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Monday, May 04, 2009
Rich Galen :: Townhall.com Columnist
Kemp
by Rich Galen
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Jack Kemp died this weekend, but the ideas he fostered with unbounded energy deserve another look. Kemp was more than an adherent of supply-side economic theory. He was a zealot. But he was just as vocal about his support for minorities and the need for the GOP to connect with them.

The NY Times' Adam Clymer, who wrote the paper's obituary on Kemp which appeared Sunday morning, said yesterday that Kemp:

"was one of the strongest and most consistent voices within the Party of Lincoln for the need to listen to, and heed, the views and needs of people who would not necessarily be viewed as the base of the GOP."

In the obit, Clymer pointed out that Kemp had

"campaigned in New York for Nelson A. Rockefeller and in California for Ronald Reagan in their gubernatorial races; and for Richard M. Nixon and Barry Goldwater in their presidential bids."

Imagine the howling from talk radio hosts, and cable news hosts if a card-carrying member of the Conservative wing of the Republican Party dared to campaign for someone like Nelson Rockefeller today.

No one ever worked with, around, or for Jack Kemp and didn't have an opinion. Jack Kemp was a force of nature. No matter what the venue, he was fully capable of taking over the room.

During a holiday visit to the White House a few years ago, Kemp waited in the line to have his photo taken with the President and Mrs. Bush. The line went down a hallway then around the walls of a holding room before we got to the room where the photos were actually being taken.

On that occasion, when he got to the holding room, Kemp picked a chair in the middle of the room and held court, chatting happily with those of us inching our way through the line.

Jack Kemp was a fighter from beginning to end. He was anything but a shoo-in to be a professional quarterback. According to the Associated Press:

The Detroit Lions picked Kemp in the 17th round of the 1957 NFL draft, but he was cut before the season began. After being released by three more NFL teams and the Canadian Football League over the next three years, he joined the AFL's Los Angeles Chargers as a free agent in 1960. A waiver foul-up two years later would land him with the Bills, who got him at the bargain price of $100.

Kemp led the Bills to two American Football League championships and was voted the AFL's Most Valuable Player. Not bad for a guy drafted 203rd in the 1957 NFL draft.

Newt Gingrich said Sunday:

Jack had an enormous heart and an unquenchable spirit for staying on offense. He lived life as a quarterback always seeking the next touchdown.

His greatest contributions in the 1970s were teaching the Republican Party to be idea oriented optimistic and committed to economic growth instead of devoted to austerity.

Only Ronald Reagan was more important in shaping modern conservatism.

As a Congressman from Buffalo, New York from 1971 to1989 Kemp's devotion to the idea that lower taxes would generate economic growth was put into practice by a Democrat-controlled House and a Republican-controlled Senate during Ronald Reagan's first term when tax rates were rolled back about 25 percent across-the-board.

In spite of dire predictions from the Left, inflation which, under Jimmy Carter had exploded to over 13 percent a year, collapsed to about four percent. Not only that, but the proportion of income taxes paid by middle class wage-earners decreased by about 32 percent while the proportion of income taxes paid by the wealthiest tax payers increased by about 20 percent.

According to a Joint Economic Committee of Congress report in 1996 looking back at what was known as the Kemp-Roth Tax Cut, the reason was "Lower top marginal tax rates had encouraged these taxpayers to generate more taxable income."

Even President Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers in wrote in a 1994 report: "It is undeniable that the sharp reduction in taxes in the early 1980s was a strong impetus to economic growth."

Jack Kemp: Professional quarterback. Congressman. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Defender of minority rights. American.

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About The Author

Rich Galen has been a press secretary to Dan Quayle and Newt Gingrich. Rich Galen currently works as a journalist and writes at Mullings.com

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RIP
Jack Kemp was a voice in the wilderness, but he was respected and will continue to be a Great American. Perhaps someone else will step into his shoes & carry on...?

God Speed
May God Rest the Patriot in Eternal Peace.

America has lost a great Gentleman.

A good quarterback, too!
EOM

Attended a Kemp Speech in his Prime
Jack Kemp was inspiring to listen to because he spoke with conviction and heart. He wrote a great little blue book called American Renaissance. When Dick Morris talks about why we can't keep taxing the ship's engine room - he's talking pure Kemp.

R.I.P.---
I believe that Jack Kemp was a very good man, an athlete, gentleman, scholar, and a good American. He is already missed by many.

Jack Kemp, RINO and CINO
As a liberal Democrat, I always respected Kemp. However, even when he was popular he was light-years from today's conservatives. By the standards that prevail today among conservative Republicans, Kemp was a RINO and a CINO. He showed this in his energetic effort to appeal to blacks. He was the kind of big-tent Republican now so despised by conservatives.

It's probably a good thing for the Republicans that there is no room for a Jack Kemp today. The conservatives who dominate the party want something quite unlike Kemp's lack of ideological orthodoxy. In my posts on this subject, I encourage the Republicans to become a true hard-Right party, excluding all but true believers from their ranks. If conservatives are correct in their understanding of the political possibilities of their doctrinal purity, they will find that enough Americans share their vision of a hard Right party to put them back in office. Any Kemp-like figure will lose today, and real conservatives know it.

Gestell - you're a label machine
Your thoughts on who is a rino and cino are just too interesting. Do you have any thoughts or ideas on how to deal with an actual issue?
What's your favorite item in the stimulus package? Will that item help revive the economy? How do you want to deal with entitlement reform? How about energy? How about terrorism?

R.I.P. JACK KEMP
In 1987 I registered to vote for the 1988 election.I lived in a Reagan household so we worried about G.H.W.Bush.(BOY,WERE WE RIGHT)I liked Kemp.He was my first choice.He was the best person to continue the Reagan revolution.I remember Kemp/Roth and Kemp/Gramm.He was always talking about tax cuts and balanced budgets.I think he would have fought harder than Bush against the Dems,like Reagan did.I think he finished fourth behind Bush,Dole ,and Robertson.

I also liked the intreprise zone idea.He had this idea that if you created tax-free zones in the inner cites it would create jobs and raise the incomes of blacks.Moving everyone up the ladder.He was a real thinker.

I don't remember how he was on the social issues but I thought he would have made a great president.

HE WAS THE TYPE OF PERSON WHO WANTED TO RAISE EVERYONE UP.LIKE REAGAN.HE WLL BE MISSED.

ROB from Louisiana


Jack Kemp
One of the 'good guys'.

Oh look! Gestell is here!
and using this occasion to give the GOP much needed advice on how to win friends and influence people.

The GOP is most fortunate this day to have such a friend who cares so deeply and offers such much needed and time tested advice.

Imagine! Free and unsolicited advice from a member of the opposite Party! What a concept.

Strong advocate for the poor.

One of the things conservatives liked about Jack Kemp was is strong advocacy for the poor.

His proposals to help the poor always made good economic sense while preserving dignity.

Contrast that to Liberal proposals which lead to dependance, loss of dignity and destruction of communities.

No Gestell ...
Jack believed as I (and many Republicans do) that entrepreneurship is the fundamental engine that best serves those who might be outside the mainstream because of race, religion, sex, or anything else. Btw, FYI, we call that Capitalism!

We Republicans need to find another like Jack ... Jack was the antithesis of Obama!! Jack did us a favor even in death by reminding us of this.
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