By David Harsanyi
Friday, October 16, 2015
When Democratic party presidential hopefuls were asked by
CNN’s Anderson Cooper to list the enemies they have made during their careers
that they are most proud of, the only candidate who didn’t include any fellow
Americans was Jim Webb.
Webb — who, it should be noted, didn’t exactly answer the
question — explained that it was an enemy soldier who once threw a grenade and
wounded him, a soldier who is no longer around. Jim Webb killed a Commie
because Jim Webb loves America.
Many liberals on social media found this revelation sorta
creepy. Yet there was probably a time when liberal voters would have been
impressed by someone who served his country so valiantly. They might have seen
promise in a candidate whose populist sensibilities could speak convincingly to
the working class and to Southerners and whose appeal could be propelled by
both idealism and realism. Webb might have been a formidable Democratic
presidential candidate 15 years ago. Twenty-five years ago, he might have been
a star. Today? He’s a man completely out of touch with the philosophical
temperament of his party.
Webb may have fought in a war against collectivist
authoritarians, but today he’s debating one — a less threatening socialist who
regularly lectures thousands of excitable sycophants about the need for more
coercion and redistribution. This would have been anathema even for Barack
Obama in 2008. Bernie Sanders is not stigmatized by his ideology. Today there’s
almost no genuine philosophical daylight between Sanders’s ideas and the
professed positions of front-runner Hillary Clinton. Their disagreement is over
what’s achievable. Yet Beltway wisdom tells us that only one party has been
radicalized in America. Democrats are the adults.
So there was Webb, listening to the former Baltimore
mayor lecturing America about how to stop gun violence. There was the former
secretary of state — a product of nepotism, big money, and cynical identity
politics who’s flipped on nearly every issue for expediency at some point in
her public life — lecturing America about her experience. Lincoln Chafee is not
the sort of guy who’s going to be ready on day one. And there was the
democratic socialist who plans to spend trillions of dollars on redistributive policies
that have created misery and poverty around the world lecturing us about
economics.
“I got a great deal of admiration and affection for
Senator Sanders,” Webb retorted after one of the senator’s diatribes about
toppling the oligarchy. “But, Bernie, I don’t think the revolution’s going to
come. And I don’t think the Congress is going to pay for a lot of this stuff.”
Maybe that’s where Webb is wrong. The revolutionary
candidate (even when you include Joe Biden) is polling at 24 percent.
So while the revolutionary candidate blamed the wealthy,
Webb refused to engage in ugly pandering. He insisted that all lives matter
when asked the loaded “black lives or all lives” question by a Facebook user.
He refuses to offer sound bites that will please anyone on foreign policy. He’s
the only candidate to talk about abuses against privacy from the previous
administration and point out that this president is also guilty of abuses of
executive power. He was the only candidate on the stage in Las Vegas who did
not selectively embrace the Constitution to make a point about some pet
political issue.
Webb detests politics just like the rest of us. You can
see it in his eyes. He hates campaigning. He doesn’t like raising money. In the
debate, Webb exhibited contempt for the bunkum that poured from mouths of
people who can claim that climate change is the most pressing problem mankind
faces. And I have little doubt he would have been similarly unimpressed by most
of the platitudinous answers Republicans offered in their debates.
Now, Webb would be far more conservative than the GOP
front-runner, but his moderate positions on tax policy, immigration, and
foreign affairs would make him just as disagreeable to most conservatives as he
is to most liberals. He isn’t exactly right for either party — not because of
some triangulation or convenient moderation but because he’s not an ideologue.
He’s also not a coward, as he’s unwilling to say whatever his party demands in
the pursuit of power.
In theory, these are all commendable traits. These, in
fact, are the sorts of things voters are always pretending to look for in a
candidate. In reality, this authenticity gets you to about 0.7 percent in the
polls. Americans claim not to like the partisanship of Washington. What they
mean is they dislike the other guy’s partisanship. What it means for Jim Webb
and candidates like him, serious people who deserve to be heard, is obscurity.
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