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flamingdem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-12-08 10:37 PM
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Ike's Granddaughter Calls Obama 'Future of America'
http://www.washingtonindependent.com/view/eisenhowers

"You'll have to forgive me for being an Eisenhower Republican," joked Susan Eisenhower, granddaughter of the former five-star general and two-term Republican president. The man who had helped lead America to victory over the forces of Axis darkness during World War II, then oversaw a period of unprecedented prosperity and suburban satisfaction during the 1950s.

Speaking on the telephone on Aug. 7 from her Washington office at The Eisenhower Institute, a think tank where she serves as president emeritus, the journalist-turned-foreign policy wonk explained her decision to publicly support Barack Obama after a lifetime in the Republican Party.

"I don't know how much you know about my grandfather's administration," Eisenhower said. "But that administration stood for multilateral engagement, balancing the budget. They were the party of civil rights, they were the party of environmental progress. That was the Republican Party of the 1950s. I think you can make the case that doesn't sound like the Republican Party we know today. If you look at the way Obama's run his campaign, to how Hillary Clinton ran her campaign, or even how John McCain's campaign is shaping up -- you can definitely say that Obama's running his campaign in a way an Eisenhower Republican would have run his campaign.

"He raises a lot of money," Eisenhower, 56, said, by way of explaining the similarities she sees between her grandfather and the likely Democratic nominee. "He has very little debt. I just love it. Anybody who wants to make him out as this wide-eyed liberal -- I just don't see any evidence for that, not in the way he runs his campaign. And this tells you a lot about how he can administer things, how he manages things, how he deals with situations.

"This race is very similar to the 1952 campaign that brought my grandfather to power," Eisenhower said, continuing the comparison. "He was an outsider who was nominated by the Republican Party -- but it was not an easy process at all. He was an outsider who threatened to shake up the party itself."

As a surrogate for the Obama campaign since her declaration of support in February, Eisenhower can be seen in the most simple terms as merely another moderate Republican backing Obama. But she could also be on the frontlines of something bigger. As we approach the Democratic and Republican National Conventions of 2008, we do so as the coalitions of both parties appear ever more fractured. And it is the GOP coalition that could be in greater disarray.

Eisenhower in the Oval Office (Dwight D. Eisenhower Library)True, the Democrats are still scared by the divisions of a hard-fought primary season. Democrats, of course, have been used to intra-party fights since Chicago in 1968. But in the Republican Party, the fissures might mean something more long-term. These could be the fault lines of a new sort of national realignment. Fiscal conservatives, in addition to many foreign-policy pragmatists, are dissatisfied with Bush administration policies. And they might flee the party as well as its leader. Should Obama win in November, he might do so with the aid of moderate Republicans like Eisenhower, whose power within the GOP has been diminishing for decades.

In many ways Eisenhower and Republicans like her are at a pivotal moment. They can see a new chance for relevancy should Obama win, for they could then become part of a new majority coalition. This could be an amalgam, similar to the one Ronald Reagan put together with his win in 1980 -- when Democrats, frustrated with President Jimmy Carter, helped forge the Reagan Revolution. It is a chance for this group to remain vital. But they also face the opposite -- the threat of greater marginalization, if not complete extinction, within the GOP -- if the other factions come together and can elect Sen. John McCain.

In this light, Eisenhower is not an aberration. She is part of a vein within the Republican Party that still pumps. But not as hard, for moderates are being driven out of the party -- even with a supposed centrist like McCain as the likely nominee.

Indeed, this group has been losing power since Sen. Barry M. Goldwater's nomination in 1964. But it now seems acutely at a loss, as its members find themselves unwanted, without a real champion to fight for their cause. This GOP faction is less concerned with eliminating gay marriage or sustaining what many economists have viewed as crippling tax cuts, than with the pragmatic aspects of how the party sees itself and what that means for the United States and the world. Whatever say this group once had in the GOP is fading.

"It is this very weird moment where Republicans are very divided," said Julian E. Zelizer, a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University. "It's accurate to say that you don't have a dominant set of ideas or a figure the party can really rally behind. What you simply see are factions who aren't forming to create a coherent vision."

Bruce Shulman, a professor of history at Boston University and author of "The '70S: The Great Shift in American Culture, Society and Politics," explained the situation. He sees the factions' dissatisfaction, but cannot see a full realignment in the offing.

"Since the Reagan Revolution," Shulman said, "you've seen this amazing united front by different factions that are much more at odds ideologically than the factions within the Democratic Party. They've all managed to put their feelings about one another aside to defeat a common enemy. I don't think the fracturing you're seeing now will result in large numbers of Republicans voting for Obama. But I do think you'll see people willing to sit on their hands instead of work towards that common goal as they have in the past."

Little in the polling data shows the same kind of wide turn from either party that mirrors Reagan's ability to tap into the blue-collar Democrats, who were fed up with Carter, and their entire party, in 1980. However, what is evident now are significant defections on either side, which seem destined to continue beyond Nov. 4.

It seems that, for the first time in decades, including the Clinton years, the Democratic Party has an opportunity to draw GOP players -- people who, like the Southern Democrats of 40 years ago, fundamentally disagree with the direction the party has taken. But it is one that, should Sen. Barack Obama and a solidly Democratic Congress blow the deal, will simply be a blip in the history of modern politics. Fleeting and forgotten.

"Both these parties have core constituencies that will support the party no matter what," said the presidential historian Robert Dallek. "Even today, George Bush has a 28 percent approval rating. There are cycles of American history where you see a real shift, but I don't see a definitive change in party structure or alignment. I see a national mood shift that gives the Democrats and upper hand for the time being. But, if Obama's elected, both he and the party have to deliver."

Eisenhower, for her part does see the plates shifting -- if only for a moment.

"The thing we have to ask ourselves for this election is whether this is a small temporary change or permanent realignment," said Eisenhower, whose father, John, served as ambassador to Belgium under Richard M. Nixon but supported Sen. John Kerry over George W. Bush in 2004. "Political parties change over decades, to seize and capitalize on opportunities. But what can happen -- whether you're a Democrat or Republican -- is you can wake up one morning and find yourself looking at a party whose standard-bearer doesn't reflect the values that brought you to the party in the first place. I can say that, for this election, I'm supporting Barack Obama, because I think he will represent the future of America. He is the future of America."

Unlike many prominent Obama supporters -- including Caroline Kennedy and Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill -- who said they came to support Obama at the urging of their children, Eisenhower did so by her own grown-up accord. The two had first met in the winter of 2007, after the Illinois senator had called asking Eisenhower to meet with his staff.

As a practice, Eisenhower has always made it a point to meet with candidates or their staffs regardless of the party, and did so then. She was impressed by what she'd seen out of his people, and by the inquisitiveness of the man himself. Over the next few months, the two met three or four more times, and she grew to respect his ability to think about issues in a nuanced, post-Cold War fashion.

After initially telling Obama that she wouldn't endorse anyone, Eisenhower decided to say something in the middle of the gritty Democratic primary -- with a February op-ed article in The Washington Post, headlined, bluntly, "Why I'm backing Barack Obama."

.............snip
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flamingdem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-12-08 10:39 PM
Response to Original message
1. Her children encouraged her to support Obama, my MOM encouraged me! nt
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MadMaddie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-12-08 10:44 PM
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2. Nice Read
Others like Ikes daughter do count and they will make a difference. They view McCain as dangerous to this nation.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-12-08 10:45 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Yeah....folks rarely talk about those that might not ordinarily vote for a Dem
but want to support Obama for a whole host of reasons. That's why those that keep talking about the racists are off the mark. There are more than just racists in this country......way more!
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Gabi Hayes Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-13-08 12:25 AM
Response to Original message
4. an EISENHOWER speaking at the Democratic convention, anyone?
?????

are they working on this?

surely they realize the powerful symbolism????????

what about David and Julie?

I'd like to see Obama make some hay with this

and....FFFFFFF YOU, Lieberman, you whiny, lying pipsqueak
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Gabi Hayes Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-13-08 08:56 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. I said......
wtf?

this is great idea

I mean it!
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Marrah_G Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-13-08 08:58 AM
Response to Original message
6. I saw her on CNNthis morning before work. Nice Interview.
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bullwinkle428 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-13-08 09:02 AM
Response to Original message
7. Eisenhower - the last Republican president that actually showed
some level of respect for the office and the Constitution!!
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