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Specter’s party switch is all about winning

By: Michael Barone
Senior Political Analyst
April 29, 2009

Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa., center, exits a news conference after making an announcement that he is switching from the Republican to Democratic party, in Washington on Tuesday. (AP)

Only his most sycophantic admirers might compare Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter with Winston Churchill, but the two do have something in common. Both had long and turbulent political careers, and both switched parties twice.

Churchill crossed aisles from the Conservatives to the Liberals in 1904 and from the Liberals to the Conservatives in 1924. Specter switched to the Republican Party in 1966 after he was elected district attorney of Philadelphia County, and Tuesday he returned to the Democratic Party in hopes of winning re-election to his sixth term in the Senate next year.

Specter’s crossover tells us interesting things about Specter and about the state of the Republican Party. In his statement announcing the change, he was unusually candid for a politician. He didn’t break with the Republicans on issues but instead focused on his electoral prospects.

Since 2004, when he edged Rep. Pat Toomey in the Republican primary by 51 percent to 49 percent and then won the general election 53 percent to 42 percent, he has obviously been weaker among registered Republicans than among Pennsylvania voters generally. His recent vote for the Democrats’ stimulus package prompted Toomey to announce he was running again, and the latest public polls showed Toomey leading Specter 51 percent to 30 percent and 41 percent to 27 percent.

But the polls also showed Specter winning the general election as a Republican or as a Democrat. This stirred Specter’s legendary defiance: “I am unwilling to have my 29-year Senate record judged by the Pennsylvania primary electorate.”

That primary electorate has grown smaller of late. Some 200,000 Pennsylvania voters switched their party registration from Republican to Democrat between 2004 and 2008. John McCain, despite campaigning heavily in Pennsylvania, won 137,000 fewer votes than George W. Bush did in 2004. Barack Obama won 338,000 more than John Kerry. In the 2004 Pennsylvania exit poll, Republicans trailed Democrats by just 41 percent to 39 percent; in 2008 the margin was 44 percent to 37 percent.

Specter’s argument — that if a majority of Pennsylvania voters wanted him re-elected, he should be — is obviously self-serving. But it’s not self-evidently wrong.

On conservative Web sites, the reaction seems to be “good riddance.” I think this is wrongheaded, for reasons specific to Specter and more generally. Specter has not been a reliable Republican partisan, but when he has been, he has been mightily effective — on the nominations of Justice Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito, on the Iraq war and the surge, on the unions’ Card Check bill that would effectively abolish the secret ballot in unionization elections (which he noted that he would continue to oppose).

Specter’s switch now gives the Democrats a 59th vote in the Senate, and if and when Al Franken is seated, they will have a 60th.

Those will not be automatic votes for cloture on every issue. But Specter’s switch clearly strengthens the Democrats’ hand.

The Club for Growth, which Toomey used to head and which supported him in 2004 and again this year, has made a practice of targeting moderate Republicans in primaries even at the risk of losing the seat in the general election. This arguably made good sense when Republicans had majorities in Congress and needed reliable votes to pass major legislation. It makes much less sense now that Republicans have beleaguered minorities in Congress and are trying to stop things. It makes even less sense when a conservative primary challenger such as Toomey faces such long odds in November.

Specter decided to defect after Sen. James DeMint of South Carolina told him Monday that he planned to support Toomey. “I would rather have 30 Republicans in the Senate who really believe in principles of limited government, free markets, free people, than to have 60 that don’t have a set of beliefs,” DeMint said.

DeMint may get his wish. When Churchill left the Liberals, they had led governments for 16 of the preceding 18 years. They never did so again. A party in decline should adapt its basic philosophy to new policies and positions in order to win over voters, rather than stand on principle and expel heretics.

Arlen Specter will never rise to Churchillian heights and will probably be, as Churchill was after 1924, as uncomfortable in his new party as in the old. But he also seems likely to have, as Churchill did, the last laugh.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

bobc

Apr 29, 2009

Why have two Democratic view points in D.C.? Everyone yelling that the Republicans have to become more like the Dems...then we would just have one Party.

Specter is a career politician, he needed to go back to the Dems, from whence he came.

For any reporter or Democrat say that the Republicans need to become more like them, it may satisfy you, but you should know, there are millions that want Conservatives back again!

I do not expect the people of Pa. to vote for Specter, surely they can see that Specter swings with the wind and has no allegiance to them.

 

Steve Brown

Apr 29, 2009

One could take an alternative view as to why the Liberals failed after Churchill's departure. Beginning with "The Peoples Budget" (1909) under Liberal PM Asquith, the Liberals were looking more and more like the interventionist Conservatives. Indeed, Churchill was a great supporter of this budget, which levied punative taxes on the wealthy, and was openly redistributionist. By 1924, with British industry in turmoil, Labour became the dominant left-wing party. It was apparent that the British electorate had no use for two virtually indistinguishable parties (Conservative and Liberal) and one truly socialist party (Labour).

The fact is that the Liberal party was dead and that Churchill had nowhere else to go but the Conservatives. Maybe the real lesson is that the Republican Party is better off staying conservative. If they choose to be the Democrat "light" alternative, they may find themselves supplanted by a third party led by real conservatives.

 

LoveFreedom

Apr 29, 2009

Please...there is absolutely no comparison between Winston Churchill and Sen. Arlen Specter.

Sen. Specter is a COWARD and is in LOVE with HIMSELF and HIS SELF INTERESTS.

Mr. Churchill was a HERO LOOKING out for HIS COUNTRY ABOVE ALL ELSE!!

 

jayr

Apr 30, 2009

Senator Specter is loyal to Pennsylvania. He is not beholden to Republicans. He doesn't change with the wind. Over his previous 29 years, he has irritated both Democrats and Republicans. He does what he feels is best for Pennsylvania. I don't know what the vote count will be, but he will probably win again, not because he is Democrat or Republican, but because he is Pennsylvanian through and through.

 

salsabil

Jul 12, 2009

defection within election anyone who runs for his benefit will take the same path of mr Specter, he has the right to defend his career and to be reelected again

 


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