As part of the ongoing drive to nationalize next year’s elections, and prepare the party for a consistent, positive message for congressional candidates, Dems have been toying around with a new slogan.
House Democratic leaders are holding a closed-door meeting with members of their caucus this afternoon to discuss a new slogan for the 2006 midterm elections: “Together, We Can Do Better” or “Together, America Can Do Better,” according to Democratic sources.
Although aides say the slogan has yet to be finalized and is still up for debate, it has already been in frequent use by Democratic leaders on both sides of the Capitol for several weeks.
Apparently, it’s been subtly making the rounds. Nancy Pelosi has used the phrase at press conferences on the Hill, Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.) used it in the Democratic radio address on Saturday, and Harry Reid plastered it, not so subtly, across the backdrop of an event held last week.
For what it’s worth, I kind of like it. Polls show that a strong majority of Americans believe the country is on the wrong track. By emphasizing that we “can do better,” Dems are reminding voters that a) Republicans are in control; b) they’re screwing up badly; and c) Democrats represent the voice of change and progress. It’s positive and forward-looking. Republicans run the show and think this is the best we can do, but Dems believe that “together, we can do better.”
Granted, it’s just a catchphrase, and the number of voters who’ll base their decision on a five-word slogan is probably pretty low (I think). Still, as catchphrases go, it’s not bad. (It’s also an improvement on Gephardt ambiguous two-word rubric: “Families First.”)
What do you think?