ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
Thursday, Nov. 13 2008
Obama victory: No mandate for
cultural revolution
By Colleen Carroll Campbell
It is often said that America is a center-right country when it
comes to social
issues. But after Sen. Barack Obama's impressive electoral victory,
some
pundits say we are witnessing a "lurch to the left" on such issues
as abortion,
gay marriage and judicial activism.
Their claims of a new cultural mandate are based on the results of
last week's
election. And as even the most sunny-eyed social conservative must
concede,
those results came as a blow, particularly to the pro-life movement.
Anti-abortion measures put before voters in California, Colorado and
South
Dakota all failed. Washington state voters joined Oregon in
legalizing assisted
suicide. There no longer are any pro-life women in the U.S. Senate.
And Obama's
stated plans to sign the Freedom of Choice Act — which would
eliminate
virtually all federal, state and local restrictions on abortion —
and to
appoint Supreme Court judges who will uphold Roe v. Wade will be
easy for him
to fulfill, given the pro-choice congressional majority.
Still, the reports of social conservatism's demise are greatly
exaggerated. For
starters, two of the three state anti-abortion measures that failed
did not
receive the support of major pro-life players in their states
because they were
perceived as deeply flawed. Republicans sustained significant losses
in
Congress, but the number of congressional Democrats elected on
pro-life
platforms increased for the second time in two years.
As for the presidential race, Sen. John McCain was not exactly a
conservative
darling. His support for embryonic stem-cell research and opposition
to a
federal marriage amendment made him a less than ideal
standard-bearer for the
pro-life and pro-family causes. And his recent proposal for the
federal
government to buy up America's bad mortgages inspired little
confidence among
fiscal conservatives.
McCain clearly is more socially conservative than Obama. But it is
noteworthy
that in their match-up, Obama mostly played defense on social
issues. He
repeatedly distanced himself from his socially liberal record by
stressing his
desire to find "common ground" on abortion, hedging on earlier
pronouncements
about a pro-Roe litmus test for judges and reminding voters that he
opposes gay
marriage.
Obama's fans on the hard left are trumpeting his victory as the
definitive
triumph of social liberalism in America. But exit polls paint a more
mundane
picture of an electorate overwhelmingly focused on economic issues.
Although
voters in 2004 cited "moral values" as their top concern and
re-elected
socially conservative President George W. Bush as a result, voters
in 2008
cited the economy and opted for Obama, who campaigned as an economic
change
agent. Obama's decision to play up pocketbook issues instead of
social ones
reflects his understanding of an electoral reality that eludes many
of his
left-wing supporters: When contentious social issues dominate an
American
presidential campaign, liberals lose.
Few social issues are more contentious than the definition of
marriage, and on
this score, conservatives won big last week. Voters in Florida,
Arizona and
California approved gay-marriage bans, bringing the number of states
with such
bans to 30. The California victory was particularly impressive
because it
happened in a solidly blue state where voters supported Obama by
double-digit
margins. In backing the time-honored understanding of marriage and
thereby
affirming every child's right to a mother and a father, California
voters
proved that defending marriage is a bipartisan priority.
Obama should keep those voters in mind in the coming months.
Although he ran as
a post-partisan conciliator, he will be pressured by his party's
fringe to
govern as a left-wing culture warrior. If Obama truly wants to unite
America
and prove his skeptics wrong, he can begin by keeping his campaign
promise to
seek common ground on the issues that divide us most.
Colleen Carroll Campbell is an author, television and radio host
and St.
Louis-based fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. Her
website is
www.colleen-campbell.com.