tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5052634112244166698.post5661387194725858815..comments2023-10-25T09:06:52.457-07:00Comments on Democrats Now: Love and Loathing in Las VegasAndrew Levinehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13872591255507588661noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5052634112244166698.post-86251823703785170082008-01-16T09:57:00.000-08:002008-01-16T09:57:00.000-08:00I don't know whether Barack Obama is the Gary Hart...I don't know whether Barack Obama is the Gary Hart of this election, but I do know that your "vacuity" inference is a cheap shot when it comes to Sen. Hart's 1984 campaign. For the benefit of your readers, I thought you might be interested in this recently published opinion:<BR/><BR/>Denver Post<BR/>Opinion<BR/> <BR/>Where's the beef?<BR/>By Dan Haley<BR/>Article Last Updated: 01/05/2008 07:18:54 PM MST<BR/><BR/>Shuffling through some old files in the office last week, I stumbled upon a yellowed clipping from The Futurist that someone from The Past had tucked away in a manila folder. <BR/>The piece was titled "The Future of the Democratic Party," and was dated December 1981. Democrats had just weathered the Reagan Revolution. Not only was a Republican elected president a year earlier, but Democrats lost their generation-long grip on the Senate. <BR/>They were searching for answers. <BR/>"Democrats need . . . to regain their own positive political vision," wrote then-Sen. Gary Hart, who was settling in to his second Senate term and scratching out the first of two presidential bids. <BR/>"Clearly, we can't do this by focusing first on the Republicans and then designing our own agenda in reaction to them. The party's future lies in the creation and articulation of a positive - not reactive - agenda." <BR/>Sounds like good advice for today's Democrats and Republicans. <BR/>The Hart piece was a fascinating read, given that we're now officially mired in high political season, where too often glitzy campaign ads, celebrity stumpers and soaring rhetoric substitute for substance and new ideas. <BR/>His piece was incredibly prescient, predicting exactly the issues we're faced with today. <BR/>The essay dropped, literally, onto my lap on the eve of the Iowa caucus. Ironic, since it was in Iowa 24 years ago that this unknown senator gained a national foothold by finishing a surprising second to front-runner Walter Mondale. <BR/>He did it by pitching new ideas that he thought would drive the country forward - an ingredient too often missing from today's Iowa debates. <BR/>With more than four days between Iowa and New Hampshire back then, Hart was able to use that momentum to upset the veep in N.H., shaking up the race for good. Mondale, though, somehow got away with criticizing Hart's ideas as empty, vague rhetoric. "Where's the beef?" Mondale deadpanned, proving, again, that easy slogans can win over substance. <BR/>The beef was there, had anyone looked. Hart outlined three issues in his essay that the United States would face in the 1980s: national defense, energy and economic revitalization. <BR/>While he whiffed on defense, considering how the Cold War would end - "We must never cease reminding Americans that an unrestrained nuclear arms race makes us weaker, not stronger" - his words on energy and the economy were striking. <BR/>He called energy independence a national security issue: "We cannot regain a clear vision of America's role in the world until we free ourselves from dependence on oil from the unstable Persian Gulf region," he wrote. "Until then, we risk being drawn into a vain, futile war for oil." <BR/>He backed an aggressive conservation program, and investment in renewable energy sources. <BR/>He also spotted the rapid growth of the country's high-tech sector: "We have concerned ourselves with shoring up aging industries . . . Our tax policy rewards investment in physical equipment, yet offers no similar incentive for investment in the human capital that drives our 'information economy.' " <BR/>Reading it begged the question: Is there a candidate out there today with such a clear vision of the future? And could he or she even articulate such a vision in our world of sound bites and slogans? <BR/>Hart couldn't do it 1984, but at least the more drawn-out process then allowed him to campaign all the way to the convention floor, where he would seal his front-runner status for a later bid. <BR/>Today's front-loaded caucus and primary system seems only to benefit the candidate with the money and organization, not the big ideas. <BR/>Where's the beef? <BR/>We may no longer have the time, or patience, to find out. <BR/>Editorial page editor Dan Haley can be reached at dhaley@denverpost.com.Tomashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00662344913518523695noreply@blogger.com