Never mind the weather outside. The political barometer in
Washington says Republicans are heading into a terrible
storm.
Congressional Quarterly recently conducted an
exhaustive review of the political winds blowing this summer
and concluded that the GOP is in trouble: "All current indicators
suggest that the Big One -- hurricane, tidal wave, tsunami or
tornado … -- is gathering in the middle distance."
The Washington Post's David Broder
predicts "serious trouble for the GOP across a broad swath of
states from Pennsylvania to Oklahoma." The Hill newspaper, which
covers Congress,
reported that "the universe of competitive congressional races
is broadening" and that most of the newly identified vulnerable
incumbents are Republicans. Indeed, according to the
CQ analysis, "a total of 57 GOP seats … are currently in
play, to just 19 for the Democrats."
With the overall approval rating for Congress below 30% and only
55% applauding their own House member's performance (the lowest
this rating has been since just before the 1994 election), the time
has long since passed for congressional leaders to up the ante and
give their potential supporters something to cheer about.
Sure, Washington's jaded insiders may say, but what are the odds
that a robust legislative initiative could advance in this
hopelessly gridlocked Congress? Democrats have stymied just about
every promising bill. The list includes: expanding drilling for oil
and natural gas in Alaska, in the Gulf, and off our coasts;
removing regulatory bottlenecks to the construction of new oil
refineries; making Bush's tax cuts permanent; limiting spending
through budget process reforms such as hard spending caps and the
line-item veto and requiring the United Nations to adopt serious
reforms or lose U.S. taxpayer contributions. Republicans, CQ
assumes, "will probably go home to face the voters with few newly
minted legislative trophies to brag about."
But that need not be the case. The recent success by British and
U.S. intelligence in thwarting the terrorist plot to explode a
dozen U.S.-bound planes over the Atlantic, coupled with a renewed
chorus of liberal defeatism in the war on terror, provides a
potential opening.
Liberals George Soros, the uber-liberal billionaire, and Richard
Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, recently
weighed in with dour assessments of our prospects in the war on
terror. Soros described it as "an endless war waged against an
unseen enemy" that in the end "cannot be won." Haass agreed that
"there is no end in sight" and made the remarkable concession that
"terrorism is now part of the fabric of contemporary life." Our
best hope, he wrote, is to reduce terrorism "to a scale that won't
threaten the openness, security or prosperity of modern
societies."
For politically besieged Republicans, terrorism remains the one
issue on which they connect with the voters. Legislatively, much
remains to be done. That remaining work, moreover, continues to
inspire heated opposition from congressional liberals. If that
ideological divide is sufficiently emphasized before the election,
today's rudderless Republicans could rise above the projected
tsunami and surprise the pundits.
"Too much emphasis," my colleague James Carafano writes, "has been
placed on preparing to respond to terrorist acts and not enough on
enhancing the ability of law enforcement to uncover and disrupt
attacks on U.S. citizens." Incessant complaints from the American
Civil Liberties Union and other liberal groups, Carafano says, have
created a chilling effect on our ability to provide law enforcement
authorities with the tools they need to preempt terrorist acts.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff points to the
importance of good intelligence, saying: "if we can't get a
reasonable amount of information on people … and if we can't
get it in a timely fashion, we are tying our hands against what is
still a very serious threat."
Congressional leaders should force up-or-down votes on a solid
anti-terrorism legislative package upon Congress' return next
month. Such a package should:
- Authorize surveillance of phone calls, emails, and financial transactions involving suspected terrorists.
- Establish federal guidelines for the use of sophisticated data-mining technologies that enable investigators to sort through and organize massive volumes of information into a more coherent picture. Specifically, it should rush into service the Transportation Security Agency's idle program to screen domestic air flight manifests for suspected terrorists.
- Respond to the Supreme Court's Hamdan decision by explicitly authorizing military tribunals, which rightly place national security interests ahead of individual liberty, to try suspected terrorists.
- Authorize a preventive terrorist detention law that, consistent with civil liberties, allows authorities to keep would-be terrorists off the street while they assemble proof of life-threatening terrorist plots.
It's essential that lawmakers debate these issues before
the election. After all, no American should be willing to concede
defeat in the War on Terror. Nor should we be asked to integrate
terrorism into the fabric of our daily lives, as Soros and Haass
propose.
Yet that may be the choice we face this November.
Mike Franc, who has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill, is vice president of Government Relations at The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events Online