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May 18, 2007
The GOP -- a
party in distress
by Mark Alexander
From The Patriot Post
The '08 Republican contenders assembled again
this week for another "debate."
For the same reason that most of you did not
watch the second debate, I will not recap it,
except to say that the Rudy McRomney amalgam
candidate -- Rudy
Giuliani, John
McCain and Mitt
Romney -- are still ensconced as the leading
contenders, with no significant opposition from the
rest of the field.
Like the faux debate two weeks ago, the latest
deliberation re-established that the embodiment of
20th-century conservatism was, and remains, Ronald
Wilson Reagan, whose name
was invoked repeatedly. The current contest is
to determine which candidate can best fill
Reagan's boots, though it's already clear that
no single candidate on the "A Team" can muster The
Gipper's vision, charisma or character.
So where does this leave conservatives?
Waiting for a candidate with the qualities of
Ronald Reagan
of course, but a candidate who is also a contender
in his own right.
We do not need a Reagan wannabe. We need a
leader who understands Reagan's place in history,
but who can restore the nation's focus on what is
good and right -- timeless
conservative principles. We need an advocate
for individual liberty, the restoration of
constitutional limits on government and the
judiciary, and the promotion of free enterprise,
national defense and traditional American
values.
Conservatives continue to support the Bush
administration's policy to contain the menacing
jihadi
threat worldwide, and we deplore the Left's
opportunistic potshots about the real shooting
war in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
However, Republican domestic policies under the
leadership of George Bush have been abysmal, and if
conservatives had a theme song, it would surely be
Toby Keith singing "I Wish I Didn't Know Now What I
Didn't Know Then."
The
Party of Reagan withered under the "kinder,
gentler" administration of Bush(41), consequently
suffering further indignity under two "era of big
government is over" Clinton terms, only to be
further disenfranchised by Bush(43)'s
"compassionate conservatism" domestic spending
policies.
Under Republican leadership (before they were
booted out last year) annual government spending
had ballooned to more than 50 percent higher than
the Clinton-era budgets a decade earlier. Of that,
only 21 cents of every taxpayer dollar goes to
national defense and homeland security. By
contrast, 54 cents goes to entitlements like Social
Security, Medicare and Medicaid, and 8 cents goes
to servicing the federal debt.
Meanwhile, the federal deficit continues to
grow, raising the national debt, and those debts
tighten the money supply, increasing the costs of
investment and slowing economic growth and
prosperity.
That having been said, however, public approval
ratings for the current Democrat-controlled
Congress are as low as the dismal approval ratings
for President Bush.
The Republican Party has lost
its bearing, and predictably, its ability to
field conservative candidates in general elections.
Though there are still many authentic
conservatives on Capitol Hill, they have not
composed even a majority of the Republican Party
since Newt Gingrich was speaker.
However -- all is not lost.
Ahead of the 1964 presidential election, Ronald
Reagan delivered what is now considered the
defining declaration of 20th-century conservatism:
"A
Time for Choosing." Reagan said, "This is the
issue of this election: Whether we believe in our
capacity for self-government or whether we abandon
the American Revolution and confess that a little
intellectual elite in a far-distant capital can
plan our lives for us better than we can plan them
ourselves." He went on to define, with typical
clarity and resolve, a political agenda designed to
"conserve" our national heritage.
Today, conservatives and Republicans again face
a time for choosing.
In 1977, Reagan outlined "The
New Republican Party," noting, "Our party must
be based on the kind of leadership that grows and
takes its strength from the people. Any
organization is in actuality only the lengthened
shadow of its members. A political party is a
mechanical structure created to further a cause.
The cause, not the mechanism, brings and holds the
members together." Reagan was steadfast in his
leadership of a Republican Party that derived its
strength "from the people." The result was evident
in his landslide
re-election in 1984.
In order to ensure a Republican
victory in '08, the party will have to nominate
a conservative who understands the tested principle
of a political party that is nothing if not a
"shadow of its members."
In the wings, there is such a candidate.
When Fred
Dalton Thompson launches his campaign, the
current field of contenders will be reordered. More
interesting than the shift in support to Thompson
from the current poll leaders will be how a
Thompson candidacy elevates some of the second-tier
candidates like Duncan
Hunter and Sam
Brownback.
The sooner the better, Fred.
The
Patriot Post
Copyright 2007 by Publius Press, Inc. and
reprinted with permission.
The
Patriot Post Archive
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