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Paul R. Hollrah, O.E.
Political Poison Pills
September 18,
2009
Beginning in the 1930s, during the depth of the Great Depression,
Democrats began repeating over and over again that it was the fiscal
policies of a Republican president that brought on the Great Depression,
that the Republican Party was owned by the “robber barons” of Wall
Street, and that Republicans were the enemies of working men and
women...the “common” man.
It was all a big lie, but for the poor and the working classes, anxious
to receive more and more government handouts or envious of those with
wealth and economic security, it was a believable lie. It was a poison
pill that would define the Republican Party for more than half a
century.
But the most devastating poison pills of all are those that are
self-administered...the most damaging in recent years being administered
by George H.W. Bush and his son, George W. Bush, and the lethal dose
that Barack Obama now represents for the Democrat Party.
George H.W. Bush was not a man to inspire confidence among
conservatives. It was only among members of the moderate wing of the GOP
that he inspired any real excitement. Conservatives were convinced that,
should he ever ascend to the presidency, he would be a one-term
president.
When author Gail Sheehy was preparing
her article, “Is George Bush Too Nice to be President” for the
October 1986 edition of Vanity Fair, she interviewed more than
forty of his closest friends, senior aides, and family members. She
asked each of them the same set of questions, one of which was, “Exactly
what is it that George Bush feels passionate about?”
Oddly, no one, not even his own wife,
had a ready response. After pondering the question for several moments
they all came up with equally lame responses such as: “Peace,”
“Justice,” or “Fairness” – as if anyone would be opposed to peace,
justice, and fairness.
After his election, Bush made a concerted effort to bring federal
spending under control. However, saddled with a Democratic Congress he
received little congressional cooperation. Ultimately. he agreed to
participate in an “economic summit” on neutral ground at Andrews Air
Force Base. At that meeting, Bush agreed to a number of targeted tax
increases...mostly federal user fees, etc...while the Democrats agreed
to substantial cuts in federal spending. They all shook hands on the
deal and everyone went away happy.
When the tax increases arrived on Bush’s desk he signed them into law
and, naively, sat back to await the spending cuts. Of course, Democrats
being Democrats, the spending cuts never materialized. However, after
snookering Bush into the one-way deal, they added insult to injury by
using his 1988 “Read my lips! No new taxes!” pledge to defeat him for
reelection in 1992.
It was a “poison pill” that came to define the Bush presidency and it
came as no surprise to conservatives. Not once did Bush use the
Democrats’ duplicity to defend himself. Then, after nominating David
Souter as an associate justice to the Supreme Court...a man who might
easily have been an Obama nominee...his credibility suffered yet another
severe blow and the public perception of the Republican Party suffered,
as well.
As the last of their generation of national Republican leaders, George
Bush and Bob Dole had an obligation to showcase the next generation of
national Republican leaders. But they didn’t do that. Bush gave us Dan
Quayle and his son, George W., and Dole gave us Jack Kemp.
In 2000, the Republican “establishment” engineered the nomination of
Texas Governor George W. Bush, a man about whom we knew very little. We
knew that he was very short on preparation for the presidency; he was
not well read; he was not a student of history, philosophy, or
government; he did not think well on his feet; he spoke in four or five
word phrases; he was minimally conversant in national and international
affairs; he refused to deny that he had ever used cocaine; and he
insulted every conservative in the country by referring to himself as a
“compassionate” conservative – as if conservatism has not always been
the soul of compassion.
As president, he was a strong and resolute leader in time of war and,
unlike his father, he was not afraid to surround himself with men and
women more experienced and more capable than himself. However, he failed
miserably in his most solemn responsibility, that of defending our
borders against foreign invasion.
Bush entered the White House in January 2001 with the opportunity to do
great things, not only for the people of America, but for the Republican
Party as well. He performed well in the global War on Terror and he made
two exceptional appointments to the Supreme Court...with the
inexplicable Harriet Myers fiasco sandwiched in between. Unlike his
father, who contributed David Souter to the Court, George W. left the
Court more conservative than he found it.
Having worked cooperatively with Democrats in Austin during his years as
Governor, Bush was under the misapprehension that he could do the same
in Washington. Unfortunately, he had not stared evil in the face until
he met the likes of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. Bush apparently felt
that Reid would be very much like other Mormons: kind, decent, and
honorable. It did not occur to him that Harry Reid was living proof that
even rattlesnakes can be Mormons.
And although he enjoyed Republican majorities in both houses of
Congress, he was plagued by incompetent congressional
leadership...particularly in the House of Representatives where Speaker
Dennis Hastert (R-IL) and Majority Leader Tom Delay (R-TX) presided over
a GOP majority that worked very hard at making themselves
indistinguishable from Democrats. In refusing to use his veto pen to
stem the Republican spending binge, he seemed oblivious to the notion
that he had an obligation to enforce traditional Republican principles
of government.
When Bush ran for reelection in 2004, CBS News anchor Dan Rather
attempted to damage him with forged documents purporting to show that he
had avoided service in Vietnam by enlisting in the Texas Air National
Guard. Now, in 2009, five years later, we learn for the first time that
he had, in fact, volunteered for service in Vietnam but was turned down
because he didn’t have enough flying hours. When he was being torn apart
by Democrats and the mainstream media he apparently found that
information to be irrelevant.
During Democratic administrations, few major decisions are ever made
without first considering what is best for the party. During the Bush
years the fortunes of the party that elected them were rarely, if ever,
a consideration. And when the political rough-and-tumble demanded
toughness...an eye for an eye...there was no fight in them. When faced
with the vicious hostility of the Democratic opposition they simply
smiled and turned the other cheek. Because of the weak-kneed leadership
of the Bushes, father and son, and because of the incompetent and
self-serving leadership of men such as Dennis Hastert and Tom Delay, we
now find ourselves with a party that not even the most ardent Republican
partisan can defend.
But now it appears certain that Barack Obama is preparing to administer
a poison pill to the Democratic Party that is even more deadly than what
the Bushes have prescribed for the GOP.
Obama campaigned for the presidency on three primary platforms: 1) He
promised to bring “fairness” to our tax system, stem the outflow of jobs
to overseas markets, restructure the mortgage lending industry, and
bring stability to financial markets, 2) He promised to develop clean,
renewable sources of energy, reduce our dependence on foreign oil,
substantially reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and create millions of
new “green” jobs, and 3) He promised to reform our overly expensive
healthcare system, making quality healthcare more readily available, at
reduced cost, for every American.
His first major effort was a $787 billion economic stimulus package that
is quickly proving to have been unnecessary. When the American people
realized that the true purpose of the stimulus was to enrich Democratic
constituencies at taxpayer expense, he backed away from the stimulus and
proceeded to push cap-and-trade legislation...the most destructive piece
of legislation ever to come out of the Congress. And when voters found
that his radical environmental proposals could cost them as much as
$3,000 per family, per year, he moved on to healthcare reform.
Now, as congressional Democrats struggle to write legislation that will
meet all of Obama’s impossible and unrealistic criteria, the
Administration finds itself in full panic mode. They are confronted by
the sad fact that, if congressional Democrats push through a healthcare
package similar to what Obama has promised, a great many of them will be
defeated in 2010. If congressional Democrats are paying any attention at
all to the intensity of the tea parties and the town hall meetings, they
can be expected to reject Obama’s healthcare fantasies.
One pundit has said that “Democrats in
Congress will pass (Obama’s healthcare reform) because they must.
Otherwise, they'll have slain their own savior in his first year in
office.” No and yes. Given the choice between saving themselves and
sacrificing Obama, they’ll sacrifice Obama.
When Obamacare fails, and
it will, Obama runs the risk of being
the first three-year lame duck president in history. Having squandered
whatever goodwill he enjoyed before taking up the healthcare issue, his
low approval ratings will prevent him from returning to the rest of his
radical agenda, while Democrats in Congress face all but certain
disaster in the 2010 elections.
Having gained power just months ago, Obama and congressional Democrats,
are now a train wreck waiting to happen. That being said, wouldn’t it be
nice if we had a viable Republican Party that the people would trust to
take up the mantle of leadership? But we don’t. The last two Republican
presidents, in concert with a generation of reckless and undisciplined
Republicans in Congress, have seen to that. |