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Patrick Buchanan
Pat Buchanan
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Lyndon Baines Obama

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It was the winter of conservative discontent.

Barry Goldwater had gotten only 38 percent of the vote, and his party had suffered its worst thrashing since Alf Landon fell to FDR in 1936.

Democrats held 295 House seats, Republicans 140. They held 68 Senate seats to Republicans' 32, and 33 governors to the GOP's 17.

Democratic registration was twice that of the GOP. The liberal press was gleefully writing the obituary of "The Party That Lost Its Head."

Decades might pass, it was said, before the GOP recovered from its fatal embrace of right-wing radicalism and foolish rejection of the leadership of Govs. Nelson Rockefeller and William Scranton.

Wrote Robert Donovan in the opening lines of his book, "The Future of the Republican Party":

"The devastating defeat of Barry Goldwater at the hands of voters in all sections of the country but the Deep South has damaged, weakened and tarnished the party. For years to come ... the two-party system will be crippled."

Donovan and all the rest were wrong. The GOP came roaring back in 1966 to capture 47 House seats and eight new governorships. In 1968, Nixon led the party out of the wilderness and into a White House it would hold for 20 of the next 24 years.

Full of hubris in 1965, Lyndon Johnson had seized his moment. He had launched a Great Society that would outdo his beloved patron FDR. He would dispatch 500,000 troops to Vietnam to "bring the coonskin home on the wall" and create a "Great Society on the Mekong." Those were heady days of "guns-and-butter."

By 1968, LBJ's coalition was shredded. Gov. George Wallace had torn away the populist right. Sens. Gene McCarthy, George McGovern and Robert Kennedy had rallied the antiwar left against him. LBJ and Hubert Humphrey were left to preside over a shrinking center.

Why did LBJ fail? He overloaded the circuits. He tried to do it all. He misread a national desire for continuity after Kennedy's death as a mandate for a lunge to the left and a great leap forward with the largest expansion of government since the New Deal.

By 1968, racial riots had torn apart almost every great city. The most prestigious campuses had been rocked by student violence. Thousands of antiwar demonstrators had taken to the streets. And 100 to 200 body bags were coming home from Vietnam every week.

By the winter of 1968, Lyndon Johnson was a broken president.

History never repeats itself exactly.

But Barack Obama is making the same mistakes today that LBJ made in 1965.

He has ordered 17,000 more U.S. troops into Afghanistan, as the situation deteriorates and the NATO allies pull out. He has no exit strategy. He has read a repudiation of George Bush as a mandate for a government seizure of wealth and power that exceeds anything attempted in the Great Society.

Fully half of the $3.55 trillion in spending Obama will preside over this year will not be covered by tax revenue but by red ink. The money will have to be borrowed from abroad or printed by the Fed.

Not only is Barack running a deficit four times as large as Bush's largest, he has called for $1 trillion in new taxes on America's most successful, who have already seen their savings and pensions ravaged.

He wants a cap-and-trade system to deal with a global-warming or climate-change crisis many scientists believe is a hoax. He is going to provide health care for all, including immigrants, millions of whom arrive uninsured every year. He is going to plunge scores of billions more into education, though education has eaten up the wealth of an empire, as SAT scores sink further and further below the apogee of 1964, before LBJ and the feds barged in. He is going to ask Congress for authority to spend another $750 billion rescuing the banks.

He is going to find the cure for cancer. He is going to ensure every kid gets a college education. He is going to drop half of all wage-earners off the tax rolls, while the top 2 percent, who already pay 40 percent of all income taxes, are forced to cough up more.

Obama is misreading the election returns. When America voted to cancel the White House lease of Mr. Bush, it did not vote Barack Obama a blank check.

By misinterpreting his mandate, Obama has accomplished something John McCain could not — unite the Republican Party and instill in it a new esprit de corps. For the Obama budget is an insult to the core belief of the party — that free people, not coercive government, should shape the character of society.

By daring Republicans to fight on the issue of a $1.75 trillion deficit, Obama has liberated the GOP from any obligation to him. He has come out of the closet as a radical liberal spoiling for a fight over an agenda of radical change.

Sooner than any might have thought, we have clarity.

Patrick Buchanan is the author of the new book "Churchill, Hitler and 'The Unnecessary War." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

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Sir;...Must you really ask why LBJ failed??? One word pretty much covers it: Vietnam.... Whenever a democratic president lets himself get sucked into foreign conflicts on ideological grounds he is making sweet love to failure... I have seen the guy, Johnson, on T.V....He knew how short was our attention span, and how quickly we demand victory...He was offered a creditable justification in the domino theory... The General, MacArthur, who knew we would lose, was dead...The other generals said they would win; and had no idea... But look at this situation even today... Kerry was seen to be hedging his bet on Iraq, voting both sides of the fense, and it cost him the election... H. Clinton voted for war to keep her political hopes alive, and killed them.... The democratic voters have more sense than their leaders, and sense enough to not follow losers.... Even when LBJ was done, and had given up on the war, and the presidency, he could not cut Hubert Humphry loose to chart his own course, and the democrats voted with their butts, and elected Richard Nixon and his secret plan to lose the war... The whole bunch of them were scumbags...Not one of them had the courage to pick their fights and walk away from a fight they could not win... The most basic concepts of military science were lost on them all from generals to president because their ideologies were directing all their actions... Party politics has ruined this country....Each party is playing for division, to satisfy no more than the absolute minimum -and still hold power...It gives to those demagogues on the attack the advantage over every defense... We Do not have the most able minds, but the most defensibly virtuous.... We do not have the most imaginative minds, but those most facile in principal... They would attack the whole world if they could defend their actions... They will let American soldiers die if they cannot defend peace... We do not have democracy... We have fickle public opinion.... We have competing ideologies as a substitute for real thought, and engaging discussion...The object and the necessity of true democracy is unity; consensus...Stupid presidents that bring this country to war without consensus deserve the contumely of history.... Is unity beyond us???The powerful do not want to concede any power to the people to decide on their own issues... They act without consensus in the expectation of consensus, and consensus is a thing of the past... That is the victory of party over democracy... It has ruined us... It limits every absolute good any president can do, and as Mr. Bush shows, the party process does not protect the people in the least from outrageous mistakes and moral turpitude... This system is crazy, and it will fall...I hope it does not manage to take us with it... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Mar 10, 2009 4:54 AM
...nixon got elected in '68 for one reason ...he promised to end the war ...course, mr. buchanan was there, he knows that ...hes just trying to spin history to make the point that obama must fail for the gop to rebound and retake the majority in '12
...i cant wait to see the gop populist right coming out against the war in afghanistan like they do against gay marriage ...maybe israel/us policy will be next ??
Comment: #2
Posted by: william coleman
Tue Mar 10, 2009 7:35 AM
Mr. Buchanan - I agree with everything that you said. I am just nervous to see someone like Rush Limbaugh or the neocons perceived as leaders of the Republican party. I thought this Obama defeat may finally drive the neocons out of the party, but apparently not. Of course this Obama-shlobama White House is showing its foreign policies are drafted by and for neocons, just like Bush jr. I just wish McCain had picked a better VP candidate ... and had not tried to sound so much like a neocon (although we know he desparately needed their support), then maybe, just maybe, he may have won the election. But I'll admit, I didn't vote for him. We need someone like Ron Paul. He might not be a great speaker like Obama (although this Obama-shlobama guy is overrated in the way he talks) but Paul's ideas are 100% better than Obama's. Lastly, unlike the fat and fat mouthed Rush, no matter who we have as President, I hope that the country and its economy will improve, and that we all succeed.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Ali Mogharabi
Tue Mar 10, 2009 10:07 PM
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