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BY Victor Davis Hanson
In 2008, a mostly unknown Barack Obama ran
for president on an inclusive agenda of "hope and change." That upbeat
message was supposed to translate into millions of green jobs, fiscal
sobriety, universal health care, a resetting of Bush foreign policy, and
racial unity.
Four years later, none of those promises will be themes of his 2012
re-election campaign. Gas has more than doubled in price. Billions of
dollars have been wasted in insider and subsidized wind and solar
projects that have produced little green energy.
Unemployment rates above 8 percent appear the new norm, when 5 percent in the past was dubbed a "jobless recovery."
From the Middle East to the Korean peninsula, the world seems on the brink. Modern racial relations are at a new low.
If borrowing $4 trillion in eight years was "unpatriotic," as Obama
once labeled George W. Bush, no one quite knows how to term the addition
of $5 trillion in new debt in less than four years. ObamaCare is
unpopular with the public. Its constitutionality now rests with the
Supreme Court.
After four years, the claims of "Bush did it" and "It might have been
worse" grow stale. So re-election will rest not on a new agenda, or an
explanation of what happened, but on a divide-and-conquer strategy.
Translated, that means Obama will find fissures in the voting public
over fairness, expand them, and then cobble together various angry
partisans in hopes of achieving a bare majority. Such an us/them
strategy is not new in American history.
There are suddenly new enemies called the "one percent" -- those who
make more than $200,000 per year and who "do not pay their fair share."
Apparently in a zero-sum economy, this tiny minority has taken too much
from the majority and thereby caused the four-year lethargy that
followed the 2008 meltdown. Andrew Jackson, William Jennings Bryan and
Franklin D. Roosevelt all ran, with varying success, against the selfish
"rich."
Congress is also now a convenient enemy of the people. Although it
was Democratically controlled in Obama's first two years, and the Senate
remains so, the new theme insists that a Republican House stops the
Democrats from finishing all the good things they started. When support
for 16 years of the New Deal had evaporated by 1948, Harry Truman ran
successfully against a "do-nothing" Republican Congress that had blocked
his own big-government "Fair Deal" follow-up and thus supposedly
stalled the economy.
In 2009, Obama pushed through his health care plan by a narrow
partisan margin in the House, despite constitutional questions about the
individual mandate. Now, as the Supreme Court seems skeptical of the
legality of ObamaCare, the president seems to be running against
"unelected" justices. That could work too. In 1968, Richard Nixon
squeaked by Hubert Humphrey in a divisive campaign, in part by
lambasting the activist Warren Court that had done everything from
outlawing school prayer to supporting school busing.
Team Obama has seized on the Democrats' allegations of a "war on
women," waged by both Republican and Catholic grandees against federal
subsidies of birth control. For the first time since the campaign of
John F. Kennedy a half-century ago, the role of the Catholic Church in
politics is suddenly a landmark issue.
The president faults "Big Oil" and tension in the Middle East -- not
his own failure to develop vast new gas and oil reserves on public lands
-- for high gas prices. Jimmy Carter likewise blamed greedy oil
companies and the Middle East in 1980, after gasoline prices spiked and
lines formed at filling stations.
Suddenly, after the Trayvon Martin tragedy and what may prove to be
murderous white vigilantism in Oklahoma, race again looms large.
President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder have weighed in often
on that issue. The former castigated police for acting "stupidly" in one
incident, and more recently reminded the nation of the racial
affinities between himself and Trayvon Martin. The latter blasted the
nation's reluctance to discuss race as cowardly, and alleged racial bias
among his own congressional overseers. Race is always an explosive
wedge issue. In 1964, Lyndon Johnson ran successfully in part on the
need to expand civil rights, while in 1968 Richard Nixon found traction
in the backlash against racial violence.
If Obama can cobble together disaffected young people, greens, women,
minorities and the poor -- who all believe a nefarious "they" have
crushed their dreams -- then massive debt and deficits, high
unemployment, sluggish growth and spiraling gas prices won't decide the
election.
Lots of presidential candidates have run by identifying such enemies
of the people, rather than debating the general state of the nation --
sometimes successfully, sometimes not.
But the problem with an us/them strategy is not just winning an election, but trying to put back together what was torn asunder.
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