[Mb-civic] Lobbygate Deja Vu - Anne Applebaum - Washington Post Op-Ed

William Swiggard swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Jan 11 03:52:58 PST 2006


Lobbygate Deja Vu

By Anne Applebaum
Wednesday, January 11, 2006; A21

Scandal followed scandal. Gaffe piled on gaffe. The ruling party, 
utterly invincible in the last election, overnight became the symbol of 
incompetence and corruption. Carefully launched plans and programs fell 
flat. Legislators were caught taking bribes in brown envelopes. 
Meanwhile, the party leader hunkered down in his office, controlling all 
contacts with the media.

No, I am not talking about the Republicans in 2005 and 2006. I am 
talking about the British Tory party in 1996 and 1997. True, the rules 
of politics are different here and there. Also, the Tories had been in 
charge of Britain for 17 years, longer than the Republicans have 
controlled Congress, and their crackup was more spectacular. But -- 
having been a member of the British press corps throughout the prime 
ministership of John Major, the last Conservative leader of Britain -- I 
can tell you that the dynamics of these two great political collapses 
nevertheless feel strangely similar.

Certainly the behavior of politicians in both eras made clear the 
relationship between perceived electoral invincibility and petty 
corruption: The longer you've been in office, the less you fear the 
voters' wrath, the more likely you are to bend the rules. The "cash for 
questions" scandal of 1995 Britain -- legislators took bribes for 
presenting questions in Parliament -- in that sense resembles the Jack 
Abramoff scandal of 2006 Washington. Relatively speaking, huge sums of 
money weren't involved -- just a few thousand pounds here or a golfing 
trip there -- but it was enough to make life more bearable for the 
underpaid career politician, one who thinks his electorate has become 
too stupid to notice what he does in his spare time. And enough to fall 
afoul of the law.

Both eras also illustrate the old maxim that political failures always 
beget more political failures. Only months after John Major made the 
unfortunate decision to link the British currency to the European 
exchange rate mechanism -- a predecessor of the common currency -- a 
clutch of hedge funds (led, incidentally, by George Soros) forced 
sterling out. Tory economic reliability, once the heart of the party's 
appeal, never recovered. Among other things, that meant that when the 
Tories launched a perfectly sensible pension reform, nobody took it 
seriously.

A White House that acquired a record for incompetence and mismanagement 
in Iraq, New Orleans and elsewhere will recognize this phenomenon, 
particularly where it concerns pensions, which we call Social Security 
on this side of the Atlantic. Once lost, credibility is never regained.

Finally, both eras also tell us a lot about what happens to political 
ideas, even good ones, in the hands of complacent politicians. At 
different times, both British and American conservatives have lambasted 
uncontrolled government spending, unbalanced budgets and the "waste, 
fraud and abuse" that seem inherent in large government programs. And 
yet, at different times they appeared to tolerate, even to encourage, 
all of the above. I'm not sure I've ever understood the psychology of 
this -- if balanced budgets were so good in the 1990s, why don't they 
matter in the 2000s? -- but it seems, again, linked to power: The longer 
you stay in charge, the more tempting it becomes to put things off. 
Today you've got to build that Alaskan bridge to nowhere or add that 
drug benefit to Medicare to get reelected. You can always balance the 
budget tomorrow. Right?

There is, of course, one major difference between Britain in 1997 and 
America in 2006: So far America has no Tony Blair, the Labor Party 
leader who stole all of the Tories' best economic and foreign policy 
ideas, at least on paper, and beat them at their own game. So completely 
did Blair rout the Tories, and so rapidly did he shift the paradigm -- 
redefining the Labor Party and thereby forcing a redefinition of the 
Tory party -- that the Tories lost not one election but three. The 
British journalist Robert Harris once wrote that when Blair took over it 
was like an old science fiction movie in which "a mad boffin throws a 
lever and the poles are reversed. Political matter suddenly became 
antimatter. Negatives became positives . . . [as if] someone switched 
the bottles and the Tories became reprogrammed with socialist DNA." 
Since then they've changed in different ways. Indeed, their recently 
elected party leader, David Cameron, has just appointed a series of pop 
stars to advise him on Third World poverty, something Blair would do but 
something it's hard to imagine any pre-Blair Tory even contemplating. If 
you can't beat 'em, join 'em.

There is no American Blair at the moment, no Democrat prepared to attack 
the Republicans from the right, or to blast the Republican Congress for 
wasteful spending or insufficiently vigorous foreign policy, or even 
just to change the style of the political debate so rapidly that nobody 
in either party understands what's happened until it's too late. But 
there could be. Everyone's forgotten this now, but Blair himself was a 
fluke, becoming Labor leader after his immediate predecessor, John 
Smith, had a heart attack. And should a similar deus ex machina take 
place in the United States -- then, perhaps, we'll learn how 
head-swirlingly fast an apparently invincible political party can 
unravel here too.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/10/AR2006011001177.html
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