WASHINGTON — At a moment when the nation wonders whether politicians can agree on anything, here is something that unites the Republican presidential candidates — and all of them with President Obama: Everyone agrees that the 2012 election will be a turning point involving one of the most momentous choices in American history.
True, candidates (and columnists) regularly cast the impending election as the most important ever. Campaigning last week in Pella, Iowa, Republican Rick Santorum acknowledged as much. But he insisted that this time, the choice really was that fundamental. “The debate,” he said, “is about who we are.”
Speaking not far away in Mount Pleasant, Newt Gingrich went even further, and was more specific. “This is the most important election since 1860,” he said, “because there’s such a dramatic difference between the best food-stamp president in history and the best paycheck candidate.” Thus did Gingrich combine historic sweep with a cheap and inaccurate attack. Nonetheless, it says a great deal that Gingrich chose to reach all the way back to the election that helped spark the Civil War.
Mitt Romney was on the same page in a speech in Bedford, N.H. “This is an election not to replace a president but to save a vision of America,” he declared. “It’s a choice between two destinies.” Sounding just like Santorum, he urged voters to ask: “Who are we as Americans, and what kind of America do we want for our children?”
Obama could not agree more. “This is not just another political debate,” the president said in his theme-setting speech in Osawatomie, Kan., earlier this month. “This is a make-or-break moment for the middle class, and for all those who are fighting to get into the middle class.”
On this one, Santorum, Gingrich, Romney and Obama all have it right. For the first time since Barry Goldwater made the effort in 1964, the Republican Party is taking a run at overturning the consensus that has governed American political life since the Progressive era.
Obama is defending a tradition that sees government as an essential actor in the nation’s economy, a guarantor of fair rules of competition, a countervailing force against excessive private power, a check on the inequalities that capitalism can produce, and an instrument that can open opportunity for those born without great advantages.
Today’s Republicans cast the federal government as an oppressive force, a drag on the economy and an enemy of private initiative. Texas Gov. Rick Perry continues to promise, as he did last week during a campaign stop in Davenport, Iowa, to be a president who would make “Washington, D.C., as inconsequential in your life as he can make it.” That far-reaching word “inconsequential” implies a lot more than trims in budgets or taxes.
The GOP is engaged in a wholesale effort to redefine the government help that Americans take for granted as an effort to create a radically new, statist society. Consider Romney’s claim in his Bedford speech: “President Obama believes that government should create equal outcomes. In an entitlement society, everyone receives the same or similar rewards, regardless of education, effort and willingness to take risk. That which is earned by some is redistributed to the others. And the only people who truly enjoy any real rewards are those who do the redistributing — the government.”
Obama believes no such thing. If he did, why are so many continuing to make bundles on Wall Street? As my colleagues Greg Sargent and Paul Krugman have been insisting, Romney is saying things about the president that are flatly, grossly and shamefully untrue. But Romney’s sleight of hand is revealing: Republicans are increasingly inclined to argue that any redistribution (and Social Security, Medicare, student loans, veterans benefits and food stamps are all redistributive) is but a step down the road to some radically egalitarian dystopia.
Obama will thus be the conservative in 2012, in the truest sense of that word. He is the candidate defending the modestly redistributive and regulatory government the country has relied on since the New Deal, and that neither Ronald Reagan nor George W. Bush dismantled. The rhetoric of the 2012 Republicans suggests they want to go far beyond where Reagan or Bush ever went. And here’s the irony: By raising the stakes of 2012 so high, Republicans will be playing into Obama’s hands. The GOP might well win a referendum on the state of the economy. But if this is instead a larger-scale referendum on whether government should be “inconsequential,” Republicans will find the consequences to be very disappointing.
E.J. Dionne’s email address is ejdionne(at)washpost.com. (c) 2011, Washington Post Writers Group
In politics, the word “conservative” means avoiding change. In that sense, Obama and the majority of the Republican field is absolutely a conservative one. The new definition of liberal (that is, for change) should be ones that want to get rid of the rules that favor the rich, especially bankers. War spending favors the rich. Expansion of credit favors the bankers (who always get first dibs on the cheapest money). That’s the what the current conservatives, including Obama, favor. Taxes are a weak and ineffective counter-balance, which is why both sides like to fight over it: if you can get people asking the wrong questions, you don’t need to worry about their answers.
For once, I agree with Mr. Dionne, although I don’t think he’s taken it far enough. He’s still blind to the real source of our financial and political woes.
This has to be a joke, but it’s not April fools day. Check out the following
http://www.americanselect.org/profile-candidate/234946
If you believe raising taxes is more important than lowering spending to a conservative, then its true.
If you believe spending money on renewable energy while ignoring natural gas, coal and oil is conservative, then its true.
If you believe the federal government should be the major provider for healthcare reimbursement is conservative, then its true.
If you believe most illegal immigrants should be given amnesty and stay in the country is conservative, then its true.
If you believe America should listen to other countries in foreign policy and not be a leader in foreign policy is conservative, then its true. (Further drill down of the foreign policy position questions clarifies more fully his positions)
If you believe the federal government control of curriculum over the state and local controls are conservative, then its true.
If you believe that no natural resources should be used by man, but should be protected at all cost, then its true.
If you look deeper into the questions asked of the various politicians responding to these questions, you will find that these answers are as liberal as can get.There are four answers, from extreme right to extreme left, with two in the middle.
Obama’s answers wer at the far left. That is not conservative!!!
RP, your rant is pretty meaningless. No serious candidate really believes the straw men you put on the screen. And so what if in this system of comparing viewpoints Obama comes out on “the left”? Looking at the way they defined things shows their positions on things. As soon as I saw the phrase Death Tax applied to the estate tax I figured out how worthless their little comparison of candidates would be. The idea that there is still a de facto moratorium on looking for new energy sources also shows that Americans Elect is anything but what they portray themselves as.
Thanks Jim you saved me both time and keystrokes.
Here’s a little background on RP’s source – Americans Elect Candidate Ejection Committee Chaired by FBI, CIA, Military Research Chiefs