
Four years earlier, in the 2000 election, Bush had won the
By late 2003, Bush's popularity had dipped over the unpopular Iraq War, which a majority in both houses of
Bush was attacked nonstop as a Nazi, fascist and war criminal. "Bush lied, people died" was the new left-wing mantra.
Talk of Bush's impeachment was in the air.
Neither presidential candidate
Oddly, none of the
Within that void, little-known
Dean was running on an ever-harder-left agenda. His chief allure to primary voters was that he was the most venomous of the candidates in references to Bush, and he loudly claimed that he had always been against the Iraq War.
The rest of the Democratic field was full of even more radical fringe candidates, including Sen.
The so-called "centrists" -- House Minority Leader
As the first 2004 primaries loomed, Democratic donors, officeholders and blue-collar workers became concerned that Dean might be too far ahead to be stopped. They warned of a landslide loss similar to the one
Few realist Democratic candidates for congressional seats wanted to run with Dean at the head of the ticket. By default, the worried Democratic establishment then rallied around late-entering Sen.
Kerry had been in the
The result was that the safe Kerry won the Democratic nomination, but the plodding candidate went on to lose to Bush in a close election.
Something similar is shaping up for the
Yet the left-wing favorites --
Strangely, many of the top contenders are critical of once-revered former President
In the initial debates, most of the chief Democratic contenders seemed resolute that no other candidate on the stage would sound more left-wing.
The de facto Democratic agenda for 2020 is shaping up to be open borders, race and gender identity politics, and free health care for undocumented immigrants. Many of the Democratic contenders support Medicare for all, repartitions for slavery, the Green New Deal, a wealth tax and much higher taxes overall.
Candidates talk of fundamentally "transforming," "recalibrating" and "restructuring"
And then there is 76-year-old
Biden, like Kerry, is an old political warhorse. For now, he poses as the Democratic establishment's only safe bet.
Like Kerry, Biden has lots of flaws, is an erratic campaigner and is gaffe-prone. Yet Biden continues to poll as the front-runner, mostly because the majority of Democratic voters realize that none of the scary hard-left alternatives have any chance against the hated
Fifteen years ago, the
This time around,
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Victor Davis Hanson is a contributing editor of City Journal, where this first appeared, the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow in Residence in Classics and Military History at the Hoover Institution, a professor of classics emeritus at California State University at Fresno, and a nationally syndicated columnist for Tribune Media Services.