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Windbags of change

A front-row seat at the midterm elections
By CHRIS LEHMANN  |  November 8, 2006

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Regardless of which major party sits astride Capitol Hill, Washington is a conservative city. Not in ideological terms, mind you. The District of Columbia and most of its inner-ring suburbs are stolidly liberal and Democratic, and have remained so even as “liberal” has come to mean something shifty, pusillanimous, and otherwise suspect in mainstream political discourse.

No, Washington is conservative in the cultural sense. Hidebound. Set in its ways. Unimaginative. Dull. The city — at least the narrow, affluent, Ivied and overwhelmingly Caucasian minority that most Americans see on cable-TV-talking-head shows — traffics in hoary clichés, horse-race banter, and empty gossip, while studiously trussing itself up as wise and generous in its civic-mindedness. Pay close attention next time your remote maroons you before some MSNBC chat-fest. Most panelists will deliver breathless observations of the political landscape with a faux-knowing preface: “I was talking to a [insert major party name here] operative the other day, and he says . . .” Such half-leering asides are intended to create the illusion that you, the viewer, are being let in on something big. Of course, it’s all warmed-over guess work — punditry once-removed. There’s a reason why, say, Washington Post national political correspondent David Broder is called “the dean of political reporters.” When was the last time you heard a dean say anything memorable, much less candid?

Down for the count
If you attended any recent gathering of conservative political operatives — and for reasons both personal and professional, I attended way more than my share — you saw the same glassy-eyed mien among the party faithful, the look of a tired fighter in the 11th round, well on the way to being punch drunk. They drank a little heavier, they flirted more broadly, they barked out jokes a little louder, because they already had the sense that they were playing to a rapidly thinning house.

All the while, of course, they stayed on message — that’s just what your Bush-era Republican does, in exactly the same way that compass needles point true north. But you could almost hear the gears grinding in the background: “What about that PR job? Does AEI need a press flak? What Democratic-friendly lobbying shop needs a GOP associate?” You found yourself trading party banter with people mentally revising their résumés and reviewing their Rolodexes as you spoke.

For all the horse-race minutiae the city feeds on, the prospect of actual political change sent the keepers of official Washington discourse into conniptions. One senior GOP operative — see? I can do it too! — was recently heard, in a cable off-camera prep room, dourly sizing up his party’s prospects while a Republican eminence grise was gamely talking up the election on camera next door. “I get candidates asking, ‘Can I run on a call for Rumsfeld’s resignation?’ ” he shouted. “I tell them, ‘Run away from everybody! Have you HEARD OF THE TITANIC? SAVE YOURSELVES!’ ”

One of the hoary clichés of this election cycle was that Republicans were starting to act and talk like Democrats. And it’s true. They panicked. You could smell the fear. They tried to define campaign messages way too late. Most of all, they tore into one another, blaming the White House, the congressional leadership, their political consultants — anyone and everyone — for their expected loss of the House long before a single vote was counted. Here, for instance, was Richard Viguerie — the DC mail-order baron who revolutionized the GOP by getting the religious right to vote conservatives into power in the early 1980s — when I interviewed him about fallout from the Mark Foley scandal: “We know this administration for six years has never had an antenna. It only has a transmitter. But they’ve been comfortable telling conservatives, ‘Be a good boy, be a good girl, be quiet about this outrage or that one’ ”

So, Viguerie went on, the leaders who turned out the GOP’s fabled “base” in droves to smite down the gay-marriage menace in 2004, are pulling the transmitter’s plug: “I would say that 40 to 50 percent of the conservative leaders at the national and state level are either ambivalent about the election, or they prefer a Democratic victory.”

Like Viguerie, others distanced themselves from Bush while lunging at some semblance of bipartisan high ground in the future. Way back in December of last year, one GOP power lobbyist, well into his cups, announced to me, “This Abramoff thing BLOWS! We don’t deserve to stay in power!” I haven’t spoken with him since, but in my mind’s eye, he’s been nursing one long 11-month hangover.

Indeed, the winds of Republican discontent had been gaining force for some time in Washington, as the Iraq war veered into bloody chaos and the subpoenas, indictments, and convictions of GOP fixers continued to pile up. At a reception last spring for Ahmad Chalabi — the disgraced WMD proselytizer who at that time was still making a delusional run at the Iraqi presidency — war pundit Christopher Hitchens raised a glass with the toast, “Next year in Baghdad.” While the crowd of diehard Republican fixers in attendance murmured vague assent, the lobbyist standing next to me hissed in a stage whisper: “There’s not enough Kevlar in the world, pal.” (Kevlar, of course, being the material used in bullet-proof vests.)

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  Topics: News Features , U.S. Republican Party , John Kerry , Richard Viguerie ,  More more >
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election special
ARTICLES BY CHRIS LEHMANN
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  •   WINDBAGS OF CHANGE  |  November 08, 2006
    A front-row seat at the midterm elections

 See all articles by: CHRIS LEHMANN

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