It’s Not Sour Grapes, Michael Tomasky Just Hates the South. By Charles C. W. Cooke. National Review Online, December 8, 2014.
Have Democrats Failed the White Working Class? By Thomas P. Edsall. New York Times, December 9, 2014.
Carney:
Fritz Hollings, John Edwards, Zell Miller, Blanche Lincoln, John Breaux, Kay Hagan, Mark Pryor and Mary Landrieu. These eight Democrats have been senators from the South in the past decade.
If not
for Southern Democrats, Republicans would have nearly had a filibuster-proof
Senate supermajority after the 2002 elections, giving George W. Bush some real
clout. Without Southern senators, Democrats wouldn’t have taken over the Senate
with Jim Jeffords’ party switch in 2001. If not for Southern Democrats,
Obamacare wouldn’t have become law.
For the
foreseeable future, though, Democrats will have make do without Southern
senators.
With
Mary Landrieu’s gigantic loss on Saturday, following Hagan’s surprise loss and
Pryor’s thumping, the Southern Democratic senator is officially extinct. In the
House, there are no White Democrats from the South.
Why did
it happen?
In
short: Democrats waged a culture war against the South, trying to force
Southerners to stop “clinging” to their guns and to God. When you try to make
it illegal for people to conduct their own affairs according to their
conscience, you tend to lose their votes.
The
self-soothing story the Left tells itself is that it’s all racism, that
Democrats have lost the Southern vote because they’re not as willing to be
racist as the Republicans are. Liberal columnist Michael Tomasky cheered the
Democrats’ loss of the South, which he lovingly called “one big nuclear waste
site of choleric, and extremely racialized, resentment.”
Any
full accounting of Southern politics has to involve race and racism, but it
isn’t a top reason for the realignment.
Tomasky
and other liberals may not have heard of Sen. Tim Scott, the first black
Southerner elected to the U.S. Senate since reconstruction. South Carolina not
only elected Scott to the Senate in a special election this fall, it gave him
757,000 votes — 85,000 more votes than his South Carolina colleague Lindsey
Graham received the same day.
South
Carolina’s voters re-elected their Republican Governor, Nikki Haley, nee
Nimrata Nikki Randhawa. The state that defeated Mary Landrieu has had an
Indian-American governor since the 2007 elections.
White
racism can’t explain the GOP takeover of the South.
The
best explanation comes from the mouth of President Obama himself. Speaking to
San Francisco donors in 2008 about white voters in the Midwest, Obama lucidly
expressed his low opinion of all non-rich voters in flyover country: “they get
bitter, they cling to guns or religion.”
Naturally,
Democrats and the Left have tried to pry Southerners away from their guns and
religion. Gun control has largely been a culture war effort for Democrats.
“Some of the southern areas have cultures that we have to overcome,” was
Congressman Charles Rangel’s explanation for why gun control was both needed
and difficult.
The
Washington Post’s Gene Weingarten cursed the Second Amendment as “the
refuge of bumpkins and yeehaws who like to think they are protecting their
homes against imagined swarthy marauders desperate to steal their flea-bitten
sofas from their rotting front porches.”
Obama
and his party waged this culture-war crusade with glee — and failed, but not
before making it clear that they disapproved of the way Southerners live.
And the
Democrats have made it clear that they are willing to use government to impose
their morality on others. Through the courts, the Left has banned prayers at
high school football games and forced states to remove the Ten Commandments from
public grounds.
The
Obama administration, through its birth-control mandate that includes
abortifacient drugs, has told Christian employers that they can’t run their
businesses as Christians.
There’s
no mystery here, and no need to assign widespread racism to why Southerners
have rejected Democrats. It’s simple: Democrats and the Left have tried to
outlaw Southerners’ way of life.
Here’s
a related factor in the realignment: Democrats have given up on being the
populist party, and — as they have increasingly won over the wealthy suburbs
and the college-educated — have embraced their status as the party of the
economic elite.
As
crony capitalism and corporate welfare have grown, and as the Washington region
has sucked in more and more of the nation’s wealth, Republicans have started to
take up the populist mantle.
Alabama’s
Jeff Sessions, whose populism flares up in many ways, joined Louisiana’s David
Vitter in co-sponsoring a bill to break up the big banks. Sens. Landrieu, Hagan
and Pryor all campaigned unsuccessfully on their support for the Export-Import
Bank (a federal agency that subsidizes U.S. manufacturers and the banks that
finance them).
Democrats
have become the party of Hyde Park and Chevy Chase — elitist on culture and
economics. It’s no wonder they can’t also be the party of Charleston and
Shreveport.