http://humanevents.com/2015/12/08/democrats-problem-americans-have-little-faith-in-government/?utm_source=hedaily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl


Democrats’ Problem: Americans Have Little Faith in Government

Michael Barone <http://humanevents.com/author/michael-barone/> | Tuesday
Dec 8, 2015 10:56 AM

[image: Description: Democrats' Problem: Americans Have Little Faith in
Government]

The Republican Party certainly has its problems: a chaotic presidential
race; a despised congressional party; unpopularity among the rapidly
growing number of non-whites.

But the Democratic Party has its problems as well. One of them is the fact
that the two signature policies of Barack Obama — the Affordable Care Act
and the nuclear agreement with Iran — are unpopular with most voters.

You heard little from the President about Obamacare or his approach to Iran
during his 2012 re-election campaign. You’ve heard little about them from
Democratic candidates for Congress in 2010, 2012 and 2014 or those running
for next year.

It’s also not clear that these policies would have been pursued in the same
form if Hillary Clinton had been elected president in 2008. Would she have
taken a mono-partisan approach to health care and hewn to it after the
election of a Republican as senator from Massachusetts? Would she have
banked so heavily on the notion that concessions could make Iran a
friendlier power in the Middle East?

Maybe, maybe not. But as the certain Democratic nominee and as Obama’s
former secretary of state, she is saddled with them.

Richard Nixon in 1960, George H. W. Bush in 1988 and Al Gore in 2000 sought
third presidential terms for their parties when their incumbent presidents
had job approval well above 50 percent. Bush, after turbulent primaries,
won a solid victory. Nixon and Gore, nominated with only brief opposition,
lost by a hair.

Barack Obama’s job approval is currently 44 percent, and Clinton, like
Nixon and Gore, seems unlikely to undergo serious testing in the primaries
and caucuses.

There is a larger problem here, not just for Clinton but also for her
party. Since the 1930s it has been dedicated to the proposition that
expanding government will help ordinary citizens make their way through the
perils of (then) an industrial-age and (now) an information-age society.

The problem is that these seven years of the Obama administration, quite
contrary to the president’s intention, have discredited government as an
instrument to improve people’s lives.

The most glaring failure has been Obamacare, from the implosion of the
healthcare.gov website to the recent announcement of the nation’s largest
health insurer that it would no longer offer policies on Obamacare’s
exchanges.

Designing government policies that can produce positive results without
negative unanticipated consequences is a tricky business. Social Security
required government to collect taxes and send out checks on time —
something a competent bureaucracy can do. Obamacare requires government to
do many more things, some of which government is not very good at. Voters
have noticed.

They have noticed, as well, that government is no longer very good at doing
things almost everyone thinks it should do, such as providing health care
for military veterans. Democrats can argue that the Department of Veterans
Affairs hospital system’s problems antedate 2008. But government is their
baby, and they’ve been in charge for seven years.

Last week’s mass murders in San Bernardino have underlined government’s
limits. Obama and Clinton have called for more gun control measures. But
California already has the laws they want Congress to pass. Overall trends
in Pew Research Center polling data in the last 20 years show an increase
in the percent of Americans who support gun rights and a decrease in the
percent of Americans who support gun control.

A third problem for Democrats is apparent in the fact that near the end of
multiple Democratic presidential terms, sizable forces in the party turn
left. A few examples are: Henry Wallace’s Progressives in 1948; the
anti-Vietnam war movement in 1968; Edward Kennedy’s challenge of Jimmy
Carter in 1980; and Ralph Nader’s third-party candidacy in 2000.

Similar things are happening today — in the Bernie Sanders candidacy, the
Black Lives Matter movement and rebellions on college campuses. When the
public has soured on Democratic policies, party rebels double down and
demand more.

Republicans have faced similar discontent on the right, from Barry
Goldwater in 1960, Ronald Reagan in 1976, Pat Buchanan in the 1990s and the
tea party movement in the wake of George W. Bush’s presidency.

But the problem is more acute for the Democratic Party, which has always
been a coalition of disparate groups: the top and bottom of the income and
education scales, ghetto blacks and gentry liberals, left-wing academics
and labor unions.

Holding that coalition together is easier when faith in government is
strong. It’s harder today, when, as Pew reports, only 19 percent of
Americans say they can trust the government all or most of the time. For
Democrats, that’s a big problem.




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