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Title: Third Time - America may be ready for a new political party
Source: OpinionJournal.com
URL Source: http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/pnoonan/?id=110008453
Published: Jun 1, 2006
Author: Peggy Noonan
Post Date: 2006-06-01 09:05:00 by Phaedrus
Keywords: None
Views: 162
Comments: 8

Something's happening. I have a feeling we're at some new beginning, that a big breakup's coming, and that though it isn't and will not be immediately apparent, we'll someday look back on this era as the time when a shift began.

All my adult life, people have been saying that the two-party system is ending, that the Democrats' and Republicans' control of political power in America is winding down. According to the traditional critique, the two parties no longer offer the people the choice they want and deserve. Sometimes it's said they are too much alike--Tweedledum and Tweedledee. Sometimes it's said they're too polarizing--too red and too blue for a nation in which many see things through purple glasses.

In 1992 Ross Perot looked like the breakthrough, the man who would make third parties a reality. He destabilized the Republicans and then destabilized himself. By the end of his campaign he seemed to be the crazy old aunt in the attic.

The Perot experience seemed to put an end to third-party fever. But I think it's coming back, I think it's going to grow, and I think the force behind it is unique in our history.

This week there was a small boomlet of talk about a new internet entity called Unity '08--a small collection of party veterans including moderate Democrats (former Carter aide Hamilton Jordan) and liberal-leaning Republicans (former Ford hand Doug Bailey) trying to join together with college students and broaden the options in the 2008 election. In terms of composition, Unity seems like the Concord Coalition, the bipartisan group (Warren Rudman, Bob Kerrey) that warns against high spending and deficits.

Unity seems to me to have America's growing desire for more political options right. But I think they've got the description of the problem wrong.

Their idea is that the two parties are too polarized to govern well. It is certainly true that the level of partisanship in Washington seems high. (Such things, admittedly, ebb, flow and are hard to judge. We look back at the post-World War II years and see a political climate of relative amity and moderation. But Alger Hiss and Dick Nixon didn't see it that way.) Nancy Pelosi seems to be pretty much in favor of anything that hurts Republicans, and Ken Mehlman is in favor of anything that works against Democrats. They both want their teams to win. Part of winning is making sure the other guy loses, and part of the fun of politics, of any contest, of life, can be the dance in the end zone.

But the dance has gotten dark.

Partisanship is fine when it's an expression of the high animal spirits produced by real political contention based on true political belief. But the current partisanship seems sour, not joyous. The partisanship has gotten deeper as less separates the governing parties in Washington. It is like what has been said of academic infighting: that it's so vicious because the stakes are so low.

The problem is not that the two parties are polarized. In many ways they're closer than ever. The problem is that the parties in Washington, and the people on the ground in America, are polarized. There is an increasing and profound distance between the rulers of both parties and the people--between the elites and the grunts, between those in power and those who put them there.

On the ground in America, people worry terribly--really, there are people who actually worry about it every day--about endless, weird, gushing government spending. But in Washington, those in power--Republicans and Democrats--stand arm in arm as they spend and spend. (Part of the reason is that they think they can buy off your unhappiness one way or another. After all, it's worked in the past. A hunch: It's not going to work forever or much longer. They've really run that trick into the ground.)

On the ground in America, regular people worry about the changes wrought by the biggest wave of immigration in our history, much of it illegal and therefore wholly connected to the needs of the immigrant and wholly unconnected to the agreed-upon needs of our nation. Americans worry about the myriad implications of the collapse of the American border. But Washington doesn't. Democrat Ted Kennedy and Republican George W. Bush see things pretty much eye to eye. They are going to educate the American people out of their low concerns.

There is a widespread sense in America--a conviction, actually--that we are not safe in the age of terror. That the port, the local power plant, even the local school, are not protected. Is Washington worried about this? Not so you'd notice. They're only worried about seeming unconcerned.

More to the point, people see the Republicans as incapable of managing the monster they've helped create--this big Homeland Security/Intelligence apparatus that is like some huge buffed guy at the gym who looks strong but can't even put on his T-shirt without help because he's so muscle-bound. As for the Democrats, who co-created Homeland Security, no one--no one--thinks they would be more managerially competent. Nor does anyone expect the Democrats to be more visionary as to what needs to be done. The best they can hope is the Democrats competently serve their interest groups and let the benefits trickle down.

Right now the Republicans and Democrats in Washington seem, from the outside, to be an elite colluding against the voter. They're in agreement: immigration should not be controlled but increased, spending will increase, etc.


Poster Comment:

Peggy hits another home run.

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#1. To: Tauzero, Arete, Starwind, christine, Zipporah, Panama Limited, All (#0)

Peggy Noonan Ping ...

Phaedrus  posted on  2006-06-01   9:07:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Phaedrus (#0)

It is like what has been said of academic infighting: that it's so vicious because the stakes are so low.

SOOO true.

This just means the end game is approaching.

If anything can save us, or a portion of us, it will be those spectrally sanguine animal spirits.

"Come!" we say. Come and reposess our blood.


Mr. McGuire: "I just want to say one word to you -- just one word."
Ben: "Yes sir."
Mr. McGuire: "Are you listening?"
Ben: "Yes I am."
Mr. McGuire: "Makeovers"
Ben: "Exactly how do you mean?"
Mr. McGuire: "There's a great future in makeovers. Think about it. Will you think about it?"

Tauzero  posted on  2006-06-01   9:16:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Phaedrus (#0)

Peggy hits another home run.

yes, particularly the parts you bolded.

regarding Perot "By the end of his campaign he seemed to be the crazy old aunt in the attic," i believe that's because the bush crime family threatened him and his family. Perot did too much of an about face to think otherwise, imo.

christine  posted on  2006-06-01   11:49:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: All, *3rd Party* (#0)

The problem is not that the two parties are polarized. In many ways they're closer than ever. The problem is that the parties in Washington, and the people on the ground in America, are polarized. There is an increasing and profound distance between the rulers of both parties and the people--between the elites and the grunts, between those in power and those who put them there.

Welcome to the 1 party system Peggy.

No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare. – James Madison

robin  posted on  2006-06-01   12:08:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: christine (#3)

Absolutely right. He gave an interview to The Dallas Morning News last year and one of the ground rules was that he WOULD NOT discuss politics.

I believe both that he was threatened and also that some sort of quid pro quo in exchange for Perot 'Omerta' was given to Ross and/or Ross Jr., who is a wheeler-dealer real estate developer in the Metroplex.

Here's that interview:

Perot on Perot An East Texas upbringing, sales call No. 78 - and the rest is legend Saturday, January 22, 2005 By CHERYL HALL / The Dallas Morning News PLANO -- At 74, Ross Perot seems a man content. But don't call him that. "Contented people sit around all day thinking everything's OK," Mr. Perot says. "I'm active. I'd describe myself as happy."Mr. Perot does what he wants whenever he wants. For some, this would lead to self-indulgence. But this legendary Texarkana native still gives his all to family, business and country. "I've got a lot of different things going on," he said recently in a rare interview, breaking a silence he has largely maintained since the mid-'90s. "Most people think that life is a neat organizational chart. In my experience, it's a spider web. Things happen in odd ways." The founder and chairman emeritus of Perot Systems Corp. and two-time presidential candidate spends his days at the office wrestling with company issues that work their way up to his executive suite. "If you have great people, the only time you see a problem is when it's a pretty good-sized problem," he said in his office at Perot Systems. This self-made multibillionaire has plenty of outside interests. He's funding a microscopic integrated circuit that will travel through the blood system to discover cancers and other diseases in their earliest stages. And the U.S. Naval Academy graduate and Navy veteran devotes significant energy helping those wounded in combat. He uses his pull at the Pentagon to get them to "medical geniuses" and his money to develop orthopedic devices. But most people know him for his revolutionary work in the computer services industry and his short but loud political career. Mr. Perot has little time -- and no need -- for personal publicity. After his second bid for the presidency failed in 1996, he all but disappeared from the public scene. Don't ask him for his views on politics. He won't go there. But this consummate storyteller is willing to share tales that shaped his life. Call it Perot Unplugged. Rest of Interview Here

Sam Houston  posted on  2006-06-01   12:44:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: christine (#3)

I believe that's because the Bush crime family threatened him and his family. Perot did too much of an about face to think otherwise, imo.

Perot turned very weird. He very likely was upsetting the plans of some very powerful people.

Phaedrus  posted on  2006-06-01   13:04:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: robin (#4)

The problem is not that the two parties are polarized. In many ways they're closer than ever.

It's the illusion that there are 2 parties that keep it running. I don't think that people are truely FOR either R's or D's. They are merely OPPOSED to D's or R's, respectively. One of the founders of the Libertarian Party was even swept up in it during the last election. He went public saying he thought Kerry was so bad that it was justifiable to forsake the LP and vote for Bush.

It's the same as sports fans cheering for their home NFL football or MLB baseball team. They have no principled reason for favoring one team over the other. They don't personally know anyone on the team. It's just that one is based nearby, but in the end they are all in the same league, and the league wins no matter which team they cheer for.

R & D politics is just a big cheerleading game. Those playing it are the fools.

Neil McIver  posted on  2006-06-01   13:35:29 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Sam Houston (#5)

Don't ask him for his views on politics. He won't go there.

i hope the reason is fear and not greed.

christine  posted on  2006-06-01   14:03:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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