the erosion of majority rule

Harold Meyerson – The Silenced Majority – washingtonpost.com

In the past several years there’s been great concern about the erosion of individual rights as a consequence of the Bush administration’s “war on terror” and war in Iraq. I share this concern. But the administration’s critics, myself included, have been remiss in noting a development even more corrosive to American democracy — the erosion of majority rule.

A fundamental premise of democracy is that elections matter. That belief is being tested today as it seldom has before. In 2006, the Republicans were swept from power in Congress because the American electorate had had it with the war and with Congress’s unquestioning acquiescence to President Bush’s blind and obdurate faith in the eventual success of the American mission. In responding to the election by sending more troops to Iraq and keeping these troops there until the limits of our manpower compel their return next year, Bush merely doubled down on his unwinnable bet on his unwinnable war. …

If Democrats are to win in 2008, it will be because they represent a decisive break, not a partially veiled continuity, with George Bush’s policies, and with his war policies most of all. The Democratic candidates, Clinton especially, need to assure voters that their voice matters more than those of the Beltway theorists who supported the war at the outset and still can’t contemplate ending the occupation. They need to assure voters, in short, that they take democracy in America seriously.

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