Posted on 12/06/2019 9:09:32 PM PST by jfd1776
In the fall of 2019, Republicans suffered a few serious defeats: Democrats won governor races in Kentucky and Louisiana, and consolidated the state legislature of Virginia.
Too many Republican voters in both states told pollsters and reporters that the Republican candidates just hadnt "earned their votes." They hadn't made the case for election, or reelection, or they'd lost the glow they used to have. Oh, these voters still consider themselves Republican, and voted Republican for other races, but since these particular Republican candidates didnt "earn their votes" they denied them the prize of victory, allowing an opposition with whom they disagree on virtually everything to win instead. We shouldnt think that this thought process is limited to Republicans, by the way. We have also seen many of the Democratic candidates for president drop out, always citing a lack of funds, volunteers, and personal support in the polls.
In one week, Sestak, Bullock, and Harris all dropped out of their race for the nomination, all citing that same lack of support And when voters were asked why, they simply reported, "these candidates havent earned my support."
Not "I don't think this is the most electable choice on my side of the aisle," but rather "I don't choose to reward this person with my vote."
This odd concept isn't completely new; it's been percolating for some time. Growing up as a conservative in Illinois, I certainly remember many an election that turned on just a few percentage points, and the same answer was given for the reason that people skipped the election, or skipped that race, or even intentionally voted for someone they hated instead of the candidate they agreed with. The candidate just didnt earn my vote, they say, or "My vote is a precious thing; I'll only award it to someone who deserves it."
Voters of a certain age still recall with sadness how Bill Clinton was able to win two terms without winning a majority of the popular vote either time. H. Ross Perot took a lot of votes from George HW Bush and Bob Dole, sure... but thats not the reason Clinton won. Bill Clinton won because so many Republicans didnt think George HW Bush really wanted to win, and because they didnt think Bob Dole was exciting enough. They just didn't feel their nominee had "earned their support," so they sat back and allowed Bill Clinton to win.
Are you beginning to see a pattern?
When did we begin thinking that elections are about candidates earning our votes?
Is political office some prize - like Americas Got Talent or Star Search - in which we reward the most deserving candidate with a cool title, a sash or tiara, and a year of shopping market openings and TV guest spots?
Our Founding Fathers would be horrified.
Somewhere along the way, Americans forgot the view of public service held by our founders. You shouldnt want political office; you should only seek it because you know that the job you do will be so important that it will be worth the sacrifice. It is not for personal advancement that you seek it; It is to help the country.
In fact, as a citizen in a constitutionally-limited republic, your vote is not a reward for a slick presentation, an attractive face, or the display of some talent like the Miss America pageant.
Our vote was consciously intended to be a selfish act, something we do for ourselves and our families and friends, not something we do to reward the candidate.
Personally, I can hardly list all of the many times that I voted for someone I didnt like, or who definitely had not earned my support but who I voted for anyway, because I knew that he or she was the better person for the job. An election is an either-or choice, you pick the one of the two who is objectively better for the country.
In the end, punishing someone for a bad campaign or a low energy attitude ... allowing his opponent to win even if the opponent will be worse in the office... is a terribly self-destructive act.
Think back on that 1992 election, when just enough Republicans decided to punish George HW Bush for not seeming to want it bad enough, so they let Bill Clinton win the White House. Who did that help? The punishment didnt do anything to George Bush; it just allowed him to retire a little earlier. But placing Bill Clinton in the White House cost the country billions of dollars in economic errors and created foreign-policy messes from which we still suffer today.
There is much we need to correct in the American education system. Our understanding of civics, and in particular, of the founding fathers' vision, is woefully lacking in almost all sectors.
But I would argue that first among these destructive modern errors is that Americans have forgotten that crucial concept: the self-interest of the ballot box. (in the Federalist Papers, this was considered its greatest genius.)
The Framers designed a system in which millions of voters, voting for their own interest on election day, would almost magically work together to create that wonderful result: the selection of the best government for us all.
Tragically, we have too many Americans today who really dont vote their self-interest on election day... voters who dont think about what the candidates will do to them, their neighborhoods, their children and grandchildren, if elected.
Instead, too many voters think about which candidate they would like to have a beer with, which candidates seem to want it more, which candidate seemed more exciting, more likable, more like me.
All those who voted for Democrat state capitals this year, for whatever reason, voted against their own interests, as well as voting against everyone elses.
We all benefit from conservative governance The conservative policies of lower taxes, fewer regulations, safer streets, and economic growth, are good for everybody, not just for Republicans!
But as long as American voters are discouraged from considering their own interests in the ballot box... as long as they think of elections as a prize to award, rather than as a sacred civic trust... our republic will remain threatened, precariously balanced on a very dangerous precipice.
Copyright 2019 John F Di Leo
John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based transportation manager, trade compliance trainer, writer and actor. His columns have been regularly found in Illinois Review for over 10 years.
Nice.
Thanks for posting this. I agree 1 million percent and the author puts it much nicer than I do.
There are cases where voting for a repugnant candidate of your own party just doesnt make sense, like voting for Willard or McStain. I defy anyone to show that things would have been significantly different if either of those turds had beaten Hussein Obozo. This country has been cursed with abominable candidates for generations. At some point eating that schitt sandwich by voting for a turd just cant be stomached.
Dr Pretorius makes my point.
OF COURSE McCain and Romney were lousy Republicans...
But it’s also equally obvious to anyone not intentionally blinded by a dreamlike utopian vision that Barack Obama was a thousand times worse.
I would of course prefer people like Washington, Coolidge, Reagan and Trump every time, and not have to settle for mushy clods like McCain and Romney...
But if McCain or Romney were president between 2009 and 2017, we would not have seen hundreds of billions of US dollars given to Iran to prop up the mullahs... or all the advances against islamofascist terrorism that GW Bush accomplished squandered... or all the schools directed to allow boys to call themselves girls and take over high school girls’ bathrooms and even high school girls’ sports... or pot legalization marching across the country, state by state...
It’s incredible how much damage was done by Obama’s two terms. Even the worst republican would never have done such things...
But because McCain and Romney weren’t great, there was a segment of the right that stayed home or skipped the race, even some who voted FOR Obama out of anger at the GOP for allowing mushy clods to win the nomination...
And if just those few percent hadn’t been such fools, we would have been spared those eight miserable years.
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