Finding the Good in an
Uninspiring Year
Encouraging signs for 2014 can be
found—sometimes it's best to look close to home.
By Peggy Noonan in the
Wall Street Journal
Home, night, fireplace
crackling. A long, good day followed by quiet, peace and a chance to reflect.
The past year was not the most satisfying politically, not the most exalted or
inspiring. Republicans suffered an unforced error with the shutdown. The
Democrats suffered for insisting ObamaCare be implemented on schedule, as planned, which
immediately revealed . . . it hadn't been planned, was in fact fatally flawed,
a bad law. This in turn damaged progressivism itself, at least as it is
currently practiced.
On the upside for both
parties: Republicans proved to be right on the health-care law and have room
now to be right on other things. Democrats could, if they choose, see their
position this way: They're taking a drubbing on ObamaCare but the very catastrophe of that program has
highlighted the fact that they kind of won the argument on the need to do
something big on health care. People aren't saying, "Get rid of ObamaCare
and then do nothing," they're saying, "Repeal it and replace it with
. . . something!"
Democrats are so
concussed they've barely noticed that people do want health-care help,
and it will probably have to be national in scope. Looking at it this way,
Democrats have won a 30-year argument. They should wake up, get out from under
the albatross of ObamaCare and start trying to create something that will work.
With Republicans, who now have new credibility on the issue.
Progress is always
possible. The world is full of surprise.
***
Beyond politics, every
year has something to recommend it. I asked some smart, accomplished people:
What was the best thing that happened this year, some breakthrough, some joy,
some encouraging sign. It was interesting that with a lot of them, their first
thoughts went to the personal.
Chris
Christie, elected in 2013 to a
second term as governor of New Jersey: "I am grateful that my oldest
daughter Sarah got her Christmas wish—admission to the University of Notre Dame
Class of 2018. I am a father full of pride and joy this year."
Mike
Huckabee, former governor of
Arkansas and Saturday-night TV-show star: "Two and a half years ago I had
no grandchildren and started telling my kids that my biological clock
was ticking—to heck with theirs. Now I have four grandchildren, two of whom
were born this year: Caroline Grace, born on my August 24 birthday (very
considerate of her!); and William Huckabee 'Huck' Sanders, born in
October."
For Lesley Stahl of
CBS News, her primary joy was the same: the birth of her second grandchild,
Chloe Major, born in September.
Matt Drudge spoke of
the personal too. The best thing about 2013? "It's the year I discovered
prayer. It changed my life. And I didn't think my life needed changing."
***
Others spoke not of a
personal event but of something outside.
Dana Perino, former
White House press secretary for George
W. Bush and now of Fox News,
says the big event of 2013 is a man in Rome. " Pope Francis. He has become the beacon of hope all around
the world, and he comes to prominence just as the world needed him (and for the
church's sake, too—the church is such an important institution in the
world)." Donna Brazile of CNN and ABC News, and veteran strategist of
Democratic presidential campaigns, saw it the same way: "Finally a pope
who believes in sharing the gospel and not throwing the book at sinners."
Mother Agnes Mary
Donovan of the Sisters of Life, a Roman Catholic order based in New York, is
overjoyed at the number of young women joining her order. "Who would
believe in this age that talented, educated, gifted young women are willing to
make a lifelong commitment as religious sisters? This year 12 women entered the
Sisters of Life alone, and so many more in other religious communities throughout
the nation. Who could measure the value of such graces?"
Mary Anastasia
O'Grady, columnist and editorial board member of this paper, found herself
thinking of something wondrous that maybe didn't get quite enough attention.
"A spacecraft called Voyager I went beyond the solar system this year,
marking a mind-boggling milestone in human progress."
***
Back to politics, for
just a moment.
Paul
Ryan found satisfaction in
the federal budget agreement that he authored and argued for: "We
prevented two possible shutdowns for 2014 and made our deeply divided
government work at a basic functioning level. In Washington, that ranks as an
accomplishment these days."
Andrew Tobias, the
writer and treasurer of the Democratic National Committee, said he's so
grateful he doesn't know where to start, and presented his answers in
questions. "Progress degrading Syria's chemical weapons and Iran's nuclear
capability without having to go to war? Or a record-high Dow? Or our
spectacular first family?" Great friends and good health are important,
"But the rest of it can't hurt."
New York attorney
Lloyd Green, a former member of the George H.W. Bush administration, said it's
good that 2013 is over—2012 was an election year and so "combative,"
but 2013 was "acrid" and full of pointless argument. He's looking
forward to some political resolution in 2014. "Finally elections are in
sight." He's thankful that this year "our country is doing better
than it feels. The economy is haltingly expanding. We are ahead of much of
Europe . . . this is a reason to raise a glass."
***
Richard Haass, the
diplomat and author who this year marked 10 years as president of the Council
on Foreign Relations, said the world has some things to say for itself. "I
am grateful that Pakistan didn't fail, China and Japan didn't go to war, the
euro didn't unravel, Jordan didn't collapse under the weight of refugees, and
the U.S. didn't default."
Those were good
didn'ts. Here's a good did.
Jeremy Shane, who runs
an education foundation in Washington, found himself thinking this year of his
native South Africa. When Nelson
Mandela died, Mr. Shane
remembered how all but fools thought apartheid wouldn't end without "a
bloodbath." "And yet Mandela imagined, and with [ Frederik Willem ]
de Klerk navigated," a peaceful transition to majority rule. "What
Mandela fashioned stands alone in the annals of national reconciliation in
improbability and result."
***
The writer and
public-policy thinker Yuval Levin also thought that 2013 was a "rather
dismal year" but was happy to go "looking for the good." He
found it in teaching political philosophy to college-age and slightly older
students. He was "deeply struck by the earnestness and intensity of their
desire to understand the sources of the circumstances we are in," and
struck too by their search for "causes for confidence and hope." The
generation "now reaching maturity in America seems unlike its predecessors
in the postwar era," he wrote. They are "weighted down with heavier
worries, surely, yet also relatively free of the childish fantasies imposed by
the baby boomers on all who have followed in their wake." This year he
perceived a common "attitude" among those in their early 20s.
"We're dealing them a seriously deficient hand of cards, yet they seem
(maybe as a result) more serious sand sober than I would have imagined."
ABC News President Ben
Sherwood also found a lot of good in 2013. "Boston gave us strength, the
pope gave us humility, Mandela gave us wisdom, the Bat Kid gave us joy, Robin
Roberts gave us resilience, and our troops gave us pride."
And 2014? "The
New Year gives us hope."
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