11/16/2018 - David Limbaugh Townhall.com
The Democratic Party's
emerging radical bloc is alarming, but the leftist group's youthful
intemperance could backfire and re-energize Republicans' 2020 electoral
prospects.
Even before all the
hanging chads and miraculously divined ballots have been examined in Florida,
newly elected leftist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is already engaging in activism
in the halls of Congress. On Tuesday morning, the future representative from
New York joined a protest organized by the Sunrise Movement outside the offices
of Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi to demand immediate action on climate change
-- as if the dinosaur wing of the Democratic Party weren't sufficiently
extremist on environmental issues.
Ocasio-Cortez, who
validates the maxim "youth is wasted on the young," is part of the
Justice Democrats, which promoted leftist challengers during the 2018
Democratic primary cycle. The Sunrise Movement is demanding House support of a
"Green New Deal," which contemplates forming a committee to write
policies aimed at creating jobs by moving the nation off fossil fuels -- as
counterintuitive as that may strike you.
Waleed Shahid, the
Justice Democrats' communications director, insists that the Democratic Party's
leadership must get serious about the climate and the economy. "Anything
less is tantamount to denying the reality of climate change," said Shahid.
"The hopeful part is that we're ushering in a new generation of leaders
into the Democratic Party who understand the urgency and will help build a
movement to create the political will for bold action." Yes, they must get
moving before any more of Al Gore's hysterical doomsday predictions fail.
The adage "with
age comes wisdom" is biblically based and objectively observable --
except, perhaps, in the case of Pelosi and her old-guard Democrats. They have
invited all types of radicals into their coalition, so they can hardly complain
when the fruit of their poisonous tree begins to blossom. Accordingly, Pelosi
pretended to support this presumptuous upstart's mini-rebellion.
"We are inspired
by the energy and activism of the many young activists and advocates leading
the way on the climate crisis, which threatens the health, economic security
and futures of all our communities," said Pelosi. "I have recommended
to my House Democratic colleagues that we reinstate a select committee to
address the climate crisis. ... We welcome the presence of these activists, and
we strongly urge the Capitol Police to allow them to continue to organize and
participate in our democracy."
Her groveling wasn't
enough to pacify the implacable Justice Democrats, who tweeted: "Our
response: Not good enough. Pelosi is reinstating a 2007 committee tasked with
investigating the harms of climate change. We don't need more investigation. We
need specific plans matching the urgency and scale mandated by the UN's IPCC
report on catastrophic climate change."
The good thing about
cliches is that, usually based on human experience, they're often true. So, the
current plight of the Pelosi Democrats is that they have made their bed and now
have to lie in it. For the next two years, they're going to be lying in the
same bed as the rebels -- a bed that has two left sides.
The Democrats have
lived by the sword of radicalism, embracing every last crazy idea of the
extreme left and incorporating it into their agenda, and may they electorally
die by that sword in 2020.
Democrats used to tack
to the center during general election season, knowing America has been a
center-right nation. But since Obama's presidency, they've begun playing their
left hand more openly. In the bluest of areas, they can afford to reveal their
outright socialism, which explains Ocasio-Cortez's unapologetically socialist
campaign message. In other venues, such as Arizona, their radicals have to
feign centrism, which explains Kyrsten Sinema's chameleonic transformation to
would-be centrist.
The developing schism
in the Democratic Party is a positive sign for Republicans, who should greatly
benefit from Democratic fissures, especially if they lead to the Democratic
Party's moving even further to the left and exposing its radicalism.
Though the electoral
demographics seem to be shifting leftward -- and though our public schools,
universities and dominant media culture are indoctrinating more Americans every
day -- it's unlikely the majority of the country will be comfortable with
leftist extremism as soon as 2020.
But this is hardly
something Republicans can rejoice over, because until they get their own act
together, they won't be able to properly capitalize on intramural conflict
among Democrats. But from my perspective, anything that awakens a complacent
America to the existential dangers posed by the radical left, which
increasingly controls the Democratic Party, represents cause for hope and
optimism.
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