the fact that the Schiavo episode exposed something hollow in their party too. Far from having made a compelling case for euthanasia or against morality by fiat, Democrats, with a few notable exceptions, pretty much became bystanders to the whole unseemly affair. And while Republicans managed to further define themselves as a party that would even go to unpopular lengths to defend the sanctity of ravaged and unborn souls alike, Democrats were again left to ponder their own identity in an age in which religious values and scientific insight seem increasingly to be hurtling toward collision. Even in defeat, Republicans emerged as ''the party of life.'' And as one leading Democratic operative privately warned a roomful of allies, ''We can't just be the party of death.''


Don't be silly--they've got taxes too!

Posted by Orrin Judd at April 24, 2005 11:50 PM
Comments

And everyone knows that death and taxes go together naturally.

Posted by: jd watson at April 25, 2005 12:02 AM

leading Democratic operative: "We can't just be the party of death."

Kate Michaelman: "Too late. You're already bought and paid for."

Posted by: Mike Morley at April 25, 2005 5:54 AM

This commentary is a little silly. Did the author really think W and Frist went mute on this question? And when has the GOP ever been about libertarian values? When has the GOP ever felt like morality was best left up to private choices of families? If that were so, then there would be no prolife plank. There'd be no faith based initiative. There be no war on drugs. There would be no push for the marriage amendment. There is a libertarian streak in the GOP, but every party has that crazy aunt in the attic, too.

Posted by: Buttercup at April 25, 2005 8:12 AM
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