Posted on 06/28/2006 1:45:44 PM PDT by Dane
WE LOST THE REFERENDUM
It was a landslide.
They had that referendum on illegal immigration yesterday and the answer was clear.
People dont care.
Im not saying that as a criticism, or as accusation, but as an observation. If yesterdays Republican Primary in Utahs third congressional district was a test of the countrys sentiment on illegal immigration, it is unarguably clear that people arent that bothered by it.
At least theyre not in Utah.
Congressman Chris Cannon pounded the living snot out of challenger John Jacob. It wasnt even close. John Jacob lost in every county, jurisdiction and precinct. At no point did he lead in any category and every new report of results was more bad news. As I sat last night at the computer with his staffers, watching the results post on the Internet, it was clear that by the time 10 percent of the precincts had posted that the race was lost.
So Ive got egg on my face.
I attacked Chris Cannon ruthlessly. I was John Jacobs loudest and most passionate defender. His loss is also my loss. His failure to represent the interests of the people is also my failure to read the interests of the people. What I thought was important was clearly unimportant to the voters. And in a republic, the voters are always right.
It turns out that Salt Lake Citys two daily newspapers, and Provos newspaper, the states other talk-show host, and most of the states politicians were all more in touch with the sentiments of the Republicans in the Third District than I was. It is clear that their general liberalism is a better reflection of voter sentiment than my rabid conservatism.
And I should have known that. Instead, I was blinded by my desire to evangelize the world to my view of freedom a decidedly conservative and Constitution-based view. But Utah is not a politically conservative state. It is dominated by the Republican Party, but not by conservative Republicans. The governor is a moderate to liberal, one senator is a moderate and the other is arguably a liberal. The last two governors were moderate to liberal and the attorney general is moderate to liberal.
Those are not accusatory labels, they are merely demonstrations of the consistently expressed will of the people. When Utahns go to the polls, they often pick moral conservatives, but rarely pick political conservatives. More typically they go for social liberals.
And they rarely go for political challengers from the right.
So, logically, John Jacobs campaign was doomed from the beginning. And I should have known that. I probably did know that, but chose to ignore it, caught up in the talking-head argument that this was the time and place the people would rise up against government neglect of the border and acceptance of illegal immigration.
That argument made sense. This was the chance. It was the chance for conservatives in the Republican Party to call to account the ruling liberal wing of the party. But that is not what the voters wanted.
And that cant be ignored.
If this was a referendum on illegal immigration, it seems the people want Senate over House, Kennedy over Tancredo. It seems that Chris Cannons 10 years of being the open-borders guy in the House is something the Republicans in Utahs Third District wanted to reward.
Again, that is not an accusation. It is not bitterness. It is an observation. The landslide re-election of an incumbent is not a call for change in that incumbents conduct or in the direction of his party. It is a ratification and approval of what they both have stood for.
George Bush and Vicente Fox won last night. It was a fair fight, I made the issue as clear as I could, and people chose what I wasnt selling. Which is their right and the great beauty of our republic.
We tried to make our stand, and we got steamrollered. We can take comfort in knowing that we did our best, and we can seethe in the bitterness of knowing that it didnt do any good. It was duty done, but pointlessly.
And I apologize for that. For taking up so much of your time with this issue. For being so passionate about something for which there is not a public enthusiasm. For being clearly out of touch with what Republicans want. For misreading the potential of this election.
It is impossible to ignore the fact that Chris Cannon won this primary by a larger margin than he won the primary two years ago. Last times $50,000 campaign did better than this times $700,000 campaign. And even that second figure is uncertain. It is possible that John Jacobs campaign ran out of money a month ago, that it was underfunded. It is possible that John Jacob was a poor candidate.
But it is also irrelevant.
In his concession remarks he bypassed a prepared speech John Jacob said that the results of the election showed that Chris Cannon has support in Washington.
Actually, thats not right.
The results showed that Chris Cannon has support in the Third District.
His constituents have known him for a decade and they seem overwhelmingly to like him and what he does. The referendum failed. Its business as usual business with which the voters seem completely content.
If this primary was an opening battle in the war to bring the Republican Party back to its conservative roots, we got massacred. And that will be noticed and have consequences. We conservatives hoped to show momentum and strength and didnt. And we may have hurt our cause substantially as a result. Opposition to illegal immigration has been hurt, and so has the attempt to chastise the party. We fell flat on our face, and to the winner go the spoils.
Politics is like baseball. When you lose, you congratulate the winner and walk off the field.
Chris Cannon won because he represented what people want. He won the election. He deserves congratulations.
Seems you support Cannon (correct me if I'm wrong). Cannon supports amnesty, therefore you support amnesty.
We have known about this for a long time. I call it the Pat Buchanan effect.
I'm starting to think that nothing will be done on a Congressional level this year, though Pence getting his plan through would be a pleasant surprise. I'm glad you're on board with it. Most of the freepers on your "side" of this debate are stubborn about supporting the Senate amnesty.
Sean Hannity's "ego" is raising thousands of dollars for children of killed troops this weekend here in Jersey. I can't believe you guys diss him like you do.
I second that
I saw your crickets.
Some folks sure get a kick out of taking the Mexican national's side in all this. I don't understand it.
I can.
Most freepers on the "other side" of the debate call the Pence Plan amnesty. Tancredo called it amnesty, but supported Jacobs in Utah, who supports the Pence Plan, even though he originally called Tancredo an opportunist and bay buchanan said he was soft of immigration, before they all decided to support each other against Cannon, then Jacobs, who supports the Pence Plan, was strong on immigration...sometimes I have to sit down and draw out a diagram just to keep track of the silliness with this issue.
Well Put.
Your representation of Cannon when it comes to illegal immigration is a stretch and even you must realize that.
In various posts I've mentioned Cannon's past poor record on illegal immigration and his recent support of HR4437 and his recent criticism of the Senate bill.
I do not "stretch" Cannon's record on illegal immigration. Even you should realize that.
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