markfiend wrote:He's also strongly anti-abortion. I don't know how he squares that with his "libertarianism".
You really can't? If he thinks life begins at the moment of conception, then it's a no-brainer.
I think that Tuesday's elections results stem from a fundamental error on the part of the Democratic party. They interpreted the 2006 midterms and the 2008 presidential election as signs of a re-alignment in the American electorate. In other words, they mistakenly assumed that they got elected on their own merits rather than because the American people were fed up with Republicans. Consequently, they over-reached. The 2006 and 2008 elections were both referendums on Bush and government spending. The fiscally conservative and libertarian wings of the Republican party either sat out those elections or cast protest votes. Many Republicans responded to the nomination of John McCain by saying that they would vote for Obama and other Democrats as a way of punishing the Republican party. The goal of this punishment would be to force the GOP out of power, so that they would recognize that they should return to the principles of limited government.
This really had a few major sources: First, conservatives have always had an uneasy relationship with John McCain, seeing him as too much of a neoconservative (i.e., much more willing to countenance an expansion of government power). Some conservatives held their noses and voted for McCain, some voted for Obama as a way of punishing the Republicans. Secondly, the first major bailout that came at the end of the Bush administration was very offensive to many conservatives and libertarians who thought a) it artificially distorted the market, and would lead to more trouble in the long term; b) it was beyond the legitimate scope of government power; and c) it operated as a sort of moral hazard--in other words, the last thing you want to do is teach people that the government will bail them out when they make stupid choices or take stupid risks. That will simply encourage stupid decisions and risky behavior rather than prudence and self-reliance.
The Democrats misinterpreted the 2006 and 2008 elections because they thought that these elections were somehow about them. They weren't: they were about Republicans failing to live up to their principles in the legislature, they were about GWB's complete unwillingness to engage in public argument or justification for policies in his second term, and they were about a general repudiation of neoconservatism (which is a specific political ideology best described as "big government conservatism." The original neoconservatives were progressive liberals who came to question the effectiveness of government programs, and
not the legitimacy of them).
Because the Democrats misunderstood those two elections as political realignment elections, they thought they had a mandate to "fundamentally transform" the US. They were wrong, however, and they over-reached. They were also blinded by the brilliance and effectiveness of Obama's campaign itself. What they discovered when they took power, however, was that governing is hard. This isn't meant to be flippant, either: the Obama administration in particular did
not want to appear to be Clinton
redux; on the other hand, the only Democrats with executive branch experience would have been veterans of the Clinton administration. The Obama administration took some of them, but not a lot. This meant that a president with little legislative experience and
no executive experience now had a White House full of people who had little government experience period.
The 2010 midterms were animated by a sense that the government had been overtaken by an executive branch that was out of its depth, and a legislature that spends more money than a drunken sailor. The Democrats had won because they were not Republicans. They lost on Tuesday because instead of learning the lessons of 2006 and 2008, they decided to go for broke (quite literally!) on spending. Any working adult knows that if you spend more money than you make in a month, you're in trouble. What you saw on Tuesday was a nation of people who can balance a checkbook looking at the Republicans and saying: "we'll give you one more chance to prove that you can be fiscally responsible." The reason they did this is that the Democrats took all of the economic vices that Republicans had developed during their time in power, and amplified them. Both parties have been put on notice, but only one party seems to know it.
The other party just thinks it's a communication problem. It's not. It's a lack of fiscal discipline problem.