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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: Go Webb Go Is it too soon for a Webb for President bandwagon? Of course it is. But Webbs landslide win in a Southern statewell, make that a pre-recount third of a percentage-point win carved from big margins in the Washington suburbshas transformed him instantly into a commodity of interest for the Democrats, as was former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner before him. A national audience will now become aware of the Webb paradox: the qualities that make him most compelling are the very ones that make him not a particularly smooth or natural politician. Despite Webbs impressive military background, its not as if he commanded armies in a winning war. No one will offer Jim Webb an Eisenhower ride to a higher nomination. My own Webb bandwagon moment occurred in late September at a fundraiser in Northern Virginia. The candidate arrived, slightly late, while a suburbanite audience awaited the chance to shake his hand, size him up. He worked the room for a few minutes, our host introduced him to me, and he stopped for several minutes to converse about a Paul Schroeder essay that had appeared in TAC. This was thrilling, of course, and its impossible to imagine any other major-party candidate (even among the coterie of TAC readers in the House GOP) who would have behaved the same way. As an aide shuffled impatiently, Webb shifted into a more normal politician mode, greeting the people gathered. Then he stepped up to address the room. It was an odd speech, devoid of enthusiasm-generating applause lines, indeed devoid of any applause lines at all. It was almost professorialan attempt to analyze the categories of Left and Right in the country, explain why they were outmoded and how his campaign was working towards transcending them and fueling a new synthesis. You had to pay attention or you would miss major points. I found myself recalling a phrase I had first heard in history class about the French socialist Leon Bluman intellectual in politics. Webb was attempting to give voice to common-man themes of the sort that might be inspired by the Scots-Irish of his critically acclaimed ethnography, Born Fighting, and to appeal more generally to the American middle and working classes. But if it was a latently populist message, it was delivered in distinctly non-populist style. Webbs intellectualism ensures that he will do something that professional politicians hardly ever do: think through a position and take a public stand on it without consulting the polls. The essay he wrote for the Washington Post on Iraq, seven months before the war began, was startling in its prescience. Webb questioned whether an overthrow of Saddam would actually increase our ability to win the war against international terrorism and pointed out that the measure of military success can be preventing wars and well as fighting them. He charged, those who are pushing for a unilateral war in Iraq know full well that there is no exit strategy if we invade. He concluded, the Iraqis are a multiethnic people filled with competing factions who in many cases would view a U.S. occupation as infidels invading the cradle of Islam.
In Japan, American occupation forces quickly became 50,000 friends. In Iraq, they would quickly become 50,000 terrorist targets. If any major senators were thinking like this long before the invasion, not many Americans heard of it. Peter Boyers New Yorker profile of the Webb-Allen contest noted that Webb spent much campaign time lamenting the widening gap between the very rich and the rest of the country, noting that he regularly pushes for stronger border security and strict enforcement of laws that will stop corporate exploitation of cheap illegal-alien labor. Webb adds that free trade is not fair trade and is open in his disdain for the neocons: These guys are so far to the left you think theyre on the right. Its right out of the Communist Internationalexporting ideology at the point of a gun. Concluded Boyer: He almost seems a Pat Buchanan conservative. This is not really true, in that most Buchananites, and especially including my McLean, Virginia-based colleague (who has kept his own counsel about his vote last Tuesday) are serious cultural conservatives, for whom Webbs pro-choice position and other more typical Democratic social-issue stands are likely or potential deal-breakers. But it may be true that no successful politician is doing more to shatter the post-1960s categories of Left and Right than Webb is trying to do. If the present results hold, the Old Dominion has given us a vastly more complex senator than the oleaginous George Allen and perhaps its most interesting emissary to the upper chamber since the 19th century.
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#2. To: Morgana le Fay (#0)
Thanks. A very likeable guy. Son also rises in testy Webb-Bush exchange President Bush has pledged to work with the new Democratic majorities in Congress, but he has already gotten off on the wrong foot with Jim Webb, whose surprise victory over Sen. George Allen (R-Va.) tipped the Senate to the Democrats. Webb, a decorated former Marine officer, hammered Allen and Bush over the unpopular war in Iraq while wearing his sons old combat boots on the campaign trail. It seems the president may have some lingering resentment. At a private reception held at the White House with newly elected lawmakers shortly after the election, Bush asked Webb how his son, a Marine lance corporal serving in Iraq, was doing. Webb responded that he really wanted to see his son brought back home, said a person who heard about the exchange from Webb. I didnt ask you that, I asked how hes doing, Bush retorted, according to the source. Webb confessed that he was so angered by this that he was tempted to slug the commander-in-chief, reported the source, but of course didnt. Its safe to say, however, that Bush and Webb wont be taking any overseas trips together anytime soon. Jim did have a conversation with Bush at that dinner, said Webbs spokeswoman Kristian Denny Todd. Basically, he asked about Jims son, Jim expressed the fact that he wanted to have him home. Todd did not want to escalate matters by commenting on Bushs response, saying, It was a private conversation. A White House spokeswoman declined to give Bushs version of the conversation.
Webb's the kind of guy that could turn things around, if given the chance - I hope that he gets it. I've not heard one item with which I disagree with him.
#6. To: lodwick (#5)
I think it's way too late to "turn things around" for the United States. The only question in the case of either the U.S. or Israel is whether we will decide to blow up the rest of the world with nukes because they won't play ball by our rules.
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