By
Kathryn Lopez
For one afternoon, it seemed like the story
of longtime Pennsylvania Republican senator Arlen Specter
switching parties was serving as the capstone of the much-hyped
100 Days of President Obama celebration; the triumphal touting
of a decisive blow dealt by the Democrats against the loyal
opposition.
As April 29 began, the president and
the vice president stood with Specter at the White House for a
morning photo op. The Democratic message was clear: Not only did
we win but we keep winning. The Republicans lost big in
November, and it's just getting worse for them and better for
us.
It's a wonder that Al Franken, former
"Saturday Night Live" player and increasingly likely Democratic
senator from Minnesota, wasn't in the audience, in the
role of icing on the victory cake.
Obama and his cheering squad were both
right and wrong. The likely Democrat-Republican vote divide in
Congress, 60-40, does not bode well for Republicans — especially
considering that the Franken accession, if it happens, will mean
a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate for the president and
his party.
The next morning, Vice President Joe
Biden appeared on morning television and announced, amidst the
media feeding frenzy over swine flu, that he wouldn't — and has
advised his family not to — go near planes, trains or just about
anything short of an open field, as if those geographical
expanses might be the only safe havens for flu-averse Americans.
It was incredibly reckless, ridiculous and very Joe Biden.
But it cast the Specter story in a
perverse light of hope: things can change in but a political
moment for either party. In other words, the notion that a
signed, sealed and delivered paradigm shift has taken place in America is
false, and therein can be found hope for the Republican Party.
Though the president maybe popular overall, some polls suggest
that Americans are still undecided about their new commander in
chief.
In times of adversity, the right must
be active. In a 1970 interview, the late conservative icon
William F. Buckley Jr. said it best: conservatives must keep an
"alternative landing field in operation." During their time in
the political wilderness, Republicans and their fellow happy
warriors should take time to regroup and renew. The right has to
present and maintain a viable alternative for Americans, because
eventually the country will need to safely return to the ground.
At some point — and in an atmosphere of bankruptcy, bailouts and
ersatz economic stimuli, it could be sooner rather than later -
Vice President Biden will let the cat out of the bag: that
Democrats, too, are uncertain of their future. With the American
jury out on the new gang's policies, there's a strong
possibility that in a few years — say as the next presidential
election is approaching — voters will look for a pragmatic,
sensible alternative to the lofty left.
I was reminded of Buckley's sage words
during a panel at the Milken Institute in
Beverly Hills, where I was speaking in
the wake of the Specter switch, on the 100th day of the Obama
administration. During a session after mine, Les Moonves, the
CBS executive notorious for taking a very expensive, and perhaps
unwise, gamble on Katie Couric, was optimistic. Everyone on the
panel — the founder of popular video Web site hulu.com, a
moviemaker, a journalist — was optimistic. It wasn't just
putting on good game faces either. It was a matter of seeing
opportunities and embracing them.
Figure out what you do best, and do it.
Will Internet cannibalize broadcast TV? Maybe. But maybe it's
just another opportunity for CBS to get their product in front
of more eyes. In politics, too, it would be wise to embrace the
opportunities that drastic change brings. It's not every day you
get the time and space to study, teach and hone your ideas. Yes,
it's the worst of times for Republicans and the right. But it's
also the best of times.
Whatever party Arlen Specter belongs
to, President Obama doesn't have to be an end for the right, but
a new beginning.
May 4, 2009 Article at:
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com