Saturday, March 06, 2004

Kerry's flip-flops

So. It's Bush v Kerry, and the battle lines have already been clearly drawn: flip-flopping Massachusetts liberal vs strong leader with moral clarity. And for all that Kerry might be leading in the polls at the moment, I agree with the collective opinion of the bettors on Tradesports: Bush still has something like a 62% chance of winning the election.

The liberal press has done a pretty solid job of glossing Kerry's about-faces. Michael Grunwald has a long table of them in Slate, while David Halbfinger has a front-page story in today's New York Times on the same subject. The general gist seems to be that Kerry is weak, indecisive: an all-things-to-all-people candidate.

George Bush has already been making hay along those lines. "Senator Kerry has been in Washington long enough to take both sides on just about every issue," he said after the Democratic nomination had been secured. Even earlier, he'd described the Democratic field as "for tax cuts and against them. For NAFTA and against NAFTA. For the Patriot Act and against the Patriot Act. In favour of liberating Iraq and opposed to it. And that's just one senator from Massachusetts."

In the New York Times article, the defenses of Kerry partisans are pretty weak:

Some aides and close associates say Mr. Kerry's fluidity is the mark of an intellectual who grasps the subtleties of issues, inhabits their nuances and revels in the deliberative process. "He doesn't fit into any neat pigeon holes," said Mr. Kerry's younger brother, Cameron, his closest adviser. "He's complex. So what?"

And the story ends with an utterly self-defeating quote from Jonathan Winer, a former Kerry aide:

"Between the moral clarity, black and white, good and evil of George Bush that distorts and gets reality wrong, and someone who quotes a French philosopher, André Gide, saying, `Don't try to understand me too much,' I'd let Americans decide which in the end is closer to what they need in a president."

Um, right, Mr Winer. George Bush is going to paint himself as a war president, a strong leader who fights on the side of good (and of God, natch) against the "evildoers". Will Americans really rather elect someone who quotes a French philosopher? Er, no.

When you actually look at the list of Kerry's flip-flops, however, it's slightly more difficult to get annoyed at them.

On affirmative action and education reform, Kerry started off tacking against the Democratic Party, before being pulled back in to the liberal mainstream. This doesn't really worry me: a president's positions on such things don't really matter too much, and if a Republican-controlled Congress should pass a sensible bill on either issue, the chances are that Kerry is going to be able to see the other party's point. In that he's in stark contrast to Bush, who, for all his rhetoric about being a "uniter, not a divider", has never seen a Democratic policy he didn't hate.

On mandatory minimum sentences and welfare reform, Kerry moved the other way: he started off liberal and then triangulated. In that, he was simply following the path of intelligent left-wingers everywhere, as exemplified by Bill Clinton and Tony Blair. Kerry has been a politician since the Vietnam war, and anybody who has exactly the same opinions now that they had 30 years ago should, in my view, be disqualified from ever running for office. The Clinton/Blair Third Way hasn't had much press recently, but it remains the only realistic way for a Democrat to get elected president.

On the issue of the death penalty for terrorists, the New York Times actually makes a convincing case that his reason for opposing it (that no one would extradite terrorists to the US) doesn't really apply any more: the US has proved itself pretty adept at getting its hands on terrorists other nations have captured.

Which leaves, in terms of the Slate list, at least, economic policy: gas taxation, double taxation of dividends, and trade. These are issues where the president has a lot of clout, and we want someone who's getting it right. The bedrock of the Third Way was that the leftist parties in the US and the UK had become more fiscally responsible than the right-wing parties who had traditionally held that ground: Clinton balanced the budget, while Blair's first bill in Parliament gave independence to the Bank of England. Robert Rubin set the standard for finance ministers around the world, with Gordon Brown coming in a close second.

The trade issue is the most worrisome. Kerry seems to have caught a nasty strain of protectionism from his potential running-mate John Edwards – one which is only reinforced by the logic of triangulation. If you want to move from Democratic orthodoxy towards the Bush administration on such issues, you need to shift to the left by quite a large amount.

Double taxation of dividends doesn't worry me at all: it's one thing saying that it ought to be abolished in theory, at the corporate level; it's another thing entirely voting for a hugely fiscally irresponsible tax bill which abolishes it at the personal level, creating all manner of stupid tax inefficiencies and contradictions.

But the gasoline tax issue is yet another case where fiscal responsibility has been triangulated away. The Bush administration has been so fiscally insane that it's a no-brainer for the Democrats to run as fiscal conservatives. But when it comes to the grey zone between rhetoric and policies, I'm having an increasingly hard time believing that Kerry will be nearly as hawkish as he needs to be.

A registered Democrat, then, is likely to look at the list of Kerry flip-flops and not feel particularly aggrieved by them. Even Republicans won't see little to hate there. But on the issue of flip-flopping in general, it's clear that Kerry is a politician in the Clintonian vein, who worries all sides of an issue to death before making up his mind. Bush is the opposite: he just barges ahead regardless of the intricacies or subtleties in any situation. And in terms of electoral politics, that might not be such a bad thing. After the midterm elections, I wrote that

What we saw yesterday was a vote for leadership in uncertain times. Bush might not be the sharpest tack in the drawer, but he makes decisions, sticks to them, and is unapologetic about them. As far as he's concerned, he knows what's best for the country, and he's going to do it. That is what's behind the unprecedented mid-term success for the party in the White House. And so long as times remain uncertain (which they surely will if the US invades Iraq) the same calculus will apply in 2004.

Well, the US invaded Iraq, as we all know, and I stand by what I wrote back then. There are lots of reasons why it makes sense to have a rather more sophisticated president, but I don't think that those reasons are compelling to swing voters. Americans, I fear, will always prefer Rambo to Rimbaud.

Posted by Felix at 16:18 EST

Comments

There's oil nearby, just about great caviar-and-cheese fests like the end of the answer would be "Not much" Kerry and his patriotism. Wel.

Let's talk about compassionate conservatism and what I believe, and the NAACP should en have tax exempt status anymore I don't need convincing. I used to be represented mainly by o political party? That's a legitimate question. (Applause.)

Posted by: Elena Markov at 14:49 EST, August 02, 2004

Post a comment




Remember Me?


(you may use HTML tags for style)

Search felixsalmon.com:
A blog about finance and economics, mostly, by Felix Salmon in New York City. Email me.

Felix Salmon: Recent posts

Felix's del.icio.us links

Archives