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Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Tony Blankley :: Townhall.com Columnist
Electoral Pragmatism Reconsidered
by Tony Blankley
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


In my column last week, I argued for electoral pragmatism by my fellow conservatives e.g., better a Giuliani Republican than Hillary. About two-thirds of my self-identified conservative Christian e-mail respondents strongly disagreed. That response reminded me of a very shrewd observation made several years ago by Robert William Fogel: "Coalitions spawned by religious movements are more ideological than partisan."

The current Republican/conservative coalition, which started forming under Richard Nixon and reached its zenith under Ronald Reagan, never would have become a national governing coalition without the powerful impetus of the expanding religious movement in America. Without the social conservative and religious faction of the coalition, the remaining fiscal conservatives, free-marketers, hawks and country club Republicans routinely would come up short of a national majority.

But the possible conservative religious resistance to Giuliani on the basis of his opposition to outlawing abortion at the federal level -- and their willingness to accept a Hillary presidency, if necessary, as a result -- points out how little partisan loyalty may have been built up in the past quarter century of the coalition's dominance.

Consider the continued loyalty to the Democratic Party of labor unions (if not always a big majority of their members), which has persisted since FDR's time -- now almost three-quarters of a century. Even when Democrats gave them little, they stuck with them -- a partisan bond that has transcended not only ideology, but sometimes self-interest.

It remains to be seen whether the bonds that have been formed between religious conservatives and the GOP will partially dissolve in 2008. Clearly, a year before the election, some of their leaders are threatening to break. And more than a few of their folks outside of Washington have informed me unambiguously that they share that sentiment.

I still believe that a powerful moral argument can be made for compromising on behalf of one's coalition in politics. I made that argument against my own cherished policy goals when I was inside government in the Reagan White House and as Newt Gingrich's advisor and press secretary. And I plan to continue to make it publicly now.

It is the same argument that Barry Goldwater made so many years ago, when he told the conservatives of his time to grow up politically and not always threaten to walk off with the ball when they didn't like every play their team called. Only a supreme dictator can get everything he wants out of politics. For the rest of us, politics is a team sport. Even vastly popular presidents -- from FDR to Ronald Reagan -- had to compromise on things they felt passionately about.

Those of us who have stayed in the fray have had to wrestle constantly with our consciences as to whether we are making a reasonable compromise or whether we are becoming power-mad political hacks. Those arguments went on constantly in the Reagan White House among many of us who came into politics not for power, but to return America to its founding principles, values and greatness. Continued...

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About The Author
Tony Blankley served as press secretary to then Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich. Tony Blankley is the author of The West's Last Chance: Will We Win the Clash of Civilizations? .
 
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Cont


Now I will agree that in ’08 it looks like the Dems may hold the congress, therefore not having a Dem pres is important if you limit yourself to socialist candidates. However, I’m not so sure this early out that Hillary has a chance against a specific Repub candidate with flesh & blood.

Let me ask you this. Carter almost put the world into bankruptcy and the guy was a stark raving mad Communist. However Reagan came on board for 8 years and his legacy lasted until Bush 2 took office and then the Carter years started in again. Were we better off when the Repubs bolted in ’77 and let Carter walk away with it so that a Reagan could go around the party machinery to get office or would we have been better off if another left wing Rockefeller Repub like GWB had beaten Carter and the Reagan miracle would have never taken place because the party machinery was even more ossified.

Anyway to answer your question, I don’t like a number of things with Ron Paul, never the less I think I could tolerate him when he runs as the Libertarian candidate. But I see absolutely no point in voting for the two socialist divisions of the Socialist Party. No matter who wins you get more socialism and totalitarianism.

Wendy M writes: 11, 2007 12:26 PM

There is no such thing as a perfect candidate -- and DESKJOCKEY, your mention of the last 8 years proves it. If Gore had been in charge these last 8 years, or Kerry for the last 4, where would we be?

DESKJOCKEY WRITES

You raise an excellent point of strategy. Now I didn’t vote for any of them because I asked God who he’d have me vote for and he has consistently said don’t vote for Marxist. Now I’m not sure I’m not misappropriating his word but that is what I did.

I had argued that folks who will only vote Dem or Repub to vote Dem in ’00, ’04 &’06. Last fall I suggested to vote Dem to stop the prior 6 years of out of control spending, pro homo laws, pro-abortion out of control funding, senior drugs, NCLB etc. I was excoriated with the typical fear mongering of all the evil the Dems would do the 1st 100 days. 10 months later they have yet to do anything. Bush & Dems are in a standoff, just like we need. Can you imagine that Bush had never vetoed anything and now he is going to veto the Schip. You see we now have a stalemate balance that is stopping all legislation and preserving any liberty or freedom that might exist.

If Algur had won and as it was apparent the Repubs were picking up the legislature we’d been in tremendous condition today, no laws passed no expansion of giver-ment, no anything as the Repubs would have done to him what they did to Klinton. In ’04 & ‘06 the Repubs would have gained yet more seats instead of getting decimated once the rank and file saw how insane they became when there was no opposition to whatever they wanted.

Because we had finally got Dems in control of the legislature we now we have had 10 months of peace and no laws. The Dems won’t give Bush anything and he won’t give them anyhing. Stalemate.

Cont
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