By Jonah Goldberg
Friday, October 17, 2014
Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes is running for U.S.
Senate in the great state of Kentucky. She is a woman of conviction, of
substance, of principle. “I’m not an empty dress,” she insists, “I’m not a
rubber stamp, and I am not a cheerleader! I am a Clinton Democrat.”
I’m old enough to remember when “Clinton Democrat” had a
fairly specific meaning. Back when Bill Clinton first ran for president, he did
so as “new kind of Democrat.” He decried the “brain-dead policies of both
parties.” He was so determined to dispel the image of the Democrats as being
soft on crime, he took time off from the campaign trail to approve the
execution of Ricky Ray Rector, a man so mentally disabled that when he ate his
last meal, he left some of his pecan pie on his plate and told guards he was
saving it “for later.”
Clinton broke with his party’s racial politics by
deliberately picking a fight with the deservedly forgotten rapper Sister
Souljah. He vowed to reform welfare (though it took a Republican Congress to
get him to follow through) and end the era of “something for nothing”
government handouts.
The Clinton Democrats were the spawn of the Democratic
Leadership Council, a proudly centrist, pro-business, and hawkish (by liberal
standards) outfit within the Democratic party, which is why left-wing Democrats
often distrusted and occasionally despised it. Jesse Jackson said DLC stood for
“Democrats for the Leisure Class” and ridiculed it as a “Southern white boys’
club.”
The DLC closed up shop in 2011, in large part because the
Democratic party had moved far to the left, a fact repeatedly confirmed by Pew
and Gallup surveys showing that Democrats favor activist government more than
they used to and are much more comfortable calling themselves liberals than
they were even a decade ago.
So it’s interesting that Grimes, and a number of other
Democrats, are calling themselves “Clinton Democrats.” Grimes goes so far as to
insist, “I’m not Barack Obama.” She won’t even say whether she voted for Obama
in 2008 or 2012, invoking her right to ballot secrecy — a right she eagerly
waives to tell people she supported Hillary Clinton in the primaries.
Now it’s obviously true that Bill Clinton did not like
empty dresses, unless he was the one emptying them, but I don’t think that’s
what Grimes means by “Clinton Democrat.” So what does she mean? When asked, she
said that being a Clinton Democrat involves “growing the middle class the right
way.”
“As we saw under President Clinton’s tenure,” she
explained, “especially when you increase the minimum wage, you actually help to
expand the middle class.” On another occasion, she said: “We all know what
being a Clinton Democrat is all about . . . It’s about remembering what
President Clinton said in his campaign in 1992 — it’s the economy, stupid!”
The only serious response to this has to be, “Huh?”
While it’s true that Clinton raised the minimum wage, few
economists would argue it had much to do with the booming economy of the 1990s.
More to the point: Obama has been campaigning relentlessly to increase the
minimum wage. (I’d also note that “the economy, stupid” was James Carville’s
phrase, not Clinton’s.)
In fact, when Obama recently declared that his policies
were “on the ballot” in November, he was explicitly referring to a minimum-wage
hike.
In other words, Grimes is running against Obama’s
policies while supporting Obama’s policies. She just doesn’t want to say so
because Obama is unpopular and Hillary Clinton is popular.
And that raises another intriguing question: Is Hillary
Clinton a Clinton Democrat? Left-wing writer Joshua Micah Marshall concluded in
2001, when Clinton was in the Senate, that she wasn’t. Clinton opposed the DLC
agenda on almost every front. And when she was first lady, it was widely
believed that she wasn’t a centrist but a voice for the Left in her husband’s
administration.
Indeed, most histories suggest that Bill reclaimed the
center in the mid-’90s only because Hillary’s health-care scheme (the precursor
to Obamacare) was seen as too left-wing. This lent weight to the theory that
Bill himself wasn’t so much a principled centrist as a shrewd opportunist who
went wherever the polls took him. (This was the man, after all, who consulted
polls to decide where he would go on vacation.)
So maybe Grimes really is a Clinton Democrat.
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