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Thursday, November 09, 2006
Debra J. Saunders :: Townhall.com Columnist
Didn't see it coming
by Debra J. Saunders
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Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


Yes, I thought the GOP would do better Tuesday -- I certainly didn't see 28 (as of this writing) House seats going to the Democrats. I thought the GOP was sure to retain the Senate. Democrats beware, however, if you think this was a victory for your party.

As Democratic pollster Douglas Schoen noted in a conference call Wednesday morning, Dems won the House by picking candidates who were "running away" from liberal Democratic positions. Independents, who rejected Bush and congressional GOP leaders, have not signed on to soon-to-be Speaker Nancy Pelosi's agenda.

Yes, I am disappointed. I strongly believe that the precipitous withdrawal from Iraq, which some Democrats support, would consign the more than 2,800 U.S. troops who have died in Iraq to the dubious honor of proving that America is a paper tiger. As Bob Ayers of Chatham House, a London-based foreign-affairs think tank, puts it, "History clearly proves, as with Chamberlain's compromise with Hitler at Munich, that compromise only emboldens the radicals."

Still, as unhappy as I may be, I have to acknowledge the dose of wisdom behind the voters' verdict. The message I hear is that voters want Washington pols to stop fighting among themselves and get to work. They're sick of Bush's "my way or the highway" approach to policy. They want the president to do a better job of managing the government with which they have entrusted him.

Folks are unhappy with Dubya's way of putting loyalty (to him) before competence. It didn't help when Veep Dick Cheney went hunting on Election Day -- after having shot a friend in a hunting accident in February. It was as if the Bushies were shouting a message to Americans: We can do whatever we want. We're not listening to you.

Wednesday's announcement that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld is leaving shows Bush has heard the message now. Whether Bush has the capacity to make more changes remains to be seen.

If Bush is seeking a model, he need look no further than Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. In his acceptance speech last night, Schwarzenegger committed himself to "a better path in order to solve problems. Yes, we have differences, but we are not divided. We address the issues, but we don't attack each other. We fight over our causes, but in the end we find common ground."

And, "Politics does not have to be personal and government does not have to be gridlocked." Sure, the part about politics not being personal is largely show -- especially considering what Treasurer Phil Angelides said about Schwarzenegger -- but this rhetoric does convey Schwarzenegger's desire to get things done. Continued...

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Ideas Have Consequences
I have long thought that columnist Debra J. Saunders to be Republican Lite. Her November 9th column reinforced that opinion. I won't call Ms. Saunders a conservative because she does not seem committed to conservative principle. She appears to take her lessons from Richard Nixon rather than Russell Kirk.

Yes, politics is the art of the possible. And yes, political compromise is often necessary to reach consensus. However, one does not abandon core principles to reach accommodation - party animal or no.

Our first amendment liberties do not need to be re-defined by moral relativists who we meet half-way. Conservatives need not accept Constitutional double-standards that allow such things as "righteous" racial discrimination. Such abandonment of principle only encourages idiologues to shake their fist at assembled Christians, or demand the job of the talk-radio host.

Nor do we need a leader who will embrace any cockamamy idea that polls well. So what if 59 percent of Americans want "some" troop withdrawal from Iraq by the end of next year? Maybe the next poll will show that 59 percent of Americans favor "some" blood for oil. We don't need a leader who cuts the baby in half so that Debra J. Saunders will refrain from calling him bull-headed.

John Kerry was run for president because he was "electable". He was not the anti-war candidate. That may be acceptable for liberals. For conservatives, this is abandonment of principle.

Another thing we don't need: Republicans encouraging the right to be more like the left.

Paul Burton
San Francisco, 94110

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