Nice things are being said today about Eugene McCarthy in the unlikeliest corners because he
died yesterday. Here's
Paul at Powerline, in full-on disingenuous eulogy mode:
McCarthy's most ardent supporters were college students. Most of my anti-war friends preferred him to Kennedy, as I did (and still do). First, McCarthy had shown more guts than Kennedy by challenging Johnson before it was clear how weak the president's position was. Second, McCarthy came across as cool; Kennedy as anything but. . . . .
In many respects, some of them superficial, Robert Kennedy's position in 1967 can be compared to Hillary Clinton's position today. It's more difficult identify the new Gene McCarthy (it's certainly not Howard Dean). He was one of a kind.
Despite the concerted effort to distinguish (with no reasons given) McCarthy from Howard Dean, everything which was said here (and elsewhere) in praise of Eugene McCarthy's anti-war candidacy applies at least as much to Howard Dean's presidential campaign. But Dean is still very much alive and McCarthy isn't, so it's safe to praise McCarthy but not Dean.
One of the most profoundly dishonest media distortions over the last decade was the almost instantaneous transformation of Howard Dean from what he really is and has long been - a sensible, passionate, principled, solidly mainstream, and highly rational medical doctor, Vermont Governor and American citizen into a freakish cartoon whose insanity and emotional instability are matched only by his rabid affection for socialism and Islamic terrorism. That patently false illusion persists today and will likely never be expunged from many minds.
But whatever else one thinks of Dean, it is impossible to praise McCarthy's candidacy without praising Dean's candidacy as well. The factors cited by Powerline Paul and most others today for admiring McCarthy -- the adoption of his anti-war stance before it was safe and popular, the way in which he galvanized young voters, the obvious authenticity of his beliefs, even his "cool" image -- are all entirely applicable to Howard Dean.
Contrary to the patently dishonest caricature, Dean's criticism of the Iraq war has never been pacifistic, but instead has always been pragmatic and principled. Dean's opposition to this war was predicated upon the (now vindicated) belief that our invasion would distract attention and resources from combating real threats to the U.S., would unleash all sorts of undesirable outcomes, and was based on an exaggerated assessment of the threat posed by Saddam. And while Bush Administration officials and pro-war advocates were issuing absurdly optimistic and inaccurate predictions of what was to come, the highly rational, pragmatic and non-ideological reasons given by Dean for opposing the war were, as it turned out, downright prescient.
But few people realize any of that today because Dean - who supported both the first Gulf War and the invasion of Afghanistan - has been dishonestly depicted as a zen-chanting, flower child pacifist, some sort of hideous leftist hybrid of Joan Baez, Ward Churchill and Abbie Hoffman, all rolled into one bike-riding, mentally ill, terrorist sympathizing hippy. Just yesterday, Norman Podhoretz in Commentary disgustingly paired Dean with Rep. Cynthia McKinney as examples of today's "Tories" -- those individuals whose allegiance in the Revolutionary War lay not with America but with the British Crown.
Even more significant than Dean's substantive and largely accurate criticisms of the Iraq war was the effect which his candidacy had on the political dynamic in this country. Like McCarthy's candidacy, it obviously galvanized huge numbers of young and first-time voters who never had any previous interest in the political process. But even more so, Dean was one of the very few mainstream political figures willing to stand up and aggressively criticize the President in the 9/11-driven militarized climate in 2002 and 2003, which was characterized by an intimidated reverence for George Bush as the Commander-in-Chief.
It was the time of the almost-unanimously and hastily passed Patriot Act, anthrax attacks, a visible para-military presence in many of our nation's cities, Homeland Security alerts, and sky-high popularity ratings for Bush. Most Democrats were cowed into submission, virtually always endorsing every Bush desire and offering only the meekest and most apologetic resistance when they resisted at all.
Howard Dean single-handedly exploded that repressive environment. He galvanized young voters and the Left not because he spouted socialistic ideals or extreme leftist rhetoric (he did not). He energized his supporters because - like the praise for McCarthy today describes - he took his anti-war stand at a time when it was highly unpopular to do so, long before it was safe to do so, and did so unapologetically, with passion and conviction rare for political candidates, leaving it impossible to doubt the authenticity of his beliefs.
And Dean -- almost alone among prominent mainstream figures -- wasn't the least bit intimidated by George Bush, and wasn't the slightest bit afraid to challenge and criticize the highly popular President. As a result, Dean forced other Democrats to at least pretend that they had a spine, and he diffused the idea that Democrats, and even Republicans -- in the wake of 9/11 -- had to cower meekly and obediently in the corner and give carte blanche to George Bush as the Great Leader to do whatever he wanted. Regardless of whether one agrees with Dean's views or not, that was an invaluable service he performed for American politics.
Dean was a threat not just to Republicans, but even more so to establishment Democrats and the privileged media stars who always are hostile to outsiders. That was why it was so easy to caricature and destroy him. He had no real defenders in any power circles to battle against the smear campaign. And even today, he continues to be one of the few political figures willing to express criticisms of the war which many Democrats believe but are too afraid to say.
Dean is not and never was the crazed extreme Leftist which he has been depicted to be. He is decidedly moderate on many issues (gun control, states' rights, government spending), liberal on others (universal health care, gay equality, reproductive rights), and he governed Vermont for 10 years with hard-core fiscal responsibility. What he was, and is, is a passionate opponent of Bush's invasion of Iraq, which -- contrary to prevailing wisdom -- makes one neither a socialist nor a hater of America. As the praise for Eugene McCarthy streams forth over the next couple of days, it is worth analyzing that praise and appreciating its wholesale applicability to Howard Dean.