Media Assist Democrats' Bait and Switch Election Strategy

Photo of Noel Sheppard.

In 1992, Bill Clinton campaigned for president by promising tax cuts for the middle class. Fourteen years later, his Party ran on a similar “tell the people exactly what they want to hear” motif, this time the mantra being a speedy withdrawal of American troops from Iraq.

Though separated by almost a decade and a half, these campaign strategies were quite similar to a now illegal marketing scheme called a bait and switch – whereby a company advertises a product for sale at a cheap price to lure in customers. Unfortunately, the organization’s retail outlets don’t actually have the item in stock forcing anxious shoppers to consider more expensive products that are available.

I Dig a Phony

Much like this advertising scam, the 1992 and 2006 political campaigns had three things in common:

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• They were hugely successful in garnering enough votes to assure victory

• They offered promises that weren’t remotely meant to be kept

• Their pledges would be rescinded before those newly elected would take office.

Surprisingly, the Democrats of 2006 were faster in retracting their campaign promises than Clinton. He at least waited a few weeks to tell the seemingly stunned populace that “suddenly” exploding budget deficits made tax cuts unfeasible, setting up the perfect ruse to raise them. By contrast, in 2006, the Democrats only waited nine days to betray their supporters.

This most recent backstabbing of the electorate is a little less obvious though – or, as liberal elites like to say, more nuanced – and came in the form of a coronation by House Democrats of Steny Hoyer (D-Maryland) as their Majority Leader instead of antiwar hero Jack Murtha (D-Pennsylvania).

Many in the media saw this as a vote of no confidence in the Congressman’s ethics background. However, buried deep under the surface was something far more telling. With this one vote, the left made it clear that regardless of what they said during the campaign, they fully understood how a capricious withdrawal from Iraq was not in the country’s best interest.

I Don’t Want to Soil the Party

To be sure, some well-timed comments by General John Abizaid on Wednesday, making it clear that he didn’t support any troop reductions at this time, proved quite fortuitous for Democrats in dire need of a Party makeover. This made supporting the currently more hawkish Hoyer the perfect tonic for those on the left looking to get this issue out of the way well before the new Congress was sworn in.

Equally timely was a Washington Post editorial published the day before adroitly explaining the need for the coming Democrat change of direction:

But [Murtha’s] descriptions of the stakes [in Iraq] have been consistently unrealistic, and his solutions irresponsible. Just last week he denied that the United States was fighting terrorism in Iraq, though al-Qaeda is known to play a major part in the insurgency. He said the United States should abandon even the effort to train the Iraqi army and should “redeploy as soon as practicable,” an extreme step that most congressional Democrats oppose. He claimed that “stability in the Middle East, stability in Iraq,” would come from such an abrupt withdrawal; in fact, virtually all Iraqi and Middle Eastern leaders have said that it would lead to a greatly escalated conflict that could spread through the region.

Obviously, achieving this necessary character switch would require Democrats to begin separating themselves from their campaign promises. After all, exit polls showed that 67 percent of voters felt Iraq was either very or extremely important in their election decisions. Of the 56 percent that said they disapproved of the war, 80 percent voted for Democrats. And, 82 percent of those that wanted all of the troops withdrawn (representing 29 percent of voters) supported Democrat candidates.

As a result, millions of Americans voted “D” in their districts and states exclusively due to the belief that this would lead to an expeditious withdrawal of troops. Once it became clear that such a move was not going to happen, the Democrats had to figure out a way to explain to the electorate that conditions had somehow radically changed in just nine days making their campaign promises implausible.

Of course, it’s likely that many Americans never bought into the Democrat pledge to withdraw troops quickly, and easily saw through the canard. Though appearing at this time to be a species facing extinction, many inside the Beltway refer to them not so affectionately as conservatives. Heartfelt congratulations go to all in that camp.

However, that doesn’t assuage the anger those who did get fooled again will feel when they discover that they fell prey to the same nefarious bait and switch scheme as they did back in 1992. Much as then, it is incumbent on the Democrats to make all those duped feel better about themselves, thereby making it easier to pull the wool over their eyes the next time this campaign strategy becomes necessary.

Johnny B. Bad

Step one in accomplishing this goal was for Democrats to distance themselves from the very man that almost single-handedly got the antiwar movement rolling back on November 17, 2005. Of course, it does appear a bit unseemly that Murtha’s “assassination” so to speak occurred almost exactly on the one year anniversary of his first well-publicized protestations about Iraq. Maybe that’s just icing on the cake, or, in keeping with the season, sauce for the goose.

Why was this essential? Well, if the Democrat Party were indeed going to backtrack from an antiwar position, how could their second in command in the House be the point-man for such pacifist tendencies? Certainly, it would be preposterous for a Congressman that had been such a strident and high-profile advocate for troop withdrawal to be in such a high position of power in a Party that is now going to take a less dovish posture.

Unfortunately, this raised other problems, as Murtha had been a darling of the media for the past twelve months. As Cybercast News Service reported on January 13, 2006:

Since Murtha’s Nov. 17, 2005, call for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, one CNN anchor has called him “one of the most highly respected members of Congress,” the Associated Press has referred to Murtha as “one of Congress’ most hawkish Democrats,” and ABC News has noted that he is “a decorated marine who served in Vietnam.”

Such praise came despite a huge Los Angeles Times expose about Murtha’s earmarking on June 13, 2005, and an October 18, 2005, Hill article on the same subject. Unsurprisingly, virtually no media outlet chose to report any of Murtha’s sordid past after he became the de facto spokesman of the antiwar movement. This was so obvious that even the Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz pointed it out on Sunday’s Reliable Sources:

[T]here was a big LA Times expose last year about Jack Murtha doing favors for companies that contributed to his campaign and that sort of thing. It got almost no national pickup until after the midterm elections.

Murtha My Dear

As a result, to make this “assassination” work, step two was to get a previously adoring press quickly to alter its view of the Congressman, and comply with the need for a hit job. And, comply they did.

First out of the gates was NBC Nightly News, which on Thursday evening, just hours after the historic vote, fabulously threw Murtha under the bus. After playing the now infamous video of the Congressman discussing a bribe with an FBI agent – a video whose public display was totally verboten before the election – correspondent Chip Reid reported:

Murtha was investigated by the FBI in the Abscam bribery scandal 26 years ago, though he was never charged, and recently expressed frustration over a proposed Democratic package of ethics reforms.

Rep. MURTHA: (From MSNBC’s “Hardball”) And it is total crap that we have to deal with an issue like this when we got a war going on.

Reid concluded this segment by getting a quote from political analyst Norman Ornstein:

You can’t have the theme that you’re going to clean up the culture of corruption and then hand pick somebody who is a product of that culture.

Next up to kick the carcass of one suddenly despised by his caucus was the New York Times which published a scathing editorial on Friday that could have been found at either the Washington Times or the National Review:

The well-known shortcomings of Mr. Murtha were broadcast for all to see — from his quid-pro-quo addiction to moneyed lobbyists to the grainy government tape of his involvement in the Abscam scandal a generation ago. […]

Mr. Murtha would have been a farcical presence in a leadership promising the cleanest Congress in history.

All We Are Saying is Give War a Chance

With step two complete, it was next essential for the media to begin laying the groundwork for changing the public’s view concerning Iraq. The network morning news programs were willing accomplices as NBC’s Matt Lauer set up a segment on Friday’s Today Show:

Americans let Congress know loud and clear they’re not happy with the war in Iraq, but what would happen if the US just packed up and left?

Correspondent Richard Engel amazingly responded:

Well, I think what happened in southern Iraq yesterday is a good example of the kind of security situation that would develop. In those provinces in the south where those Americans were kidnapped, British and Italian forces have been pulling back and handing over authority to the Iraqi security forces. But instead of having a stable environment, it was handed over to militiamen and highway robbers, and a—probably a similar pattern would be repeated across the country.

Shocking analysis from a gentleman that was quoted in an October 26, 2006, Washington Post article  as having said:

I think war should be illegal…I’m basically a pacifist.

Suddenly no longer so dovish, Engel continued with his report on Friday about what would happen if American troops withdrew from Iraq:

Iraqis overwhelmingly say it would push the country deeper into chaos. Three states would claw their way into existence in a civil war, creating an independent Kurdistan, opposed by Turkey, Iran and Syria; a Shiite south allied with Iran and in control of much of Iraq’s oil and access to the Persian Gulf; and a failed Sunni state run by tribunal war lords, some backed by al-Qaeda. […]

Osama bin Laden’s deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has said one of al-Qaeda’s goals is to find a state or part of a state as a new homeland. Leaving Iraq with a power vacuum might just give it to him. So there is that danger, Matt, that a quick pullout could have just the opposite effect of the entire war, which is to create an al-Qaeda safe haven to launch further attacks.

War’s Not Over If You Want It

With the media now starting to toe the “give war a chance” line, the Democrats were well on their way to achieving a transformation that Bill Clinton could be proud of. However, there are still snakes lying in the grass, for the members of the extreme left who worked tirelessly on pushing the antiwar agenda as well as antiwar candidates are not likely to buy into this new posture. Or are they?

David Corn of the Nation wrote shortly after the Steny Hoyer vote on Thursday:

Moreover, Murtha, the candidate with the most ardent antiwar credentials, lost—and did so decisively. How will this be interpreted (or exploited) by pundits and politicos who oppose the Pelosi/Murtha call for the withdrawal of troops? Murtha champions did try to turn the majority leader race into a debate on the Iraq war. Can the vote be read as an indicator that many House Democrats don’t support Pelosi all the way on her opposition to the war?

Yet, less than 24 hours later, Corn published the following at the Nation’s website in a Friday blog post entitled “Democrats and Withdrawal from Iraq: Asking Too Much?”:

Pulling out American troops might remove a possible obstacle to a political accommodation among Iraqi parties that leads to less chaos and violence. The removal of troops, though, could cause the opposite and render it tougher for the Iraqi government (even with much U.S. assistance) to rebuild the nation’s infrastructure and to train a worthwhile military and police force—particularly if other nations, including those of the region, do not become more involved in repairing Iraq.

These opinions espoused by the Washington editor of one of the most liberal magazines in America were the byproduct of a breakfast meeting that incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada) hosted for reporters on Thursday shortly before the House vote on Hoyer. If this is what Corn took away from such a gathering, and he is now advocating this nuanced Democrat approach towards Iraq, the country could soon be teeming with reformed antiwar zealots singing the same adulterated John Lennon refrain.

And the left thinks Karl Rove is a devious genius

—Noel Sheppard is the Associate Editor of NewsBusters.


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So, for the Liberals, the Dem

So, for the Liberals, the Democrats' - er - platform, was just a mirage?

The dogs bark, but the caravan moves on.

- Arabian Proverb

...always handy to have the M

...always handy to have the MSM in your back pocket - Iraq is fixed by the Dems already! And if not the MSM will just report it that way : ) !

Virtual Reality brought to yo

Virtual Reality brought to you by the MSM.:)

The dogs bark, but the caravan moves on.

- Arabian Proverb

Giving war a chance

As a good friend of mine said when this topic came up prior to the weekend: " Yeah, the democrats are so bad aren't they, I just love it." *snickers and laughter*

Thanksgiving Dinner

Watching liberals eat their own offspring would be funny were the fate of the Republic not in their hands. Excellent overview!

Much as then, it is incumbent

Much as then, it is incumbent on the Democrats to make all those duped feel better about themselves, thereby making it easier to pull the wool over their eyes the next time this campaign strategy becomes necessary.

I don't even think the Democrats have to make the duped ones feel better, because it looks as though many of the duped have already stopped paying attention. In a few months or a couple of years, some of them might scratch their heads and say, "Hey, weren't we supposed to be out of Iraq by now...?"

I'm certainly not seeing or hearing droves of outraged voters shouting "But you said we'd get out of Iraq!" in response to the incoming leadership's current backpedaling. Not that I mind--I was scared for awhile there that they might actually be stupid enough to do what they said they'd do and pull out too early.

Well, I take it back. There

Well, I take it back. There is one group among the duped whose betrayal I expect the Dems will have to deal with--the terrorists. I get the impression the terrorists actually believed the Democrats would get out of the Middle East if they won. If that's the case and the terrorists feel betrayed by Democrats backpedaling on the war, I am sure we'll be hearing from that disgruntled group very soon.

Interview questions for Democ

Interview questions for Democrats:

DOES IT CONCERN YOU AT ALL THAT MAJOR WORLD TERRORISTS ARE CELEBRATING YOUR TAKE-OVER OF CONGRESS...?

Come on Matthews, whattya say? Let's play HARDBALL, you prissy DNC ass-kisser...

 . .and the difference betwe

 . .and the difference between terrorists and demo-libs?

There is no sense in being stupid, if you can't prove it! - my dad

Noel's analysis is spot on IM

Noel's analysis is spot on IMO.  Consider that the libs are in this for the long haul and will spin the entire situation as Bush's fault for being stuck in Iraq because he didn't have enough boots on the ground after the successful ousting of Saddam.  Noises are already being made in that direction just as Clinton blamed Bush senior for not being able to do the middle class tax cuts he campaigned upon.  For the libs part, they will take the control of Congress as a win, because after all that "was" their "New Direction".  The "change" they were campaigning on was the change from Repub to Dem.

So the big question is will the ultra lib suckers who bank rolled the 2006 election cycle be back for 2008 having realized they've been been taken?  I guess that is going to depend on how dizzy they get from buying into the Dem Party spin machine.  If the dissatification of the conservatives with the Repub Party in 2006 is any indication, the Dem Party is going to take a drubbing in 2008.  More importantly, history indicates these 6 year upsets for the party in power are merely the voter's flirtation with the opposition party before getting serious again.  Kind of like the transition date after a big breakup.

“The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius

Oh, I don't really think the

Oh, I don't really think the Dems won't have to appease those they duped--they will. I'm simply disgusted with voters who start to pay attention to a critically important election just days (maybe hours) before voting. They take a few events or statements made just before the election as their cue to vote, without actually making the effort to educate themselves on the stakes or on the track records of the candidates and parties they're voting for. Then the rest of us have to live with their short-sightedness for however long it takes for them to wake up to reality (if they ever do).

I do think, though, that a good portion of this kind of short-sighted voting group will not realize they've been duped. They will happily buy into whatever cover the media creates for this "change in plan" that the Democrats are pulling. (Though how you can change a plan when you never had a plan, I'm not sure...)

Great question, dscott, so le

Great question, dscott, so let's visit it.  The ultra-libs (the George Soros' and the Hollywood elite) were absolutey dizzy when serial-rapist Bill Clinton came into office.  Who could forget the picture of Linda Bloodworth-Thomason and Markie Post jumping up and down on the bed in the Lincoln bedroom?  (I did a quick search but couldn't find it but I'm 99% sure it was them.)  They didn"t give a tinker's dam about doing the right things or ensuring that Clinton did what was right (other than tax cuts), for them it was all about being the group in power and for Hollywood, getting access to real power; government power. 

Hollywood has been exporting immorality successfully for a long time.  With the access to the Clinton administration, they would be able to legislate it.  Sure, this viewpoint might be a bit extreme, but I'm old enough to remember that regardless of your religion, having a child out of wedlock was an embarrassment, not something to be celebrated.  Look at how far that has changed, re: Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes?  Is anyone else appalled? 

My connection might be tenuous and it is my opinion only but the gushing and gasping of Hollywood when the Clinton administration took control was palpable.  Does anyone else recall Alec Baldwin's meltdown on The Tonight Show when he suggested that they run down to Harry Hyde's house and stone him and his family in the street???  Why, you ask?  Because Hyde was running the Clinton impeachment process. 

For you liberals here, were you upset or embarrassed; maybe concerned that he was either off his meds or something?  The silence was deafening from the Dems/liberals after his outburst.  Oh wait, I remember a lot of Hollywood got on the bandwagon and talked trash about anyone that dare utter anything less than "extreme ass-kissing compliment" about the Clintons. 

So, dscott, I don't think that the money-guys will complain all that much as long as they are getting something.  As the analysis done by Noel illustrates, the rank and file may be ticked, for a short time, but the uber-libs won't, as they want to make social policy more than anything.  Their goal is to make anything previously taboo to only be socially acceptable but to promote it as an equally moral practice.  Moral relativism is alive and well.

For the money-guys to get truly ticked, it will require the Democrats to do something stupid, like criticize their bankrolls, or heaven forbid, question the media about their practices.   Yeah I know..not gonna happen.

Fight Terrorism at home - defeat a liberal!

That's so cynical it might be

That's so cynical it might be true.  I say give it a couple of months and see if the anti-war rhetoric is still screeching.  If it isn't, then we can safely assume the ultra libs will be giving in 2008, if they are still raising the issue with Dems, then their "That was then, this is now" strategy failed. 

“The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius

What'll be interesting is to

What'll be interesting is to see which group will feel more duped. The Liberals, who were salivating over the hope of an immediate pull-out from Iraq and investigations into impeachment or the "Moderate Independents" who bought the hastily crafted "Conservative Democrat" personas.

The dogs bark, but the caravan moves on.

- Arabian Proverb

oh so cynical - Murtha-burton

oh so cynical - Murtha-burton got what he asked for, Peloni is trying to set herself as a leader, but Her Thingness is more than likely pulling the strings in the background.

Time for another prediction contest - on what date will the demo-libs
Call for impeachment
Call for a draft
Raise taxes for the "rich"
Propose an early withdrawal from Iraq, but without specifics
Spend for "education reform"
Roll back existing tax relief
Kill the death tax repeal 

Additionals, anyone?

There is no sense in being stupid, if you can't prove it! - my dad

FastEd, Charles Rangel alread

FastEd, Charles Rangel already floated the draft reinstatement yesterday.  That didn't take long. 

All the others are already in the works, they just haven't announced it yet. 

Fight Terrorism at home - defeat a liberal!

Ill take a guess that they wi

Ill take a guess that they will focus on making roe vs wade into a permit law/amendment whatever since they are so scared of the supreme court reversing it.

Ill stick with a sure fire winner in case that falls through. They will focus on Anti-Christian but Pro-Muslim agenda. The will say its promoting tolerance and understanding.

This nation will remain the land of the free only so long as it is the home of the brave. 

The fact that the dims are go

The fact that the dims are going back on their campaign promises isn’t all that surprising. The view from the inside-looking-out is always different from the outside-looking-in. Now that they are back on the inside, they realize they have to moderate themselves if they wish to maintain their majorities in ’08, when they hope to gain the presidency as well. Apparently the shallowness of their victory is beginning to sink in, as is the reality of world events.

The MSM will no doubt do all it can to make the dims appear entirely reasonable, thereby making it much more difficult for the republicans to make inroads by ’08.

I’m guessing that by now, the inmates over in the KOSylem are nearing a state of collective apoplexy.

Terrific column.   Unfortun

Terrific column.   Unfortunately, its too long for the attention spans of most liberals!

The Democrats have shown their true stripes by throwing their point man against the war, Murtha, under the bus at the first opportunity.  The poor man has been exposed as a flunky, a stooge.

It is becoming more obvious by the day that the Democrats intentionally deceived the electorate to gain power.  If the MSM had been or could be something more than Democratic Waterboys, this might never have happened.   The real Democratic agenda will be odious to a majority of the voters and they will not follow through on their anti-war promises.   The  question I have:  What will the Republicans do to oppose this agenda? 

More broadly, this grand deception has put conservatives is a difficult position.  If we are true to our beliefs, we we must support the Democrats on the war.  If we do that, we keep these liars in power where they will do many, many things we oppose such as repeal the border fence, socialize medicine, raise taxes, install more liberal judges, etc.  And it does not matter what we do, the MSM will continue its propaganda assault on conservatives and conservatism.  We seem to be reduced to finding a way to defeat the MSM before we can defeatthe Democrats.

The truly difficult part is i

The truly difficult part is if we call their bluff and raise a huge stink about it now, then the idiots will be forced to cut and run in the 2007/2008 budget.  They can't do anything until the new appropriation budget bills start their process.  Clearly if they are going to skate on this issue, they will have to fully fund the Iraq operation, any attempt to cut off or deminish funds will hamper the operation.

This is why I said on another thread that Dean was crazy, crazy as a fox.  He got us all to believe he was insane including the ultra left, it was all an act. 

“The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” – Marcus Aurelius

Isstead of "bait and swi

Isstead of "bait and switch" it looks more like Wait and Bitch to me....

Go Big, Go Long, Go Home

Nicely done, Noel.

On the way home, I heard someone frame the possible Iraq strategies as "Go Big, Go Long, or Go Home". 

The dems won't want to go for Option 1 - not with Rangel's idiotic ploy to reinstitute the draft.  They don't want to scare the heck out of their base.

Option 3 - A more polite way of saying "Cut and Run".  They're not going to go for that either.  Being branded with the big "L" on one's forehead is not the way to win any popularity contests.

Option 2 - Hmmm....doesn't this sound like what Bush and Rumsfeld have been saying all along?  Stay the Course?  Long, difficult slog?

So, now they will be exposed as truly having no plan.  Oops....fooled the electorate again.  It's not nice to fool the voters, they get mad (as we've just seen).

The democrats have more than enough rope to hang themselves, particularly if the Kerry's of the world keep sticking their feet in their mouths. (Did anyone else see Kerry's pathetic performance on Chris Wallace's show yesterday?). 

I also see the Clinton hand behind all of the bait-and-switch going on here...with HIllary to the rescue at some point down the road. 

Interesting times ahead.

Blonde

Blonde,

Well, something that I wanted to opine on in the article but chose not to due to the length was the reality that staying in Iraq and helping impoverished and downtrodden Iraqis should be a liberal precept. Aren't liberals always looking to fight for the least fortunate? Isn't this going to turn into a Cambodian bloodbath if we leave?

With that in mind, the best way for the Democrats to change direction and save face with the antiwar crowd is to position staying as a human rights issue. For example:

Bush and the Republicans have so screwed this nation up that we can't in good conscience leave it for the terrorists to kill millions of innocent civilians. As a result, even though it will continue to leave American troops in harm's way, the only humane option at this point is for us to do whatever we can to prevent the easily foreseeable slaughter that would occur if we left. The world already has one Darfur; we can't in good conscience be responsible for creating and retreating from another.

How could they lose with such a strategy? Wouldn't this appease the antiwar crowd if staying was painted in such a fashion?   ns

Noel,It's an interesting conc

Noel,

It's an interesting concept, but one which I doubt the Democrats will adopt.

The anti-war crowd is anti-war because of their deeply loved feelings.  While the leftist mantra of "always helping the down-trodden" is absurd on its face to you and me, to the anti-war faction, it would require an actual thought process.  Something they're incapable of doing. 

Imagine, if you will, that Cindy Sheehan would buy it.

Besides, the leftists don't really care about the downtrodden.   They just like to talk about how much they do.  All talk, no walk.

And everybody thought that Bu

And everybody thought that Bush was going to start up the draft...but look, the Dummycrats mentioned it yesterday...ages 18-42.  Like Kerry said, if you work hard, study hard, play by the rules, you do OK. If you don't (and vote Dummycrat) you get stuck in Iraq.

anyone else notice murtha in

anyone else notice murtha in trhe background? My gosh he should put that lower lip away- someone's going to get hurt!

http://sacredscoop.com

Well dog my cats, come to fin

Well dog my cats, come to find out the economy is doing fine afterall, and "Cut & Run" is a dumb idea.  There was either one person or one-thousand-and-one people saying just those very things here at NB during the week before the election.  Remember during future elections, you Liberals can come here and find out weeks in advance what your candidates will be saying after the election, because they surely aren't going to tell you.