Summary: No Labels and No Principles
It’s fitting that No Labels, the new group launched by liberal Republicans and not very conservative Democrats, kicked off with Mayor Bloomberg, a liberal who ran as a Republican, because the Democratic line was already taken. Almost as fitting was the appearance of other transparty types like Charlie Crist and Mike Castle, who were Republicans until they lost a party primary, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, who was a conservative Democrat until a disgraced governor picked her to be New York’s Senator, and Governor Manchin, who beat the landslide by desperately grabbing his gun and acting like a right wing caricature long enough to win reelection.

Peel away the generic wrapping and the plagiarized artwork, and No Labels turns out to be another Coffee Party wannabe, another pathetic attempt by leading Democrats to create an alternative to the Tea Party movement, this time based on generic anti-party sentiment. They dressed up their tranny transparty movement with a few liberal Republicans, most of whom have already lost an election. Some who were never Republicans. But the content is still missing. What is the transparty movement actually addressing, besides the discomfort that politicians have with being forced to identify their positions ahead of time, instead of just campaigning on a lot of money?
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Its fitting that No Labels, the new group launched by liberal
Republicans and not very conservative Democrats, kicked off with
Mayor Bloomberg, a liberal who ran as a Republican, because the
Democratic line was already taken. Almost as fitting was the
appearance of other transparty types like Charlie Crist and Mike
Castle, who were Republicans until they lost a party primary,
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, who was a conservative Democrat until a
disgraced governor picked her to be New Yorks Senator, and Governor
Manchin, who beat the landslide by desperately grabbing his gun and
acting like a right wing caricature long enough to win
reelection.divimg classalignright styleborder 0pt none
srchttp1.bp.blogspot.commveHL3n4METQbcd0fKyIAAAAAAAAENoDkQXRmZJXqgs320genericbrandtshirtp235938097705556736q6wh400.jpg
border0 alt width320 height320 divPeel away the generic wrapping
and thea
hrefhttpgothamist.com20101213didnolabelsstealdesignfrommor.php
plagiarized artworka, and No Labels turns out to be another Coffee
Party wannabe, another pathetic attempt by leading Democrats to
create an alternative to the Tea Party movement, this time based on
generic antiparty sentiment. They dressed up their tranny
transparty movement with a few liberal Republicans, most of whom
have already lost an election. Some who were never Republicans. But
the content is still missing. What is the transparty movement
actually addressing, besides the discomfort that politicians have
with being forced to identify their positions ahead of time,
instead of just campaigning on a lot of moneyLike bipartisanship, a
frustration with party identification, is one of those things that
Democrats discover after theyre beaten and unpopular. Democrats are
happy enough to identify as such, when the polls are going their
way. But when the Democratic party is as popular as a cow pie at a
fancy dress ball, then suddenly they announce that its time we all
got over this hangup we have with party identification and join
hands and dance in a circle. No more will we call ourselves,
Democrats or Republicans, they sing, but from this day forward, we
are all Bloodsuckers.But do our problems really come from a two
party system. Or do they come from a system of government that is
built on trading political favors and rewarding supporters with
taxpayer moneyOur system isnt broken because candidates are
expected to align with one of two fairly ideologically loose
parties. Its broken because both parties are fighting over the
massive budgets at the state and federal level. We dont have
elections to fix problems. We have elections to create new ones. No
one really votes for candidates out of hope, but because they
believe that the other party did such a horrible job last time
around, that their man will help clean it up. But as ugly as that
is, it still gives the public some kind of lever to pull.A
transparty landscape would not usher in good government, but
absolute corruption. If the current party system maintains at least
some kind of infrastructure that voters can hold accountable, the
transparty system would embody the worst of the present corruption,
without anyone to hold accountable for any of it. At the
congressional level, it would boil down to hundreds of politicians
blaming the rest of congress for everything. At the presidential
level, it would make it all too easy for someone like Obama to run
on a completely empty Hope and Change platform, without even being
able to challenge him on his ideological alignment. The era of the
celebrity candidate would be final and irrevocable.When voters kick
out Democrats or Republicans, the result is a larger shakeup that
transforms how one party or the other approaches their message and
agenda. On the other hand, if youre just kicking out unlabeled
incumbents, then that transformation never happens. Because there
is no larger program that fails. Its just the voters firing whoever
happens to be in office. Ideas no longer fail. Politicians just
lose their jobs. And when ideas dont fail, then they never go
away.A transparty system is really a one party system. And while
the two party system we have doesnt do a good job of representing
two separate sets of ideas, a transparty system would represent
only one idea. Spending money.A party system forces candidates to
hew roughly to some overriding vision beyond their own careers and
the favors that they owe to their supporters. It demands that they
commit to something beyond politics as an end. That commitment may
be weak and fitful, but it is better than nothing. It is better
than politicians who believe in nothing but being elected, who run
on money and nothing else. And party primaries force them to test
those beliefs against a smaller circle of voters who share those
beliefs.Its telling that the most enthusiastic endorsers of No
Labels are politicians who believe in absolutely nothing, who will
switch on a dime, toss out their old positions and trade them in
for new ones, and use money and political connections to paper over
the difference. Bloomberg, Gillibrand, Manchin, Castle and Crist
are walking advertisements for the twoparty system. Hollow men and
women with no principles and no shame. Whose only fear is being
forced to articulate beliefs that they dont have.The twoparty
system is far from perfect, but like democracy, the only
alternatives to it are worse.img classalignleft styleborder 0pt
none
srchttp1.bp.blogspot.commveHL3n4METQbf1mHliIAAAAAAAAENsqDzsEWQLy4ks320nolabels.jpg
border0 alt width320 height240 Transpartyism is a complete
surrender to political cynicism. And its biggest proponents are
also the biggest cynics. Pols who whine that voters expect them to
mean what they say and believe in something besides getting
elected. It also makes it all too easy to turn every election into
a calculated circus, like the California recall election or New
York States gubernatorial debate, which the media turned into a
deliberate farce by focusing on the Rent is Too Damn High circus
freak and his facial hair. And such circuses are manufactured to
reward the candidate with the best name recognition, while making
everyone else look like lunatics. The number of times that
Democrats tried to place fake Tea Party candidates on the ballot in
the 2010 election is the flip side of this brand of electoral
mischief.Its telling that No Labels didnt attract someone like
Senator Marco Rubio who battled their own party over principle, not
politics. Because principle candidates benefit from labels. Labels
allow them to challenge whether the partys candidate is being true
to its principles or not. Candidates of principle dont lose out
because of the party label. Candidates of cynicism do. Politicians
like Charlie Crist and Lisa Murkowski, who abandoned the party
system and fought it out in general elections, show us what a
transparty environment would really be like.Ideally a candidate
should be judged only on their merits alone, but we dont operate in
an ideal system. In this system, money can buy elections, districts
are gerrymandered by race and getting elected means controlling
where the cash flow goes. Abandoning the twoparty system would not
improve this state of affairs, it would remove one of the few
checks on the absolute corruption of an already corrupt system.
Because no labels also means no principles. And the system has few
enough of those already. Take away the last tests of a candidate,
and you leave nothing standing between the people and the cynicism
and greed of their rulers.
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