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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: neverdem
Paul Begala really liked Sager's book Mr Derbyshite...you know the one you link to Amazon? a little commission perhaps? A friendly exchange perhaps?

No - not a "dilemma" for me. I am voting Republican and Conservative.

I am doing so because the Emperor Manuel II Paleologus would want me to.

I am voting Republican down the line because the millions of unborn kids yet to die want me to!
41 posted on 11/06/2006 12:57:20 PM PST by eleni121 ("Show me just what Mohammed brought:: evil and inhumanity")
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To: neverdem

If John Derbyshire thinks this election is a "tough call", he is a real dumbass! Vote GOP even if you need a clothespin for your nose!


42 posted on 11/06/2006 12:57:40 PM PST by wjcsux (The Republicans are disappointing, the DemosRATs are dangerous- Dr. Sowell)
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To: neverdem

I was somewhat troubled and sad when Derbyshire said he was leaving his Church because the biologists had convinced him of the falseness of Christianity.

Now I really think he's losing it.


43 posted on 11/06/2006 12:58:00 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: GOPJ

One should vote even if its only to slap down the arrogant media!!


44 posted on 11/06/2006 12:58:48 PM PST by INSENSITIVE GUY
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To: gridlock
The Republicans are right on the WOT. Nothing else matters.

Who put Chafee and Kean on the ballot in RI and NJ?
45 posted on 11/06/2006 12:59:01 PM PST by sefarkas (Why vote Democrat Lite?)
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To: Tuscaloosa Goldfinch; All

I find the current poll ont he right side of the thread page very interesting. Read the internals on that poll. A very low precentage of members says they are staying home and not voting. A somewhat higher percentage of non-members say they are staying home. Democrat voters are higher in the non-member section than in the member section. I infer from these internals that more Dems are staying home than Repubs.

Now to the important part:

It is the duty of every American to vote in elections. If you refuse to vote Republican, you should vote Democrat or "third party", or write in a candidate in races where that is allowed. To not vote at all is a defacto vote for totalitarianism.


46 posted on 11/06/2006 1:00:58 PM PST by SaxxonWoods (..ON 11/7, YOU ARE EITHER WITH US, OR WITH THE TERRORISTS..)
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To: neverdem

Wishful thinking by PravdABDNC!!

Pray for W and The Election


47 posted on 11/06/2006 1:05:33 PM PST by bray (Voting for the Rats is a Death Wish)
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To: sefarkas
Who put Chafee and Kean on the ballot in RI and NJ?

Chafee and Kean were voted on to the ballot by weak-kneed, lily livered, feckless Republicans in RI and NJ, of course. Now they are on the ballot, and we have to vote for either them, or the Democrat alternative.

But if the Donks gain control of the Senate, we're all screwed, so that vote is easy to cast. Kean will vote with the Republicans on organization. After that, who knows? But that one vote is enough for me.

Chafee, I'm not so sure about even the organization vote. 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.

If you don't want to vote, that's your business. It's a free country, even for fools.

48 posted on 11/06/2006 1:06:04 PM 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: neverdem

To vote or not to vote,
That is the question,
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous politicians,
or by voting, to influence them.

For want of a voter, the vote was lost.
For want of a vote, a seat was lost.
For want of a seat, the house was lost.
For want of the house, the impeachment was launched.

For want of a voter, a voice was lost...


49 posted on 11/06/2006 1:08:28 PM PST by MortMan (I was going to be indecisive, but I changed my mind.)
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To: neverdem
To Vote Or Not To Vote. A tough call for conservatives.

We could lose the war in one day and this idiot thinks it's a tough call? We could lose the chance for a Supreme Court majority in one day and this idiot thinks it's a tough call?

Vote. Even if you have to crawl over broken glass, holding your nose all the time...

50 posted on 11/06/2006 1:20:05 PM PST by omega4412 (Multiculturalism kills. 9/11, Beslan, Madrid, London)
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To: neverdem
Not a tought call. Three words: Supreme Court Vacancy

Unless conservatives can get control of the courts, their agenda is going to be undermined, anyway.

51 posted on 11/06/2006 1:20:48 PM PST by Question_Assumptions
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To: neverdem
I'll be voting for one Congressional representative, a Governor, a State Senator, two County Commissioners, and a couple of initiatives. If Derbyshire is correct and "it might as well be" a referendum on our Iraq policies it's mighty hard to twist that mix into any such thing.

There is a natural tendency in the national media to attempt to interpret events of this magnitude by national criteria, and it doesn't always fit very well. Nor do polls that concentrate on national-level issues (although they're much easier to write and cheaper to conduct). So mid-term elections always end up surprising somebody, and it's usually the commentariat.

52 posted on 11/06/2006 1:22:52 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: omega4412

agreed!


53 posted on 11/06/2006 1:25:24 PM PST by Tirian
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To: in hoc signo vinces

Exactly. Anybody who thinks it's a 'tough call' is a self-obsessed, mastubatory idiot.


54 posted on 11/06/2006 1:33:17 PM PST by zbigreddogz
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To: neverdem
Yeah this from the same pseudo Conservative clown who predicted the Fence Bill would never get signed. What an utter idiot.
55 posted on 11/06/2006 1:34:03 PM PST by MNJohnnie (The Democrat Party: Hard on Taxpayers, Soft on Terrorism!)
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To: neverdem

I'm voting. I'm conservative. Get out and vote.


56 posted on 11/06/2006 1:35:27 PM PST by steveyp
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To: neverdem

Tough call my a$$.


57 posted on 11/06/2006 1:36:58 PM PST by Skooz (My Biography: Psalm 40:1-3)
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To: Billthedrill


IOW..."All politics is local."


58 posted on 11/06/2006 1:39:29 PM PST by in hoc signo vinces ("Houston, TX...a waiting quagmire for jihadis. American gals are worth fighting for!")
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To: neverdem

I hope someone sends Derbyshire a link to the comments here.


59 posted on 11/06/2006 1:45:25 PM PST by omega4412 (Multiculturalism kills. 9/11, Beslan, Madrid, London)
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To: omega4412

Never Forget 9-11! Vote Republican-we can not put national security in the hands of libs! Please please vote REPUBLICAN! If you are in Montana vote for Conrad Burns. We can't put Tester in. He wants to repeal the Patriotic Act and is FOR late term abortions. Please Conrad NEEDS your vote!


60 posted on 11/06/2006 1:47:56 PM PST by LYSandra
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