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To Vote Or Not To Vote - A tough call for conservatives.
National Review Online ^ | November 06, 2006 | John Derbyshire

Posted on 11/06/2006 12:30:43 PM PST by neverdem







To Vote Or Not To Vote
A tough call for conservatives.

By John Derbyshire

Of course, it is not a matter of simply “staying home.” I shall be voting not only for my U.S. senator and representative, but also for a state senator and assemblyman, a county clerk and comptroller, and a town councilcritter. You probably have a similar array of positions to vote for. By all means do the best you can for your state and district. Whether or not it is the case that all politics is local, it is certainly the case that all localities have politics, and you should participate. What I’m going to talk about here is strategies for voting federal offices.

And if you are a single-issue voter — immigration, right to life, environment — and there is a person standing for federal office in your district who is strong for your darling issue, of course you should vote for that person. You are going to anyway, and nothing I say will dissuade you.

Those cases aside, let’s face the issue of whether a principled conservative should do anything to prevent a massacre of congressional Republicans in these elections — by, for instance, voting Republican.

The case for not doing anything, for letting the massacre proceed, is straightforward. The Republican Congress has been complicit in George W. Bush’s plans to vastly expand the power of the federal government, to deconstruct our nation, and to beggar the generation that will come after us.

The concinnity of congressional Republican actions with administration goals has been total. As Ryan Sager says in his indispensable recent book: “[T]he number of crimes against conservatism committed by Republicans during the Bush administration is almost too many to list.” (Sager none the less goes on to list them. It takes him three pages.)

This is not, as someone always pipes up at this point, a vote on Bush. No, it isn’t, but it might as well be. George W. Bush has vetoed just one bill from the Congress his party controls, a bill on federal funding of embryonic-stem-cell research — a boutique issue of no importance to the life of the nation. For the rest, Republican president and Republican Congress have been two hearts beating as one. They have worked together to lead the nation in the direction they think it should go.

And that direction has been away from conservatism, whose very heart and essence is the understanding that individual liberty waxes when government wanes, and vice versa. This president, and the Congress that has supported and enabled him, does not have that understanding. For all George W. Bush’s vapid blather about a yearning for liberty having been planted in the hearts of men by our Creator, there is no hint of a trace of a sign that Bush has ever given five seconds’ thought to the connection between individual liberty and government power.

Even when this president has done good things, those things have not been part of any discernable conservative project. His tax cuts, for example, will have their entire effect washed away in a year or five by the rising waters of entitlement spending. Seen alone, which is how Bushites much prefer to see them, those tax cuts were a shining example of conservative principle; seen in combination with the unrestrained spending of this congress, approved by this president, they are a hoax, a swindle, a cynical fraud.

We cannot express our disgust with George W. Bush this election cycle, but we can use the Bushite congressional majority as a proxy. Away with them! Vote them out! In the name of God, go!

Except that… There are two issues that should stay our hands. The first of these issues is of course the War on Terror. The second is immigration.

If the thought of a massacre of congressional Republicans is pleasantly cheering, the thought of Nancy Pelosi, Barney Frank, and Maxine Waters supervising the nation’s defenses is emphatically not. Neither is the thought of a gleefully grinning George W. Bush signing into law (as he undoubtedly would) the Clinton/Kennedy 2007 Open Borders, Universal Amnesty, and Abolition of Citizenship Act. If the cherishing of individual liberty and — what is really the same thing — the distrust of state power are together the beating heart of modern American conservatism, then strong national defense and patriotism are the liver and lungs.

There you have the dilemma for conservatives: to go on enabling the enablers of those “crimes committed against conservatism” — to join in pulling on the bell rope that tolls the death knell of the Reagan project — or, to place the national defense and the National Question in the hands of fools, buffoons, and America-haters, for a minimum of two years.

It’s a tough call. Those two big issues notwithstanding, there is still a case for handing congressional Republicans their entrails on a platter, garnished with parsley. The case is made at some length by, or at least is implicit in, the article “Goodbye to the permanent majority” in the Nov. 4 issue of The Economist. Most telling is the sidebar titled “Annual growth in federal spending per head under recent administrations,” with the growth numbers put under two sub-headings: “Unified government” (Johnson 4.6 percent, Bush Jr. 3.1 percent, Carter 2.9 percent) and “Divided government” (Nixon/Ford 1.9 percent, Reagan 1.7 percent, Bush Sr. 0.6 percent, Clinton 0.3 percent). From a straightforward size-of-government point of view, a spell of divided government — Republican president, Democratic congress — looks pretty appealing.

But of course, the national defense and the National Question are not notwithstanding (“are withstanding”?) for conservatives. Not ever, not at all. This is a really, really tough call.



TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2006; demoralization; derbyshire; election2006; elections; vote; votegop; votesuppression
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To: gridlock

"But if I were in RI, I would still vote for him, if only to poke a sharp stick into the eye of the Democrat Party."

I do live in Rhode Island and I am going to vote today, but believe me, having to vote for Chafee is going to leave a pretty bad taste in my mouth. "Doing a little evil for a greater good" is the best way to describe the voting situation here in RI.

MM


121 posted on 11/07/2006 3:33:12 AM PST by motormouth (Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.)
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To: motormouth
I am going to vote today, but believe me, having to vote for Chafee is going to leave a pretty bad taste in my mouth.

I'm sorry. I sympathise. I really do. I am about to go out and punch the button for Tom Kean Jr. It sucks, but what are you gonna do?

Now go vote!

122 posted on 11/07/2006 3:37:21 AM PST by gridlock (The GOP will pick up at least TWO seats in the Senate and FOUR seats in the House in 2006)
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To: gridlock

LOL Not voting was never a choice for me, Im just going to have to hold my nose pretty tight when I cast my vote.


123 posted on 11/07/2006 3:45:19 AM PST by motormouth (Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.)
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To: Shermy
No, we're inches away from overturning the Roe case which will throw the issue into Congress. Since most people support some abortion rights abortion will be legislated instead of imposed by judicial fiat.

The issue will go to the states where there will be intense debate. There hasn't been a public debate over abortion in 33 years. Armed with new ultrasound images and photos of aborted babies, there's no doubt in my mind that severe restrictions will be approved by the voters. The annual slaughter of 1.3 million babies will be drastically reduced.

124 posted on 11/07/2006 4:58:35 AM PST by Aquinasfan (When you find "Sola Scriptura" in the Bible, let me know)
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To: neverdem; AGP; Angelwood; BillF; tgslTakoma; daughterofTGSL; Doctor Raoul; Exit148; ...
I voted to greatly expand the federal leviathan. I voted for less freedom. I voted Republican!

What else could I do?

*DC Chapter Short List ping.

125 posted on 11/07/2006 5:03:02 AM PST by BufordP ("Every morning I start my day with juice, toast, and a big bowl of Baby Crunch!" -- Michael J. Fox)
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To: BufordP

DO the RIGHT thing VOTE !!!
[Mrs T]


126 posted on 11/07/2006 5:21:58 AM PST by trooprally (Never Give Up - Never Give In - Remember Our Troops)
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To: in hoc signo vinces
I have to agree. Conservatives may not be delighted with the Republican Party, but the Republicans are so much better than the demoncrats in every area that it's not even close. Speaker Pelosi? LOL!
127 posted on 11/07/2006 5:25:26 AM PST by conservativecorner
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To: trooprally

Make up your mind. Either I do the right thing OR I vote. I can't do both. Now if you say, "Do the less destructive thing and vote", I can say I did that.


128 posted on 11/07/2006 5:28:01 AM PST by BufordP ("Every morning I start my day with juice, toast, and a big bowl of Baby Crunch!" -- Michael J. Fox)
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To: BufordP

Me too. Had too.


129 posted on 11/07/2006 5:30:56 AM PST by Doctor Raoul (Difference between the CIA and the Free Clinic is that the Free Clinic knows how to stop a leak.)
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To: BufordP

So glad you're back in time to cast your important vote!

Hope your mom is doing better.

AB


130 posted on 11/07/2006 5:30:57 AM PST by Apple Blossom (...around here, city hall is something of a between meals snack.)
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To: Apple Blossom

Thanks! She's doing much better now.


131 posted on 11/07/2006 5:44:17 AM PST by BufordP ("Every morning I start my day with juice, toast, and a big bowl of Baby Crunch!" -- Michael J. Fox)
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To: neverdem

Don't vote = Don't Bitch


132 posted on 11/07/2006 5:46:44 AM PST by RedStateRocker (Nuke Mecca, Deport all illegals, abolish the IRS, ATF and DEA)
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To: Bahbah; neverdem

"Republican president, Democratic congress — looks pretty appealing." 'No, it does not.' ~ Bahbah

Never did. Never will.

Why Party Trumps Person. bttt [excerpted]
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1733872/posts?page=123#123

A time-honored cliche heard every election year goes something like this: "I'm an independent thinker; I vote the person, not the party." This pronouncement is supposed to demonstrate open-mindedness and political sophistication on the part of the pronouncer. It's your vote, cast it any way you like - or not at all.

But idealism and naivete about the way our electoral process and system of government works shouldn't be mistaken for wisdom or savvy.

For better or worse, we have a two-party system. And party trumps person. Either a Republican or a Democrat is going to be elected... No one else has a chance.

..not the Libertarian candidate, nor the Communist, nor the Green. Minor party candidates are sometimes spoilers .. but they don't win.. elections. Ross Perot got 20 million popular votes in 1992, and exactly zero Electoral College votes.

In Europe's multiparty, parliamentary democracies, governing coalitions are formed after an election.

In our constitutional republic, the coalitions are formed first.

The Republican coalition includes, for the most part, middle- and upper-income taxpayers (but not leftist Hollywood millionaires and George Soros), individualists who prefer limited government, pro-market and pro-business forces, believers in American exceptionalism and a strong national defense, social-issues conservatives and supporters of traditional American values.

The Democratic coalition is an alliance of collectivists, labor unions (especially the teachers' unions), government workers, academics, plaintiffs-lawyers, lower- and middle-income net tax-receivers, most minorities, feminists, gays, enviros, and activists for various anti-capitalist, anti-business, anti-military, anti-gun, one-world causes.

...party trumps person because [regardless of the individual who wins an election] the coalition will be served.

.. After the individual members of a new Congress have been seated, a figurative nose count is taken and the party with the most noses wins. That victory carries with it control of all committee and subcommittee chairmanships, the locus of legislative power.

Now, let's say you're a registered Republican voter who clearly prefers the Republican philosophy of governance. And you're a good-natured, well-intentioned person who happens to like an individual Democrat, a Senate candidate, who's somewhat conservative. You decide to cross party lines and vote for him.

As it turns out, he wins, beating a Republican and giving the Democrats a one-vote majority, 51-49, in the U.S. Senate.

Congratulations! You just got Ted Kennedy, Patrick Leahy, Dianne Feinstein and Hillary Clinton as key committee chairs, and a guarantee that your Republican legislative agenda will be stymied.

That's the way the process works.

Does this mean that in a two-party system like ours it comes down to choosing between the lesser of two evils?

You bet it does.

That's not to say that either party is really "evil," that's just an expression.

If we had [300] million custom-tailored minor parties, everyone could find his perfect match.

But that's not practical.

You can be a purist and cast your vote symbolically with a boutique party, or be a player and settle for the least imperfect of the Republican or Democrat alternatives.

Your vote, your choice. ~ Mike Rosen http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1728426/posts


133 posted on 11/07/2006 5:53:15 AM PST by Matchett-PI (To have no voice in the Party that always sides with America's enemies is a badge of honor.)
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To: BufordP

OK the Dc Chapter can pick out one or two issues to go after congress during the next term. Any more than that becomes a distraction. Which two are your pets?


134 posted on 11/07/2006 6:06:30 AM PST by Jimmy Valentine's brother (HOOAH! It's an Army thing.)
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To: neverdem

My email to Derbyshire:

Grow up.

The 2006 Choice - By Cal Thomas
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/11/the_2006_choice.html

Conservatives who are upset that Republicans haven't done enough during their 12 years in control of the House and Senate and nearly six years in control of the White House need a slap in the face.

Republicans may have controlled all three branches of government, but conservatives haven't.

If conservatives believe enough has not been done to advance their agenda, let them work to elect more conservatives, not hand control of Congress over to a party controlled by far-left liberals who have no intention of moderating their tone or watering down their beliefs after the election.

One issue should trump all others for conservatives: judges.

As Manuel Miranda of Third Branch writes in Human Events, "If the GOP loses the Senate, precedent shows that more than 60 Bush judicial nominees will never get a Judiciary Committee hearing under the chairmanship of Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.).

Republicans will be unable to stop a filibuster of a next Supreme Court nominee and countless circuit court picks. This will dwarf Democrats' past six years of obstruction."

Liberals have used the courts for decades to bypass the public will and impose a secular agenda on the country.

If they win control of the Senate, their current leadership will be emboldened to continue that practice.

Any judge who manages to make it onto the bench will most likely be of the judicial philosophy of Anthony Kennedy and David Souter. Republican presidents named both men because they thought it would be easier to win the approval of Senate Democrats. Neither turned out to be conservative, despite the White House sales job to conservative groups.

Then there is the war.

We live in a time when most people do not remember what a real war looks like.

Some are horrified that nearly 3,000 Americans have died in the Iraq War, but ignore that in World War II more than 407,000 Americans died. Sixty-two million were killed on all sides.

Some say this war is taking longer than that war.

That's because this war is different from that war in that it has no home state, unless we abandon Iraq. And the enemy accepts no rules for fighting it.

Democrats speak only of withdrawing American troops and of how our presence inflames the enemy, yet they have no explanation for what inflamed them before the war.

President Bush may have to change tactics, as he has said he is willing to do, but he understands the challenge. This isn't Vietnam.

This is a religious-philosophical war for control of the planet.

Anyone who thinks any objective other than the complete defeat and humiliation of these Islamofascists will deter them from their goal of world domination is self-delusional.

Last week over lunch, I asked Vice President Dick Cheney about conservative angst. He said in previous campaigns, "I would have given a lot to get an economy this good to be able to run on." Noting the recession that occurred right after he and the president took office in 2001, Cheney told me, "We (also) had 9/11. . We had Katrina, a war.

We had to spend a lot of money on the war and homeland security. And so a series of repeated shocks... to the economy and here we are, we've got 4.6 unemployment. We added 6.6 million new jobs in the last three years. Productivity is running at an all-time high. More Americans (are) working than ever before. Inflation is under control. . The stock market has hit all-time records.

What do you want? How much better do we have to make it before people say, 'yes, that's pretty good'?" It's a good question.

Is there anyone who believes government doesn't have enough of our money? Then vote for Democrats.

Is there anyone who thinks withdrawing from Iraq before the country can stand on its own against terrorism means there won't be more terrorism? Then vote for Democrats.

Do you prefer liberal judges reading their prejudices into the Constitution and increasingly depriving us of our right to decide our own future? Then vote for Democrats.

If not, conservatives should vote Republican and then work to continue advancing conservative goals. Those goals are more likely to be reached under Republicans than under Democrats.

That's the choice this year, a choice that will be made whether one votes, or cuts and runs out of a false notion that Republicans need to be punished for not doing more.

As the vice president said, "What do you want?"

Cal@CalThomas.com


135 posted on 11/07/2006 6:12:41 AM PST by Matchett-PI (To have no voice in the Party that always sides with America's enemies is a badge of honor.)
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To: gridlock
"I'm sorry. I sympathise. I really do. I am about to go out and punch the button for Tom Kean Jr. It sucks, but what are you gonna do?"

Vote your conscience.
136 posted on 11/07/2006 6:23:55 AM PST by EnochPowellWasRight
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To: PhilDragoo
Excellent not only for today but daily when the rats spin a lie and then whine about their lie.


137 posted on 11/07/2006 6:35:16 AM PST by Grampa Dave (There's a dwindling market for Marxist Homosexual Lunatic wet dreams posing as journalism)
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To: neverdem
'KICK THE TAXRATS'

138 posted on 11/07/2006 6:37:55 AM PST by Wolverine (A Concerned Citizen)
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To: Jimmy Valentine's brother
There's no way I can focus on only two issues at this time. There are many. But I will say this. If the voting public was semi-intelligent and informed there would be no such thing as Liberals. We are a nation of buffoons because of the public school monopoly. Therefore, SCHOOL VOUCHERS and GET THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OUT OF THE EDUCATION BUSINESS is a good start.

Then we can talk about all the other federal programs that are bankrupting the country ... and illegal immigration ... and unconstitutional campaign finance reform ... and and ...

139 posted on 11/07/2006 6:41:57 AM PST by BufordP ("Every morning I start my day with juice, toast, and a big bowl of Baby Crunch!" -- Michael J. Fox)
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To: BufordP

I did the right thing . I voted!!
Glad you are back.
[Mrs T]


140 posted on 11/07/2006 6:49:38 AM PST by trooprally (Never Give Up - Never Give In - Remember Our Troops)
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