Peggy Noonan on the Democrat Convention
Democrats in the end speak most of, and seem to hold the most sympathy for, the beset-upon single mother without medical coverage for her children, and the soldier back from the war who needs more help with post-traumatic stress disorder. They express the most sympathy for the needy, the yearning, the marginalized and unwell. For those, in short, who need more help from the government, meaning from the government’s treasury, meaning the money got from taxpayers.
Who happen, also, to be a generally beset-upon group.
Democrats show little expressed sympathy for those who work to make the money the government taxes to help the beset-upon mother and the soldier and the kids. They express little sympathy for the middle-aged woman who owns a small dry cleaner and employs six people and is, actually, day to day, stressed and depressed from the burden of state, local and federal taxes, and regulations, and lawsuits, and meetings with the accountant, and complaints as to insufficient or incorrect efforts to meet guidelines regarding various employee/employer rules and regulations. At Republican conventions they express sympathy for this woman, as they do for those who are entrepreneurial, who start businesses and create jobs and build things. Republicans have, that is, sympathy for taxpayers. But they don’t dwell all that much, or show much expressed sympathy for, the sick mother with the uninsured kids, and the soldier with the shot nerves.
Neither party ever gets it quite right, the balance between the taxed and the needy, the suffering of one sort and the suffering of another. You might say that in this both parties are equally cold and equally warm, only to two different classes of citizens.
The entire article is incredibly perceptive and even-handed. If you read any commentary about the convention thus far, read this article. [via Drudge]



3 Comments
There is some truth to what she is saying. At the same time, is it small business that Republicans tend to favor, or large business? My guess is the latter, and then by extension the small businesses benefit through the policies that are passed for the large ones.
CP-
I think the Democrat line is that the GOP is for big business, but my experience has been that they’re more pro-business in general - small, large, and in-between. The fact that they’re mostly anti-union means that their stance gets the most attention in the big shops, union and non.
Oh, and also, we should be honest - both parties “support” where their bread and butter comes from. The GOPs gets the business support, the Dems get the unions. Equal and opposite forces, mostly.