In October
2010, Senator Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader, famously told The
National Journal, “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for
President Obama to be a one-term president.” And that’s how he and his party
acted.
Well, Mitch,
how’s that workin’ out for ya?
No one can know
for sure what complex emotional chemistry tipped this election Obama’s way, but
here’s my guess: In the end, it came down to a majority of Americans believing
that whatever his faults, Obama was trying his hardest to fix what ails the
country and that he had to do it with a Republican Party that, in its gut, did
not want to meet him halfway but wanted him to fail — so that it could swoop in
and pick up the pieces. To this day, I find McConnell’s declaration appalling.
Consider all the problems we have faced in this country over the last four years
— from debt to adapting to globalization to unemployment to the challenges of
climate change to terrorism — and then roll over that statement: “The single
most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term
president.”
That, in my
view, is what made the difference. The G.O.P. lost an election that, given the
state of the economy, it should have won because of an excess of McConnell-like
cynicism, a shortage of new ideas and an abundance of really bad ideas — about
immigration, about climate, about how jobs are created and about abortion and
other social issues.
It seems that
many Americans went to the polls without much enthusiasm for either candidate,
but, nevertheless, with a clear idea of whom they preferred. The majority
seemed to be saying to Obama: “You didn’t get it all right the first time, but
we’re going to give you a second chance.” In a way, they voted for “hope and
change” again. I don’t think it was so much a ratification of health care or
“Race to the Top” or any other Obama initiative. It was more a vote on his
character: “We think you’re trying. Now try even harder. Learn from your
mistakes. Reach out to the other side, even if they slap away your hand, and
focus like a laser on the economy, so those of us who voted for you today
without much enthusiasm can feel good about this vote.”
And that is why
Obama’s victory is so devastating for the G.O.P. A country with nearly 8
percent unemployment preferred to give the president a second chance rather
than Mitt Romney a first one. The Republican Party today needs to have a real
heart-to-heart with itself.
The G.O.P. has
lost two presidential elections in a row because it forced its candidate to run
so far to the loony right to get through the primaries, dominated by its
ultraconservative base, that he could not get close enough back to the center
to carry the national election. It is not enough for Republicans to tell their
Democratic colleagues in private — as some do — “I wish I could help you, but
our base is crazy.” They need to have their own reformation. The center-right
has got to have it out with the far-right, or it is going to be a minority
party for a long time.
Many in the
next generation of America know climate change is real, and they want to see
something done to mitigate it. Many in the next generation of America will be
of Hispanic origin and insist on humane immigration reform that gives a
practical legal pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants. The next
generation is going to need immigration of high-I.Q. risk-takers from India,
China and Latin America if the U.S. is going to remain at the cutting edge of
the Information Technology revolution and be able to afford the government we
want. Many in the next generation of America see gays and lesbians in their
families, workplaces and Army barracks, and they don’t want to deny them the marriage
rights held by others. The G.O.P. today is at war with too many in the next
generation of America on all of these issues.
All that said,
my prediction is that the biggest domestic issue in the next four years will be
how we respond to changes in technology, globalization and markets that have,
in a very short space of time, made the decent-wage, middle-skilled job — the
backbone of the middle class — increasingly obsolete. The only decent-wage jobs
will be high-skilled ones.
The answer to
that challenge will require a new level of political imagination — a
combination of educational reforms and unprecedented collaboration between
business, schools, universities and government to change how workers are
trained and empowered to keep learning. It will require tax reforms and
immigration reforms. America today desperately needs a center-right G.O.P. that
is offering merit-based, market-based approaches to all these issues — and a
willingness to meet the other side halfway. The country is starved for practical,
bipartisan cooperation, and it will reward politicians who deliver it and
punish those who don’t.
The votes have
been counted. President Obama now needs to get to work to justify the second
chance the country has given him, and the Republicans need to get to work
understanding why that happened.
πηγη:THE NEW YORK TIMES

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