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A Look at What Happens if Democrats Win Congress

A Look at What Happens if Democrats Win Congress

By Deroy Murdock
Scripps Howard News Service

October 26, 2006

Hypothetically, if Democrats win Congress, don't expect a mild left turn. Watch the U.S. Capitol building spin nearly 180 degrees.

Congress' current Republican leadership—their haplessness and profligacy aside—generally feature senators and representatives with solidly conservative vote records. Conversely, minority leaders and ranking Democrats on congressional committees are among their party's staunchest liberals.

A Democratic victory on Capitol Hill naturally would involve a jump to the Left. But their steering the ship of state hard aport could toss passengers overboard.

Consider the latest vote scorecards from the ACLU, AFL-CIO, Ralph Nader's Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) and the Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) on the Left. On the Right, peruse the ratings from the American Conservative Union (ACU), National Taxpayers Union (NTU), Citizens against Government Waste (CAGW), and the Center for Security Policy (CSP).

The contrast is jarring.

House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Illinois, earned a 100 percent rating from the ACU and CSP. Each judged House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-California, a zero. While the ACLU gave Pelosi a 100, it handed Hastert a zero. This is a public-policy yin-yang.

The House Judiciary Committee could go from chairman James Sensenbrenner's, R-Wisconsin, zero rating to a 95 for John Conyers, D-Michigan, who is poised to become chair.

The numbers 0 and 95 also reflect the respective PIRG ratings for Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Thomas, R-California, and ranking member Charles Rangel, D-New York.

Another key reversal could befall the House Intelligence Committee, where chairman Peter Hoekstra, R-Michigan, has a 100 ACU rating versus a four for Alcee Hastings, D-Florida, reportedly expected to head Intelligence if Democrats prevail. A shift from Hoekstra's 11 ACLU rating to Hastings' 95 would sway a panel that oversees, among other things, terrorists interrogations.

In November 1988, incidentally, the House impeached then-U.S. District Judge Hastings. The Senate convicted him in October 1989 of perjury and conspiracy to solicit a bribe and ejected him from the federal bench. Three years later, he won a U.S. House seat.

In the Senate, Majority Leader Bill Frist's, R-Tennessee, 74 NTU rating could be subsumed by minority leader Harry Reid's five.

While Appropriations chairman Thad Cochran's, R-Mississippi, 63 CAGW rating is not stellar, it glistens beside West Virginia Democrat Robert Byrd's nine.

Foreign Affairs Chairman Richard Lugar, R-Indiana, with an 88 ACU rating, could yield to Joseph Biden, D-Delaware, with an eight.

On Intelligence, Chairman Pat Roberts, R-Kansas, who earned zeros from the ADA and AFL-CIO, might swap with West Virginia Democrat Jay Rockefeller, who received 100 and 79 from those groups.

Today's GOP House speaker, majority leader, and the chairmen of Ways and Means, Budget, Appropriations, Judiciary, International Relations and Intelligence average a 91 ACU rating. Their Democratic counterparts score seven. Conversely, compare the GOP's average ADA rating of four with a 95 for these Democrats.

Today's Senate GOP majority leader and chairmen of Finance, Budget, Appropriations, Judiciary, Foreign Affairs, and Intelligence average an 84 ACU rating and an 11 ADA rating. Democrats' equivalents are 12 and 96.

Chart

Some applaud all this potential change.

"This Congress is clearly well out of step with American values," says Caroline Fredrickson, director of the ACLU's Washington Legislative Office. "The ACLU's scorecard focuses on key votes for civil liberties and the Constitution—and we can see that the current leadership is flunking the test. All recent polls underscore that the American public wants a Congress that believes in our Constitution and the values that make America a great country, and not a government that condones torture and illegal actions by the president."

Others deem a Democratic takeover scarier than Halloween.

"CAGW has been critical of Republican spending, especially the increase in pork-barrel projects over the past several years," says CAGW president Tom Schatz. However, "If Democrats take over the House and/or Senate, taxpayers should expect massive increases in wasteful and ineffective domestic programs. The growth of entitlement programs also will explode; attempts to save them for future generations will be scuttled. And kiss your tax cuts goodbye."

For free marketeers, these data should offer a cautionary tale—and an impetus to keep a Democratic congressional takeover strictly hypothetical.

Deroy Murdock is a nationally syndicated columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service. Researcher Marco DeSena contributed to this piece.

The above article is also available at http://www.conservative.org/columnists/murdock/061025dm.asp

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Voters vs. Polls

Voters vs. Polls

October 26, 2006

Are political representatives elected or anointed? Since this is America, the answer’s easy: politicians are elected.

Yet in listening to Democrats campaigning or in reading the New York Times, you’d think that elections are decided not by voters but by polls and pundits. Prognostications have replaced ballots. Rhetoric has replaced reality.

The echo chamber works like this: Shouting from the housetops, liberals begin calling the ranking members on congressional committees “chairmen” (as in Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers or Government Reform Chairman Henry Waxman). In turn, the media giddily report on the Democrats’ elaborate plans to rollback (e.g., the war on terror) whatever they can’t kill (e.g., tax relief). Words like “investigation” and “subpoena” and “impeachment” issue forth from the left’s collective lips. It’s rumored that Nancy Pelosi is picking out drapes for the speaker’s office.

But, again, we live in America, and as that renowned American Yogi Berra liked to quip, It ain’t over ‘til it’s over. Sure, today’s headlines appear disheartening, but think back to 2000, when the Eastern establishment was trumpeting a little-known governor from Vermont as the Dems’ presidential frontrunner. Then a funny thing happened: screaming Howard Dean imploded—even before the Iowa caucuses—and George W. Bush won the presidency.

They say history repeats itself. And, in politics, there’s nothing sweeter than a come-from-behind victory. So on Election Day, let’s make sure Howard Dean, who is now the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, re-learns his lessons: half of success is simply showing up, and when conservatives show up, we, not the media, determine elections.

The above article is also available at http://www.conservative.org/pressroom/2006/061026.asp

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Listen to President Bush's Oval Office discussion last week with eight conservative journalists (MP3)

Below is a link to the disscussion.  Enjoy.
 
http://www.conservative.org/documents/potus001.mp3
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Coalition of the Willing

Coalition of the Willing
by Donald Devine
Octover 21, 2006

With the number of Iraqi deaths ten times higher over six months, a top U.S. general saying civil war is immanent, and a normally cool expert like Anthony Cordesman saying “trying to declare there isn’t a civil war borders on the absurd,” is it surprising that George W. Bush ally and former Secretary of State James A. Baker III is promising new ideas from his commission after the election? A good place to begin is with the most useful of the Bush Doctrine ideas, the “coalition of the willing.”

We have come a long way from “freedom fries.” The French are back in good grace and their potato is again in the White House mess. From a vulnerable moment as the United States was reeling from the terrible blows of 9/11 and was expecting blind agreement from its allies, the President and his Administration have led the country to understand the essential need for allies and cooperative international agreements.

Allies actually have assumed the leading roles in two of the greatest challenges facing the U.S. and the world, negotiating about nuclear weapons with the nations President Bush labeled as evil, North Korea and Iran. Actually, from the beginning the president relied almost entirely for conventional forces on the Northern Alliance ally in Afghanistan, the U.S. supplying mostly air and special-forces support, and assembled a coalition of the willing in Iraq. Today, NATO has taken over leadership in Afghanistan with U.S. troops only in support and local troops are taking the lead in Iraq. Still, the idea of coalitions could be extended even further.

any on the right still see reliance on allies and coalitions as a weakness or as too restrictive of U.S. initiative. While recognizing President Bush’s determination as a leader, former Speaker Newt Gingrich--in a recent speech to the neocon American Enterprise Institute--criticized Bush’s policies as needing “real change,” requiring a more aggressive role in Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, North Korea, and within America itself. Neoconservative guru Norman Podhoretz, self-described advocate of World War IV against Islam, points to “the international community” as the actual cause of America’s problems--by “defining torture down,” by forbidding its use to the U.S. “The only reason in my opinion that we’re having as much trouble as we’re having in Iraq is that we’re not getting intelligence.…and you can only get that kind of intelligence by squeezing it out of prisoners. That is all there is to it.”

Many were concerned about the president at his recent news conference. While confirming his desire “to stay the course,” he added “changing tactics” were constantly necessary “to achieve a strategic goal.” He agreed “completely” with Republican Senate Armed Services chairman John Warner’s concerns that “if the plan isn’t working, adjust.” He even added “I learned a lesson and decided the best way to convince Kim Jong-Il to change his mind on a nuclear weapons program is to have others send the same message.” Not that the president was weakening his resolve—he told author Bob Woodward he would stay the course in Iraq even if Laura and his dog were the only ones who still supported him there.

At his news conference, President Bush not only announced his strategy to have allies deliver a strong message to North Korea but for competitor nations such as China too, specifically praising Japan, South Korea and China for their resolve, which later produced a unanimous U.N. Security Council resolution imposing sanctions. But why must President Bush do all the heavy lifting? The countries in the region are the ones who are threatened by Kim’s bomb and delivery system, not the U.S. It is China who is weakened if Japan and South Korea develop nuclear arms. It is mostly a regional problem. The following day, a State Department official mused that this cooperation could expand into a NATO-like treaty that might not only contain North Korea but stabilize the entire region—and, he might have added, take pressure off the U.S. too. Dealing with North Korea is a perfect example of how the concept of a coalition of the willing should be expanded.

etting affairs develop regionally helps diffuse conflicting interests and allows local knowledge close to the action to inform the solution of the problem. It also means the U.S. does not have to play the heavy every time. The model has already proved itself on the international scene regarding nuclear weapons. Bush’s Proliferation Security Initiative was organized on a coalition of the willing basis to confirm and publicize and ultimately to end Libya’s clandestine nuclear program. It exposed A.Q. Khan’s world proliferation machine and secured Pakistan’s agreement to end its operations. It has intercepted North Korea weapons shipments—all without focusing attention on a harping Uncle Sam.

Iraq is the toughest case. The original plan was for the U.S.-led coalition to turn over power to a local one last year with the election of the new all-faction government. While it and the still involved U.S. forces have not been able to stem the violence, some form of regionalism is widely recognized as the only solution. The Kurds already have autonomy—and peace. After absolutely rejecting federation as recently as last year, it was a powerful Shiite party just this month that pushed the parliament to approve a federalism plan that would allow autonomous provinces or regions. The Sunni are the main sticking point since they view regionalism or federalism as a means to pauperize its resources-poor areas. So total partition will not work either--some national programs such as sharing oil revenue with and amnesty for Sunnis will be necessary, which the Kurds and Shiites have not been willing to do.

nfortunately, strong elements within both the Sunni and Shiite are puling things apart. A leading Shiite group, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (and their Badr Brigade), became big supporters of federalism when it realized it could dominate the new region. The good news was it used its significant influence to win the parliamentary vote on federalism by 141 to 0. The bad news is that not only the Sunni but Moqtada al-Sadr’s radical Shiites—the largest single party--boycotted the vote, leaving the tally 134 votes short. One important Sunni group, the Mujaheddin Shura Council, very recently and for the first time called for autonomy for an “Islamic Republic” running from Baghdad and Kirkuk west. But it was vehemently opposed by the Sunni Islamic Army and the influential Muslim Scholars Association. In other words, even federalism might lead to internal Shiite wars between Badr and Sadr brigades and Sunni ones between the Shura and Islamic militias, as well as smaller and tribal groups especially in mixed population areas.

Surely, the situation is deteriorating. What might be done? Is a wider coalition of the willing involving the whole Middle East possible? Could the region’s Sunni powers Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Jordan enforce a solution between the Sunni factions in a western semi-autonomous region? Could giving these nations real responsibility even diffuse some of the animus against Israel, which would not be worse off in any event? Is it even conceivable for Iran to help stabilize the Shiite forces in the south? With fellow Shiite rather than U.S. forces as neighbors might nuclear weapons look less essential? Or might the model used in Asia work here too? Nuclear proliferation is probably inevitable. The U.N. estimates 30 nations beyond the nine declared powers have programs that could quickly be turned into weapons. If backward North Korea can develop them, anyone can.

All of these local nations have an interest in regional stability. The forcing event may be the December deadline for renewal of the U.N. legal mandate to keep U.S. coalition forces in Iraq. The government has avoided renewing the mandate for fear that it would lead to further division and perhaps be the straw leading to full civil war. But it could also be the means for the U.S. to work with the Iraq government to negotiate a planned withdrawal of American and introduction of regional forces that takes away this biggest issue spurring the insurgent forces and allows the U.S. an honorable exit.

he U.S. should do a bit of regional thinking itself. It must face the fact that its historic allies are in decline and will not be available for long unless something is done very soon. Thirty-four European nations will see an absolute decline in population in the next fifty years while most of the rest of the world grows, especially Islam. Today, with 170 million more people, economic output in Europe is only-three quarters that of the U.S and declining. Less than half of its population is working, partially from aging and from a belief the government owes all a living. Can the U.S. revitalize the old virtues of sacrifice and work in a rational and humble manner for those who taught them to us, especially since those ideas are weakening here too? Latin America needs some thought too. It will be a lonely world without the world’s two most like-minded regions.

Regardless of the passion of a Gingrich, the ruthlessness of a Podhoretz or even the resolve of a Bush, the American people will not long accept the job of lone world policeman, much less world “squeezer,” especially when it does not seem to work. People within a region can understand it better and are better able to deal with problems there. Besides, even the rich and powerful U.S. cannot do it all. Limited power was the whole point of its own political constitution, something its people and leaders need to remind themselves of every so often.

Donald Devine , the editor of Conservative Battleline Online , was the director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management from 1981 to 1985 and is the director of the Federalist Leadership Center at Bellevue University.

This above article is also available at http://acuf.org/issues/issue70/061021news.asp
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Gotta Play to Win

Gotta Play to Win
By Craig Shirley
The Weekly Standard

October 30, 2006

In the movie A League of Their Own, Tom Hanks was given two of the best lines in the history of baseball flicks. The first, as we all know, was, “There’s no crying in baseball!” The second came when one of his players quit the game, telling Hanks it was “too hard.” Hanks’s brilliant response: “It’s supposed to be hard. If it wasn’t hard, everyone would do it. Hard is what makes it great.”

With the midterm elections almost upon us, conservatives need to take that to heart. They won’t win by quitting. The Washington Post declared last week that Democrats are “prettier” than Republicans—“Democrats seem to be fielding an uncommonly high number of uncommonly good-looking candidates” (glad we’ve got that settled!)—so let’s focus on the important differences between the parties.

Yes, some Republicans have abused their charge; some have engaged in corrupt behavior; some have violated conservative principles; some don’t even know why they are Republicans. And yes, many in the “base” are angry with . . . take your pick: growth of government, spending, corruption, steel tariffs, illegal immigration, McCain-Feingold, Mark Foley, the war in Iraq.

I suspect that most of those people in the GOP who are most upset are not Security Moms or the religious right but the “angry white males” credited with delivering Congress to the GOP in 1994. These middle class dads became increasingly repelled by Bill and Hillary and the seedy liberals who came to dominate the Democratic party. Now, some are frustrated with the GOP.

But consider this, my fellow angry white middle-aged males: Ever since economic libertarians and social conservatives came together to form a majority party, the Republicans have thrived on vigorous internal debates. It is not a weakness of the GOP that some of its members are at daggers drawn over foreign policy and national defense, economic policies, and the federal role in education. Whether or not the GOP majority survives the November elections, these debates will take place.

And in this, populist conservatives should take great comfort. Republicans are not so confident about themselves as to believe they have all the correct answers all the time. Conservatives are so suspicious of man’s nature that they naturally shun claims of absolute certitude in politics.

If liberalism still has an organizing philosophy, it is a white hot, unreasoned, and, yes, frightening hatred of all things conservative and all things Bush. Within the Democratic party today, the reigning idea is an outright craving of power. Democrats do not allow debate within their party. If you are pro-life, as in the case of the late Bob Casey of Pennsylvania, you are ostracized. If you support some part of the president’s foreign policy, as in the case of Joe Lieberman, you are defeated in a primary and then shunned.

If Republicans have disappointed the American people, it’s because they have standards and rules that they sometimes fall short of. Liberals are unencumbered by such standards except those of political correctness, and who can figure those out anyway? (In the latest version, Marquette decreed last week that grad students shall not display quotations from humorist Dave Barry on their doors.)

Republicans have established high standards for themselves, and this is a good thing, as we’ve seen in the Mark Foley case. Some GOP commentators are wailing that 20 years ago, the recently deceased congressman Gerry Studds, a Democrat, did not suffer for his homosexual relationship with a 17-year-old congressional page. And it’s true: No one ever calls a Democrat a hypocrite on moral issues. But that’s hardly a selling point for a party. Republicans should not be upset if Americans have come to expect not very much in the way of ethics and morality from Democrats.

What the garden-variety angry white male needs to remember is that Democratic anger has a different source than his own. Democrats aren’t angry at the moral failings of Republicans. Democrats are furious because they can’t understand why they, the party of government, have been denied control of Washington by the American people.

Quin Hillyer, on the American Spectator Web site, poses the question well: “Who do you want, going forward, to handle taxes, national security and judges, the conservatives or the liberals?” A Democratic Congress would not sit still. As Larry Kudlow has warned, the Bush tax cuts will not be safe just because of the veto pen. “President Bush,” he points out, might be “confronted with a [Hobson’s] choice of vetoing a so-called $500 billion deficit reduction package that would overturn and rollback” his tax cuts.

As Ronald Reagan might ask, whose world would you prefer to live in four years from now, the liberals’ or the conservatives’? For my money, I’ll take the messy and mistake-prone but good-hearted Republicans over the brooding, power-hungry, and uncommonly good-looking Democrats. So should all conservatives.

Organizing a political movement around the principle of freedom combined with moral rigor has never been easy. But the fact that conservatism is hard is what makes it great.

Craig Shirley is a member of the board of directors of the American Conservative Union and president of Shirley and Banister Public Affairs.

This article is also available at http://www.conservative.org/columnists/shirley/061030cs.asp

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GOP Must Appeal to Conservative Base

 

GOP Must Appeal to Conservative Base

By Craig Shirley
Human Events

September 20, 2006

U.S. Sen. Lincoln Chafee's tough fight to overcome conservative challenger Stephen Laffey in Tuesday's primary in Rhode Island, and the stunning defeat of three-term incumbent Democratic Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman in the Connecticut primary, are among the final steps in a process that began more than 40 years ago in San Francisco at the Republican National Convention.

There, conservatives finally prevailed and nominated one of their own, Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, as their standard bearer. With the nomination in hand, Mr. Goldwater then did a rather remarkable thing, an act that would eventually result in the tipping of power in both parties—and in so doing, would create the modern Republican and Democratic parties.

Until Mr. Goldwater's 1964 run, when a nominee of one ideology was chosen for president in either party, he would pick a running mate from the other side of the ideological spectrum. Thus, when the liberal Franklin D. Roosevelt was chosen in 1932, he picked the more conservative John Nance Garner of Texas for vice president. In 1952, liberal Republican Dwight Eisenhower chose the conservative senator from California, Richard M. Nixon, as his running mate.

This "ticket balancing" to the pragmatists in both parties—"ticket splitting" to the purists—was designed to produce unified conventions, which tended to win the fall elections. In 1964, 1976 and 1992, the GOP was divided at its conventions. Republicans lost each of those elections. In 1968, 1972 and 1980, the Democrats were divided and also went on to lose. In 1960 and 2000, both parties were united at their national conventions and—lo and behold—those years saw two of the closest elections in American history.

But Mr. Goldwater changed history by choosing the equally conservative congressman from New York, William Miller, as his running mate. Mr. Miller was then chairman of the Republican National Committee and was unremarkable except that he had a knack for getting under President John F. Kennedy's skin.

When the curmudgeonly Arizonan failed to pick a moderate, as many had expected him to do, moderates and liberals in the GOP were appalled. Republicans of that stripe left the party in droves, and Mr. Goldwater was clobbered in the fall election.

But in choosing Mr. Miller, Mr. Goldwater also began the process of attracting conservative Democrats into the GOP, upsetting the delicate equilibrium both parties had operated under for years. Thus, in later years, the conservative Democratic governor of Texas, John Connally, became a Republican, while the liberal Republican mayor of New York, John Lindsay, became a Democrat. The former head of Democrats for Nixon, Ronald Reagan, changed his party registration to Republican in late 1964.

The process was furthered in 1972, when the Democrats nominated possibly their most liberal standard-bearer ever, Sen. George McGovern, a prairie populist from South Dakota. At the convention, Mr. McGovern chose Thomas Eagleton of Missouri, someone nearly as left-wing as Mr. McGovern himself. Mr. Eagleton was forced from the ticket when it was revealed that he had undergone electroshock therapy, and he was replaced by the genial Sargent Shriver, a Kennedy consort and thus another liberal. Mr. Nixon and Spiro Agnew smashed the "acid, amnesty and abortion" ticket in the fall.

Licking their wounds, Democrats moved back to the center in 1976 with the nomination of Jimmy Carter, but this was an anomaly brought on by Watergate and a large and inept field of candidates whom Mr. Carter bested.

Ticket splitting still took place thereafter, but the ideologies of running mates moved closer and closer, and the parties would thus become more and more polarized.

The Republican Party, with the demise of the "Wednesday Club," a group of liberal GOP senators, would become solidly right of center. The Democrats, led by Bill Clinton and the Democratic Leadership Conference, would attempt—and succeed for a time—to make their party more centrist. Mr. Clinton accomplished this through the force of his personality, but once he left the scene and his vice president, Al Gore, was nominated in 2000, the last hope of keeping the Democrats less than ultraliberal collapsed.

Now, iconoclasts such as Zell Miller and Christine Todd Whitman are exotic, if not endangered, species within their own parties and the DLC is irrelevant. It is no wonder Sen. Chafee, the Senate's most liberal Republican, faced such a strong challenge from his conservative primary opponent.

Given this climate of political polarization, and with Democrats threatening to recapture both chambers of Congress, Republicans, now more than ever, need to appeal to the party's base. Only by appealing to the populist, conservative base can Republicans hope to get their people to the polls and avert a disaster in November.

Craig Shirley is a member of the board of directors of the American Conservative Union and president of Shirley and Banister Public Affairs.

This article is also available at http://www.conservative.org/columnists/shirley/060920cs.asp

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How the GOP Lost Its Way

How the GOP Lost Its Way

By Craig Shirley
The Washington Post

April 22, 2006

The immigration reform debate has highlighted a long-standing fissure in the GOP between the elitist Rockefeller business wing and the party’s conservative populist base. Whether the two groups can continue to coexist and preserve the Republican majority is increasingly doubtful as conservatives begin to consider—and in some cases cheer—the possibility that the GOP may lose control of Congress this fall.

The two camps are deeply divided. The business elites are interested in a large supply of cheap labor and support unfettered immigration and open borders. The populist base supports legal immigration but is concerned about lawlessness on our border, national sovereignty and the real security threat posed by porous borders.

There is nothing new about this division. It is a 40-year-old fight that has its roots in the cultural, economic, regional and ideological differences between the two camps. Still, most conservatives felt that after the victory of Ronald Reagan and the Republican Revolution of 1994 their point was made and the country-clubbers would know their place. They were wrong. The Rockefeller wing is now attempting to reassert its control over the party and is openly hostile toward the Reagan populists who created the Republican majority in the first place.

Major Republicans have taken to attacking others within their own party as unsophisticated nativists. In a recent Wall Street Journal column, former Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie warned populists to cease and desist from promoting “border enforcement first” legislation. “Anti-immigration rhetoric is a political siren song, and Republicans must resist its lure,” he said. And in a recent editorial, the Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol attacked populist Republicans for not recognizing the danger of “turning the GOP into an anti-immigration, Know-Nothing party.”

Conservatives see this kind of rhetoric as inflammatory, anti-intellectual and offensive. Far from being driven by xenophobia and intolerance, conservative populists are motivated by a profound respect for the rule of law and by a patriotic regard for America’s sovereignty and national security. Upholding the rule of law and protecting our country’s borders is important to conservative populists and to most Americans.

To make their argument, some establishment Republicans are invoking Ronald Reagan’s name. In fact, Reagan argued that it was our government’s duty to “humanely regain control of our borders and thereby preserve the value of one of the most sacred possessions of our people: American citizenship.” Reagan was pro-legal immigration, pro-patriotic assimilation and in step with other populist conservatives.

The Republican Party is now unraveling. Sept. 11, 2001, and the war on terrorism stanched a lot of wounds inside the party, but resentment is growing over steel tariffs, prescription drug benefits, a League of Nations mentality, the growth of government and harebrained spending, the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law, the increasing regulation of political speech in the United States and endemic corruption. On top of all the scandals, it has just come to light that the RNC paid millions in legal bills to defend operative James Tobin, who was convicted with associates in an illegal phone-jamming scheme aimed at preventing New Hampshire Democrats from voting. In doing so, the GOP appears to sanction and institutionalize corruption within the party.

The elites in the GOP have never understood conservatives or Reagan; they’ve found both to be a bit tacky. They have always found the populists’ commitment to values unsettling. To them, adherence to conservative principles was always less important than wealth and power.

Unfortunately, the GOP has lost its motivating ideals. The revolution of 1994 has been killed not by zeal but by a loss of faith in its own principles. The tragedy is not that we are faced with another fight for the soul of the Republican Party but that we have missed an opportunity to bring a new generation of Americans over to our point of view.

All agree that the Democrats are feckless and without a plan or agenda. But most Americans are now presented with a choice between two parties that are both addicted to power—the Democrats to government power and Republicans to corporate and governmental power. Who speaks for Main Street Reaganism?

It was the populists under Reagan, and later under Newt Gingrich, who energized the party, gave voice to a maturing conservative ideology and swept Republicans into power. We would be imprudent and forgetful to disregard this. But it may be too late, because conservatives don’t want to be part of the looming train wreck. They know that this is no longer Ronald Reagan’s party.

Craig Shirley is a member of the board of directors of the American Conservative Union and president of Shirley and Banister Public Affairs, which has clients concerned with immigration issues.

This article is also available at http://www.conservative.org/columnists/shirley/060422cs.asp

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