Mr. Smith Meets Mr. Bonaparte
Unity '08 started life as very much a "Mr. Smith Goes To Washington" movement. The idea, hatched by two well-known if long-toothed political operatives, one Democratic, one Republican (Gerald Rafshoon and Doug Bailey, respectively), was to create a grass-roots, internet-based campaign that would mobilize the gazillions of Americans disgusted with partisan polarization, recruit volunteers, raise money, gain ballot access, and then draft a platform and a bipartisan ticket and sweep to victory in November of 2008 over the dead carcasses of the donkey and the elephant, with high-minded folk everywhere applauding madly.
So how's that worked out for them? Well, yesterday brought the unsurprising news that Rafshoon and Bailey have left Unity '08 to work for a draft-Bloomberg outfit, while Unity '08 itself sheepishly admits failure and "scales back" its operations from little to none.
Seems that Unity '08 has only signed up 124,000 "volunteers"--measured very loosely--and has $1.4 million in the bank. That's sofa-cushion change for Mike Bloomberg, who is said to be willing to spend somewhere between a half-billion and a billion smackers if he decides to run for president--an increasingly likely prospect despite all his public disavowals of candidacy. Aside from the Unity '08 crowd, Bloomberg can also count on support from the Village Elders crowd of former elected officials that assembled in Norman, Oklahoma the other day to call for some sort of bipartisan Government of National Salvation.
These developments are depressingly predictable and familiar. History is replete with examples of extra-partisan, extra-ideological "populist" movements that take a turn towards the authoritarian desire for a Big Man who can squash the petty, squabbling parliamentarians and govern in the "true" national interest. Mr. Smith often yields to Mr. Bonaparte.
I am not--repeat not--suggesting that Mike Bloomberg is some sort of proto-authoritation, or that in the unlikely event he won the presidency, he'd suspend the constitution or arrest Nancy Pelosi and Mitch McConnell. My simple point is that the exasperation with political parties and "gridlock" expressed by Unity '08 and the Draft Bloomberg crowd reflects an attitude of despair towards democracy itself that isn't very healthy, and that has a long, unsavory history in world politics.
It's telling that the Unity '08 founders, and the Village Elders as well, claim to represent tens of millions of Americans who are eager to abandon the two major parties--yet their "movement" now depends entirely on Mike Bloomberg's polling, and his willingness or unwillingness to throw enough money into a campaign to buy crediblity. You'd think the irony would give them pause. We'll soon see.






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It's easy to be "post-partisan" when no one knows what your positions are. A Macy's window mannequin could benefit.
Obama is taking a wee-bit advantage of this strategy, as well, I think.
Not that you can't find his positions anywhere. He just doesn't pepper his speeches with any detail that could rile up any opposition.