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February
20, 2008
Why
Senator Snort Is Not a Libertarian
by Gary North, Ph.D.
Older
readers will recognize Senator Snort. For decades
in the cartoon strip, Grin and Bear It, he was the
universal archetype of a United States Senator. He
frequently appeared on Faze the Nation.
There has not been a libertarian U.S. Senator in
my lifetime. Robert A. Taft was closer to the
position than the others, but he buckled on
Federally funded public housing. He was the best we
had, but he was not ideologically consistent.
There was no one in second place.
There have been two libertarian Congressmen:
Howard Buffett of Nebraska and Ron Paul of Texas.
Only one of them has attained national prominence,
and that because of a run for the Presidency.
Without warning, individuals used the Web to raise
tens of millions of dollars for his campaign. He
did not foresee this when he announced his
candidacy. Neither did anyone else.
He has collected a large data base of people who
sent money. This data base can be used for
political education. I hope this will be education
on local political mobilization. Any office higher
than mayor or state representative is a waste of
time. It had better be a small-town mayor.
THE SENATE
The Senate is carefully guarded by the
Establishment. No libertarian has gotten elected in
my memory.
A Senate race requires huge amounts of money.
Only the two parties can supply this. A
multimillionaire might be able to buy his way into
a nomination if he was willing to do what New
Jersey's John Corzine did. But libertarians with
this much money are suspicious of politics. They
are not about to spend their money on a Don Quixote
effort. Besides, even if elected, what would they
get? Committee assignments. They would preside over
the care and feeding of the beast.
A quarter of a century ago, I sat down with Paul
Weyrich. I asked him about what it takes to get
conservatives -- not libertarians -- to run for
office. He was forthright. "They will not run for a
local office. I can get lots of people to run for
the Senate, if I agree to raise the money. But they
refuse to put in years in the trenches. They are
not interested in lower offices."
I wrote my piece, "The Dogcatcher Strategy," in
response to his statement. It sat in my files
unused for almost twenty years. A much-shortened
version of it was published on LewRockwell.com
in 2000.
The Senate is a vetted organization. The party's
hierarchy screens the candidates. Then the media
screen the two rivals. If one of them deviates from
the acceptable limits of discourse, the media come
down on the side of the candidate who accepts
today's Federal government. No one gets through the
party's vetting who is hostile to the state.
This has been known by libertarians for decades.
Leonard E. Read of the Foundation for Economic
Education used to say of high-level politicians, "I
do not drink tea with such people." Read never
drank tea, but you get the idea. Another aphorism
on campaign rhetoric: "The higher you fly to get
the office, the farther you'll fall when you get
it." He dismissed all but Howard Buffett and Ron
Paul with this phrase: "They leak."
Local politics is regarded as meaningless to the
parties except in cities. This is why principled
people can occasionally get elected. But they get
outvoted in the bodies to which they get elected.
They rarely are re-elected. They will face
challengers from their own party at the next
election. The challengers will have access to deep
pockets in the Good Old Boy network.
This extends all the way up the chain of
command.
Ron Paul faces this tactic this year. He has not
had a challenger inside the Republican Party for
years. He always defeats the Democrat. This year,
there is a challenger for the Party's nomination.
Paul has had to pull back from the national
campaign until the Texas primary on March 4.
This is not random. The same phenomenon forced
Kucinich out of the Presidential race last August:
a challenger inside the Democrat Party.
DON QUIXOTE RIDES AGAIN!
The two parties screen candidates. They apply
the rule articulated by House Speaker Sam Rayburn:
"You've got to go along to get along." Those
elected local politicians who do not go along do
not get along with the hierarchy, which controls
the money.
We occasionally see someone with no political
experience and no understanding of politics make a
run for the Senate or other high office. I remember
one back in 1966: William Penn Patrick. He ran for
Governor of California against Reagan. I voted for
him. I thought Reagan was just too liberal. In the
Republican primary, Patrick got 1% of the vote,
which anyone could get if he just got his name on
the ballot. Patrick was a millionaire who had made
his money with a multilevel marketing operation
that sold cosmetics. He spent his own money. Nobody
with an ounce of sense ever sent him campaign any
money. It was a pure Don Quixote operation.
Nobody wants to be Sancho Panza at his own
expense.
Neophytes get interested in politics, play
around, spend some time, and may even write a
check. But a neophyte who actually thinks he can do
anything except waste his time and money running
for high office is totally misguided. He is without
political understanding. Anyone who would try this
without great personal wealth to waste on a Don
Quixote campaign is wasting his time. Nobody will
send him any money. People smart enough to have
much money are not ready to waste it on someone
else's soon-to-crash dream.
CONCLUSION
Politics is for our entertainment value. The
system is rigged. It is not open to outsiders. The
higher the office, the less it is open to
outsiders. The more power the office seems to
offer, the more guarded it is.
What can one person do? Develop a digital
mailing list for sending out educational materials
on the importance of self-government. "You mean he
cannot effect political change at the national
level?" That is exactly what I mean.
Senator Snort is not a libertarian. Ever.
Gary
North Archive
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
To
subscribe to Gary North's Reality Check go to
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/sub/GetReality.cfm
If
you enjoyed this essay and would like to read more
of Gary's writing please visit his website at
http://www.garynorth.com
or http://www.freebooks.com
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