And instead of smaller government, Republicans delivered a trillion dollars in new federal spending, exploding earmarks, massive new entitlements, expanded federal control over schools and marriage, and a surge in executive power.
So how will President Obama and the Democrats govern?
Prediction: Despite conservative fears, they won’t move left enough to satisfy the bloggers, activists and permanent protesters who have been driven mad by the outrages of the Bush administration.
And they can’t possibly satisfy the dewy-eyed dreamers who think Obama will transcend race and party and region and bring us all together to sing Kumbaya. The journalists who get chills when he speaks will likely discover that he is a young and inexperienced president facing difficult domestic and international problems that don’t easily yield to eloquence.
Meanwhile, Democrats in control of the White House and both houses of Congress for the first time since 1994 will likely try to move even further left than Bill and Hillary Clinton did after the 1992 election. Despite President Bush’s trillion-dollar increase in federal spending (even before the financial bailouts), the Democrats have another trillion dollars’ worth of spending plans. At a time of economic weakness, they intend to raise taxes. They will push for a global-warming bill, even though any policy that could actually reduce warming would be so unbelievably expensive that even pumped-up Democrats will likely settle for a symbolic bill. (Thus angering the angry Left and the Al Gore faction.) Powerful House Democrats want to eliminate the 401(k) retirement system and force everyone into a government retirement plan.
Like the Clintons, Obama and his congressional colleagues will want to move quickly toward national health care. That idea is popular on the campaign trail, but it may become less so when Congress begins to debate the details of bringing 50 million more people into a government program, controlling private health insurance plans and restricting many people’s choice of a doctor. It could be another HillaryCare debacle.
The victorious Democrats may also try to lock in their majority status through such measures as “card check” legislation, which would abolish secret ballot elections in determining whether employees are represented by unions, and a revival of the so-called Fairness Doctrine to shut down conservative talk radio, which played such a key role in drumming up opposition to the Clinton administration.