Of course, it depends what you mean by “Right”. The Tories did very badly at the European Elections, failing to reach even one in 10 eligible voters. Their performance only looked good because Labour and the Lib Dems did abysmally. By contrast, Gaullists and Christian Democrats did well.
Gaullists are ardent patriots. Their inspiration is the General’s fight against all four of German occupation, Soviet infiltration, American domination, and British accession’s unbalancing of the nascent EU against French interests. They used to see the EU as a potential means of exercising French influence. It no longer is, so they now have more and more doubts about it. They also have a streak of moral and social conservatism ultimately derived from Catholicism, although they have to be careful how they express it, since France has a strong strain of fierce secularism, la laïcité. But it is certainly there.
And Christian Democrats are ardent moral and social conservatives, deriving their views explicitly from their countries’ Protestant and, especially, Catholic traditions. There is no laïcité in Germany, where the churches provide so many public services that they are the largest employers after the several tiers of government. What there is, however, is a taboo against anything that smacks of nationalism, for obvious historical reasons. So the Christian Democrats have to muffle their patriotism. However, it, too, is certainly there. And it is becoming louder. After all, the War was a long time ago. The EU is a threat to the position of the Lände, the states. And American hegemony’s appeal has died in Iraq.
Sarkozy may not be much of a Gaullist and Merkel may not be much of Christian Democrat. But their respective parties have not yet signed up to their support for neoliberal economics and neoconservative foreign policy, both of which include European federalism under overall American control and in the service of global capital. Almost no one who votes for those parties feels that they are thus voting for those agenda. Very far from it indeed, in fact. Sarkozy and Merkel alike will yet turn out to have been flashes in the pan, probably very soon.
After all, there is now an American President with both the economic populism (including the economic patriotism) and the foreign policy realism (again, including the economic patriotism) of a Gaullist or a Christian Democrat. He owes his position, and his party owes its majorities in both Houses of Congress, to the votes of those who on the same day voted to reaffirm traditional marriage in Florida and California. Who on the same day voted not to liberalise gambling in Missouri or Ohio. And who keep the black and Catholic churches (especially) going from coast to coast, while also including a large and growing section of the white Evangelicals.
They have now given Democratic America the pro-life majority that Republican America never had. President Obama has called the extremely pro-abortion Freedom of Choice Act “not a high priority”, and we all know what a politician means when he says that. But he also as good as told his Notre Dame audience that his priorities did include the Pregnant Women Support Act, a clear example of the use of government action in the service of moral, social and cultural goods, in this case the sanctity of life from conception. It is a Democratic initiative. Indeed, it is a Christian Democratic initiative.
America and “Old Europe” are converging on this happy, hallowed ground. When will Britain? The movement that promised to do so would reach rather more than one tenth of the eligible electorate.
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Couldn't disagree more!
ReplyDeleteThe President has modified his radical stance because of the reasons quoted. Those who voted for Proposition 8 and against liberalizing gambling were NOT Democrats. Our President is slick in that he will push as far as he can his radical agenda but soften up when he meets resistance. For this reason we Christians must keep his feet to the fire....... without letting up. He is a serious danger to democracy and is far from Christian!
"The President has modified his radical stance because of the reasons quoted"
ReplyDeleteWhich are as good as any.
"Those who voted for Proposition 8 and against liberalizing gambling were NOT Democrats"
They must have been. The Dems won at least three, and probably all four, of those states ON THE SAME DAY. Proposition 8 is Obama's own stated view, anyway.
What did the Republicans ever do? What did Bush ever do?
Sorry, Paschal. But large sections of the Democratic base did in fact support Prop 8, and the marriage amendment in Florida -- and every other opportunity they've had to defend the traditional definition of marriage at the ballot box.
ReplyDeleteJust read what gay rights activists are saying about the Administration's brief filed in defense of the constitutionality of DOMA last week. President Obama is their sworn enemy, as far as they're concerned. But then they've resented and distrusted him since the primaries, when they were backing Hillary, and Obama was enraging them by refusing to disown the ex-gay Gospel singer Donnie McClurkin as a campaign helper.
Tell me this, Paschal. Why didn't a single one of the conservative defense of marriage organizations release a statement about the DOMA brief? Are you all so consumed with resentment over the election that you'd rather lose marriage than admit that someone you don't like did something that helped your cause?
"What did the Republicans ever do? What did Bush ever do?"
ReplyDeleteWhen it comes to certain "hot button" culture war issues, I think the GOPers actually prefer to lose. Losing gives them more to moan about, which they enjoy. Also, winning requires effort, and they're apparently saving their energy for some kind of Armageddon/Red Dawn/Night of the Living Dead -type scenario.
[roll eyes]
Only the Supreme Court can do anything about abortion, and the Republicans will always appoint judges who will preserve the status quo, because that keeps people who should be Democrats voting Republican.
ReplyDeleteWhich is what keeps the Republican Party in existence, spreading poverty (which kills people indirectly) and these days also war (which kills people directly). This will continue until pro-life tells the GOP where to go, by voting for the other actually pro-abortion candidate rather than for the GOP's actually pro-abortion candidate. This finally seems to have happened last year.
If either McCain or Obama had won, then there might be exactly as many deaths by abortion. If McCain had won, then there would certainly have been no fewer.
But since Obama won, then not only might there be fewer abortions as a result of greater social justice, but there will certainly be an end to the war in Iraq. And life is sacred after birth as well as before it.
Furthermore, the Black Church is morally conservative, is the heart and soul of the Black community, and is in that latter capacity a key part (indeed, probably the single most important part) of the Obama electoral machine. Since Obama won, he owes people who demand both social justice and traditional family values. He will not get a second term unless he has paid that debt. Everyone knows this.
So Obama was the real pro-life candidate.