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Social Security and Political Realignments
by Noel Sheppard
03 March 2005
It appears from their actions that the preservation of Social Security
in its current form has become essential to not only preventing an electoral realignment,
but preserving the Democrat Party's very existence.
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One Sunday this past
November, President Bush’s chief strategist Karl Rove went on the talk show
circuit to discuss the possibility that 2004 would be depicted by historians
as being a realigning election. A little over three months later, with
the nation fixated on Social Security reform, his opinions seem remarkably
prescient.
According to Wikipedia:
[A
realigning election is one] in which geographic bases of power for each of
the two parties [are] significantly altered, resulting in a new political
power structure and status quo. It is generally believed that a realigning
election happens only after a shift in partisan preferences, though not necessarily
policy preferences, among the electorate.
Some
of the more notable of such elections occurred in 1800 (transfer of power
from the Federalists to the Democratic-Republicans), 1824 (split of the Democratic-Republicans),
1860 (creation of the Republican Party), 1932 (creation of the “New Deal”
Democrats), and, most recently, Ronald Reagan’s revival of the Republican
Party in 1980.
Given this, it is quite likely that the significance of the 2004 elections,
though continually being downplayed in front of the cameras by the usual
suspects, has in no way been lost upon the Democratic Party leadership and
its members. In fact, it appears from their actions that the preservation
of Social Security in its current form has become essential to not only preventing
this realignment, but preserving their party’s very existence.
To understand this nexus, it is important to recognize the realigning magnitude
of the 1932 elections, as the Democratic Party and our nation were thoroughly
transformed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal. This began decades
of Democratic control of the White House as well as the Congress while the
Republican Party languished.
Now, 72 years later -- and coincidentally following the first campaign period
wherein a sitting president won a re-election bid while increasing his party’s
position in both chambers of Congress since FDR did it in 1936 -- a Republican
president with a Republican Congress is proposing a radical change to the
very program whose passage started this party’s decline seven decades earlier.
Unfortunately, this legislative battle is coming at the worst possible time
for the Democrats, who have been having a serious internal struggle for the
past ten years between their left-leaning members who are still clinging
to New Deal ideologies, and the more moderate wing founded by former President
Clinton and the Democratic Leadership Council.
What this sets up is a situation where history might repeat itself in a fashion
that is not a good omen for the Democrats, for the last time they had such
a power struggle -- the 1824 elections -- it began a division of the Democratic-Republicans
into the two parties we have today. By 1860, this separation culminated
in the rise of the Republican Party under Abraham Lincoln, leading to decades
of Republican political dominance.
How does this historical schism foreshadow what is happening today?
Well, the Democratic Party since losing the Congress in 1994 has been struggling
with its identity almost like Norman Bates. Are we liberals?
Are we moderates? Are we hawks? Are we doves? Do we like
taxes? Do we hate taxes? Do we take showers? Do we take
baths? Mother? Mother?
Of course, as the psychiatrist tells us at the conclusion of Psycho,
such a condition always ends in a battle between the two personalities.
And, with the election of Howard Dean as the party’s National Committee Chairman,
it should be infinitely clear that, for the time being, the New Deal Democratic
wing of the party prevailed.
Though this might appear foolhardy given the rightward shift of the nation
for the past 24 years, it must be understood that the Democratic Party is
in more than just a fight to win back the Congress and the White House.
Much like 1824, it is in a battle for its very survival. And, this
time, the center of the storm is likely its crowning achievement.
Of additional importance is the reality that, since its inception, all legislative
changes to Social Security have either expanded the base of its recipients,
their benefits, or the scope of their receipts, with the only exception being
their taxable status. As such, any Republican-sponsored change to this
publicly perceived Democratic incarnation that acts to reduce or delay guaranteed
benefits while increasing the individual’s control over his current contributions
and future receipts will be seen historically as the beginning of the end
of the New Deal.
Clearly, this explains why the Democratic response has been quite unified,
and singularly obstructionist. On the one hand, they’re all saying
that there is no Social Security crisis, including moderates like Evan Bayh
(D-IN), a high ranking member of the Democratic Leadership Council who in
the past four years could be counted on to be one of the more reasonable
voices in such a debate.
On the other hand, any problem that the Democrats have acceded does exist
with this entitlement program can easily be resolved in their view by either
raising the current income threshold for payroll taxes, or not extending
the 2003 tax cuts on the wealthiest one percent of wage earners. Of
course, both options intentionally represent New Deal solutions to a New
Deal program for the expressed purpose of convincing the electorate that
such dogma still has merit, even though it is no longer new and never was
a good deal.
In the end, the battle lines are certainly not surprising. However,
if Social Security reform is indeed accomplished, and is followed by an expansion
of the Republican Congressional majority in 2006 with continued Republican
control of the White House two years later, the 2004 elections will be historically
portrayed as almost the exact opposite of those that occurred in 1932 with
similarly diametric consequences.
Noel Sheppard is a business owner, economist, and writer residing in Northern California.
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