Crossposted from original article at www.opednews.com
It's time to target the right wing incumbents who are ready to "fall off the vine" and retire-- to make them so miserable in their job, that they don't want to come back, that they'd rather sign up for a cush job in the private sector instead.
It's already begun. Denny Hastert is quitting. Deborah Pryce is quitting. Charles "Chip" Pickering is retiring. Virginia Senator John Warner, 80 years old, is considering retiring.
Do you think a pattern is developing here?
It's a whole different way to make a living when you're a minority member of the congress. Lobbyists don't treat you the same, especially since the ethics rules have changed.
Think of all the Republicans who WERE committee chairs, who USED TO wield incredible power, who are now relegated to observer status, forced to accept the gavels of the Dems who they used to rule over. They have to watch as the Dems make policy.
Then they go home to a diminishing base. They look at the Dems reeling in a LOT more money. They are stuck supporting a war, giving lip service to supporting a war that it is hard for anyone to rationally get enthusiastically behind.
How many more right wingers do you think are teetering on the edge, thinking that now is the time to call an end to their career in congress. I wonder how many are already feeling that going another two years in the minority is not going to be fun, is even going to be worse, as the Dems pick up an even stronger majority.
Nancy Pelosi, Stenny Hoyer, Harry Reid, Rahm Emanuel, Chuck Schumer, are you listening? It seems that you have, probably dozens of incumbent right wingers who are not exactly enthusiastic about coming back to work in 2009, not looking forward to taking minority positions on committees, not enthusiastically expecting to cruise to victory in states or districts which they used to take for granted. They are going to have to fight tougher and hard, raise more money than they have in years.
You have a lot of potential retirees just waiting, already ripening to be knocked off the vine. You have dozens of potential candidates who might be persuaded that it's just not worth coming back, not worth going through the aggravation of running against fresh, well funded opponents supported by constituents who are angry at you for supporting George W. Bush, the worst president in US history.
These potential retirees will almost certainly be facing working in a congress with both houses controlled by Democrats, with a Democratic president. It's not going to be fun for the minority party legislators.
The time is ripe to do things to maximize the ripening process, to make those minority members WANT TO LEAVE, to bring them to the point where they conclude that it's not worth it, running again, that staying in office just won't be fun, won't be profitable, will even be miserable.
The Democratic leaders in the House and Senate are in the position to do that in the coming months. It won't be pretty, but it WILL be symmetrical-- meaning it will be comparable with the way the former majority leaders- the Republicans-- acted when they were in power. That will mean that when Democrats rule committees, they do so with an iron hand, especially with the targets of this "retirement campaign."
First step should be to identify the incumbents, besides Hastert, Pryce and Pickering, who have already announced, who fit the profile of likely to be inspired to retire-- older, weakening bases, falling funds, former committee chairs-- people who have tasted the sweetness of power and who have since, tasted the bitter pill of living in its shadow since the Dems took over in Jan 2007. Some of the "contract with a new America" people, who were swept into office with Newt Gingrich, back in the mid nineties may be ripe for falling off the incumbent "vine." Things are certainly a far cry from what they started out being accustomed to. Then there are the more senior members-- with decades of membership in the "club congressional."
Next, the Dems have to start turning up the heat on these "targets" for ripening off the vine. That means making sure that the targets become acutely aware of their minority status on committees, experiencing shart flashes of reality, in the form of minimized time, minimized input-- always respecting the rules, but not providing much if anything in the way of largesse.
These targets need to know early on that their states, for senators, and their districts, for house reps, are already being targeted more aggressively, extra early , with higher funding and more third party PACs and other organizations going after them.
The whole idea is to get these "targets" to start thinking, as early as possible, about retiring. It won't even hurt if pundits and bloggers start writing about the possibilities, doing articles specifically targeting individual candidates, discussing the hows and whys of their retirement, even exploring possible post-retirement jobs the incumbents will enjoy.
During this summer break, local activists might help the "ripening" process by holding vigils at the legislators offices, or near their homes. Now's not the time to be nice to these legislators. It's time to be clear that you don't want them to come back-- if you see them in public, time to speak up, not to be kind and friendly and polite.
America has a lot of healing to do in the coming years. It's questionable whether the US will ever fully recover from the damage the Bush presidency has wreaked. The more progressive and moderate legislators in the congress, the easier it will be.
So, when you see your legislator using that "friend" language to address the right wingers in congress, give her or him a call and suggest that now is the time to get tough on these enablers of the Bush constitution and democracy destruction team, the Bush environmental and workplace deregulation team. Contact the Dem committee heads and encourage them to do what they can to use their powers to make the right wingers, particularly the targeted ones, want to retire.
It's enormously easier to beat a newcomer running for the first time than to beat an incumbent. The smartest thing the Democrats can do is to finesse the right wing strategists by cutting off their strongest source of power-- incumbency. It's going to be, or it should be a war, the next six months. It won't be pretty. It will be unpleasant. But this is the most powerful way imaginable to act, ahead of the primaries, to weaken the competition. If you don't think the backstabbers on the right haven't been nasty and unpleasant, just think of their former leaders-- Bill Frist, Tom DeLay-- not exactly warm, fuzzy and friendly.
If you know of legislators who fit the profile-- older, former committee chair or wielder of power, diminished, weakened home base, reduced campaign reserves, recent ethics "challenges," already showing signs of being tired of the game in D.C., frayed family ties, opportunities, based on past power, to grab high paying corporate jobs-- list them in comments below this article, contact the DSCC and the DCCC. Let them know they should be adding the candidate to a "retirement motivation" list. There are about six months left to make a program like this work.
Alaska's senior senator Ted Stevens (85 on election day 2008) and New Mexico's Pete Domenici (76 on election day 2008) are under the shadow of scandals. New Mexico is getting bluer and bluer. New Hampshire's John Sununu has a tough competitor who is getting great polling stats. Oklahoma's James Imhofe, an anti-global warming science goofus who has gotten even nuttier since losing his seat as head of the Senate Environmenal committee, will be nearly 74 on election day 2008. I'll bet there's a job at an oil company just waiting for him at four times his current pay, and he only has a 46% approval rating. Colorado's Wayne Allard is considered very vulnerable, with some strong Dem contenders already interested in the race. North Carolina's Elizabeth Dole,72 on election day, could have a tough race, if a strong contender enters. She may be ready to enjoy some golden years with Bob. Oregon's Gordon Smith faces a tough race, as Oregon gets bluer. Then there's one of Bush's strongest loyalist front men, Mitch McConnell, currently polling below 50% approval , in a state that is sick of Bush's Iraq war. They're all "ripe." It's time for the Dem leaders to start treating them in a way that motivates them to want bid adeiu to their stint in the senate
And keep in mind, even if the old dinosaurs in guaranteed red states are replaced by more moderate, lower ranked right wingers, that's still an improvement.
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