116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
The end of an era that never began for Obama
The Gazette Opinion Staff
Nov. 8, 2009 11:37 pm
By Jonah Goldberg
It's all so terribly sad.
To listen to liberals and the White House spin election results, you'd think all was well with the world. Barack Obama is still personally popular! The evil right-wing extremists lost in New York's 23rd congressional district and a Democrat (who was arguably more conservative than the Republican nominee) won. Virginia was always a red state, and the election hinged on local issues. Defeated New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine was personally unpopular (let's all forget that the White House tried to turn the race into a referendum on Obama's agenda).
In short, the White House spin is: “There's nothing to see here, folks. All is well.”
What's sad is how far Obama's defenders have had to move the goalposts just to keep up morale.
They might be right that the elections don't mean all that much for Obama and the Democrats. I very much doubt it, but even having the argument represents an enormous defeat for self-styled progressives.
Almost exactly a year ago, liberals insisted that Obama was going to be FDR 2.0 and that this was the dawn of a new progressive era. Countless magazine articles and newspaper columns were dedicated to the idea we were poised for a “new New Deal.”
Nearly a year later, Newsweek's Nov. 2 cover story is a “survival guide” for liberals who seem on the verge of self-immolation given their disappointment with Obama.
If Obama is the new FDR, it might be instructive to go back and look at the elections in 1933, one year after Roosevelt was elected.
Obviously, the comparison isn't perfect, but many of the imperfections illuminate why the “Obama revolution” was always phony.
The driving political issue that year was the repeal of Prohibition.
Indeed, historians often overplay the popularity of FDR's economic program in 1932 and underplay the importance of his promise to let Americans have a beer. Regardless, the people agreed with the White House on both fronts, and supporters of repeal and the New Deal rallied to the polls. In Virginia, Democrats won a massive across-the-board landslide, outpolling the GOP 3-1.
Meanwhile, the most-watched race in the country was for New York City mayor. It was a complicated three-way contest. Republican Fiorello LaGuardia beat the White House's preferred candidate, Joseph McKee, a veteran of machine politics in New York, and the Tammany Hall Democrat John O'Brien. The key thing to remember is that while the White House's man lost, the progressives' man won. LaGuardia was in every way a New Dealer who shared FDR's agenda.
This week, Democrats insist Obama is still popular. Maybe so.
But Obamaism is on the ropes. Congress is racing to pass health care reform because Nancy Pelosi and Co. know it is losing popularity, and they fear - rightly - that moderate Democrats will jump ship after reading the tea leaves of the Virginia and New Jersey blowouts. They also now know, thanks to Corzine's defeat, that Obama's personal popularity is not transferable.
The truth is that Obama's signature issue in 2008 was also repeal - repeal of George W. Bush. He achieved that on Election Day. And now he is left looking for a mandate he never had.
He may still be a successful president. He will surely have some victories. But the “new era” is now over, before it began.
n Contact the writer:
jonahscolumn@aol.com
Opinion content represents the viewpoint of the author or The Gazette editorial board. You can join the conversation by submitting a letter to the editor or guest column or by suggesting a topic for an editorial to editorial@thegazette.com

Daily Newsletters