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If Democrats
Only Had Some Courage
by Helen Thomas
Published on Tuesday, December 13, 2005
by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Washington -- It's about time
that the "me too" Democrats, particularly those in
Congress who vote with the Republicans so often, stand up and
be counted.
Too many Democrats are tiptoeing
around the major issues facing our nation, afraid to venture
out of the mainstream. This is a big mistake at a time when the
nation is begging for true leadership.
Democrats with the courage to
be leaders could have a field day pointing out that millions
of Americans lack health insurance and that 37 million have fallen
below the poverty line. Soon they will no longer be able to claim
that theirs is a caring political party because they won't have
evidence that this is true.
Take, for example, the case of
Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y.
Instead of endorsing universal
health care -- a topic that she knows a lot about -- Clinton
is busy co-sponsoring with Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah, a law
to bar desecration of the flag. Has anyone burned a flag lately?
Clinton is a leading contender
for the Democratic presidential nomination, which might explain
why she's busy pandering to conservatives instead of staking
out a leadership role on more important issues.
The Democrats' lack of political
courage has left voters with the choice of Republicans who call
themselves that -- and Republicans who call themselves Democrats.
The result: The GOP gets a free ride.
President Bush has been weakened
this year and the allegations of corruption among GOP leadership
have hurt the party.
Democrats have a golden opportunity
to hammer away at the mistakes made by the Bush administration
and to support Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., who has made a dramatic
and courageous call for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq
within six months.
Murtha's House and Senate colleagues
should rush to embrace him. Instead, many of them have scattered
to the winds, carefully parsing out distinctions that they claim
prove that they're not like Murtha. The Pennsylvania Democrat
is a newly minted dove. He was in the Marine Corps for 37 years
and had such close ties to the Pentagon brass that some believe
he is speaking for many of them in his call to end the war in
Iraq.
Murtha argues that we will confront
less terrorism if the United States ends its occupation of Iraq.
He also frets that the U.S. military will be caught in an Iraqi
civil war if it stays behind.
To the alarm of the right-leaning
Democrats, Murtha has been joined by House Democratic leader
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who has endorsed his plan for a pullout
from Iraq within six months. But most House Democrats are taking
their marching orders from Rep. Rahm Emanuel, D-Ill., chairman
of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and Rep.
Steny H. Hoyer, D-Md., the second-ranking House Democratic leader,
who believe in a go-slow strategy.
It was sad to see Emanuel and
his cohorts fail to endorse Murtha. Despite the realization that
Congress was sold a bill of goods in endorsing the war, the Emanuel-led
Democrats fled when Murtha took a strong stand.
They also put a damper on Howard
Dean after he said on Monday that "the idea we're going
to win this war is an idea that unfortunately is just plain wrong."
White House press secretary Scott
McClellan said Dean was advocating the United States "should
cut and run and retreat."
Dean changed his tune on Thursday
and proposed a "strategic redeployment" of the 160,000
U.S. troops in Iraq over two years. It's possible to imagine
the twist marks on his arms, left there by timid Democrats.
On the domestic side, the Democrats
should put on a well-lighted marquee the fact that the Republican-controlled
Congress plans to save $50 billion over five years by cutting
food stamps, student loans and by slapping new fees on Medicaid
recipients and reducing child support enforcement. So much for
compassionate conservativism.
At the same time, the House on
Thursday passed tax cuts totaling $95 billion, sending a clear
message that the budget deficits will continue to grow.
The Democrats should learn from
the Cowardly Lion's story in the "The Wizard of Oz."
The King of Beasts wanted courage and lamented:
"Life is sad, believe me
Missy,
"When you're born to be
a sissy
"Without the vim and verve."
There's still time for a courage
transplant before the next elections.
Helen Thomas is a columnist for
Hearst Newspapers.
E-mail: helent@hearstdc.com.
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