McCain, Clintons Reveal Political
Parties' Ugly Undersides
By: Christopher G. Adamo
Irrespective of all the in-depth political analysis that deals far too
specifically with each candidate's professed policies and appeal to voters, the
bulk of this campaign season is primarily being driven on both sides by
pragmatism born of fear.
The base of each party is currently motivated not by any inspired support
for one or more of its own candidates, but always and only out of a dread of how
the country might suffer at the hands of the candidate from the opposing party.
And the situation has remained in this dismal mode since the onset of the '08
campaign.
While enthusiastically accepting empty platitudes as promises from both
Obama and Hillary of "change" for the future, their respective supporters
lean less on any particular contrast in ideology or political agenda (since no
such contrast actually exists), and are instead motivated merely by who seems to
have the best chance of keeping the Republican candidate out of office. And
across the aisle, the field of Republicans is behaving in a disturbingly similar
manner.
Florida's primary notwithstanding, the fact that John McCain is taken
seriously at all by Republicans is in no way reflective of enthusiasm for his
consistent, left leaning (and this is a charitable assessment) governing
philosophies, nor his monotonously predictable betrayals of conservatism at
every opportunity where he might personally benefit from doing so. Rather, he is
seen by some (wrongly) as a formidable opponent to the ostensibly inevitable
Hillary Clinton.
It is hardly possible that Florida Republicans voted for open borders,
trashing the First Amendment, "constitutional rights" for terrorists, or
sacrificing the integrity of the Constitution in order to "protect the supposed
integrity of Senate chicanery. No doubt, to the media and in John McCain's mind,
this is how the Florida results are to be interpreted.
So, in this clash of supposed Titans, reality has temporarily been
relegated to a back burner. But reality, at least that of the Republican
candidate and his former stances which can disillusion and alienate the
conservative base, will surely be resurrected once each party has its nominee.
Meanwhile, these most Machiavellian candidates from either side of the
aisle
(albeit, the same end of the political spectrum) flail away in their
increasingly desperate efforts to assure dominance. And as they do so, they
reveal their own unscrupulous tendencies, as well as their opponents' past
compromises of principle that lurk like vermin hidden under the rocks of
American politics, and by which so much damage has been inflicted on the
political process, and thus on the country.
If any good at all is to come from this sordid spectacle, it is that
America is being given a glimpse of just how morally and ethically vacant so
many among its so called "leaders" really are. It is a lesson the country should
not soon forget.
Gone from the field are those GOP candidates who might have ably campaigned
on their past records of stances and accomplishments. All those that remain in
the running are basing their future political prospects on their ability to
erase and recast their past dalliances with the political overtures to the left
that Washington enthusiastically led, but only now realizes that America has
rejected.
Had the current cadre of candidates been real conservatives back then, and
had they steadfastly upheld such principles in defiance of the pervading
"current" of the time, they would have no need to be sidestepping and back
peddling so vigorously now.
Ultimately, it was the willingness of so many ethically bankrupt Republican
opportunists to play along with their Democrat cohorts, and to regularly make
"deals with the devil," that now undermine any efforts to credibly castigate the
Democrat Party's more blatant liberalism. Meanwhile, the manner in which
politics was conducted has itself changed significantly.
Clearly, the flagrant and shameless lies and treachery, by which the
Democrats retook the Congress in 2006, represent a new low in American politics,
at least in the current era. For the party of Ted Kennedy and Barney Frank to
attempt to make the case that those scummy e-mails from former Congressman Mark
Foley (R.-FL) were a defining aspect of the supposed "Republican culture of
corruption," was an act of hypocritical sanctimony that never could have been
attempted, straight faced, prior to the era of the Clintons.
Nor could the hideous abuse of power employed by Travis County Texas
Prosecutor Ronnie Earle against former House Majority Leader Tom Delay have
succeeded, were it not for the environment established by the Clintons as they
perverted the FBI and IRS (to name a few) into a burgeoning cadre of "political
police" summoned to decimate their political enemies.
National politics in this country have been conducted in such a manner,
with total impunity, ever since 1992, and in Arkansas, for much longer than
that. The current ugliness being spotlighted on the evening news really is
nothing new, excepting that as a result of Hillary's desperation, it is being
conducted in an increasingly overt manner, and for the moment at least, against
another Democrat.
American politics got significantly nastier and more unscrupulous at the
brazen and unrestrained hands of the Clintons than anything Richard Nixon could
ever have hoped for in his most sinister dreams. And the problem does not show
signs of abating any time soon. For although America abhors it, those inside the
Beltway seem to believe that their mastery of such tactics is the key to
political dominance.
Yet by such events, America's prospects for the future grow bleak. If
anything, this manner of politicking continues to sink the entire governing
process deeper and deeper into a murky abyss of corruption, venom, and deceit.
Only when Americans truly decide that such behavior is unacceptable, and
show it by their votes, will Washington be forced to take note and change its
ways. The dismal results from Florida, along with the fact that the Clintons are
still standing after their antics in South Carolina, suggests that America has
still further to descend before it hits bottom.