Politics

Undemocratic impact of Centennial charter

Centennial's elected treasurer warns that elimination of her position under the proposed city charter would result in less protection for taxpayers. It makes sense. Without the check and balance of other citywide officers chosen by the people, good-faith efforts by the mayor and council won't always be enough to avoid mistakes or deter abuses of power. Treasurer Susan Bockenfeld cites a recent property acquisition where her analysis caught errors of over a quarter-million dollars per year forever (!) on a pending $4 million transaction. Her letter about the incident, along with her report to the council (which they treated as unwelcome, proving the whole point) are linked below as PDF files.

Letter from Treasurer Bockenfeld

Treasurer’s Report to Council

She recommends that Centennial home rule charter should be rejected by voters if its final draft deprives citizens of an elected treasurer/auditor performing the fiscal watchdog function for all of us.

Backbone America agrees with this concern, which we feel applies equally to the charter provision eliminating an elected city clerk. The home rule plan should either be fixed or nixed.

One too many kicks at Bruce?

So an elected member of the Colorado House can lose a committee assignment for declining to co-sponsor a resolution his leadership and fellow party members happen to like? This sounds more like Marxist re-education than open government, American style. Yet it's exactly what befell Rep. Douglas Bruce (R-Colorado Springs) last week after voting for, but then not also sponsoring, a non-binding resolution of thanks to our armed forces and veterans. While I disagree with Bruce's action, and have seen little evidence in his first month as a legislator to bear out my previous hopes for him as a beneficial truth-teller under the golden dome, I'm concerned the tit-for-tat feud between him and House Minority Leader Mike May is becoming a net minus for GOP goals and the General Assembly's good name.

After the demotion last Thursday, Republicans in both the House and Senate commented to me they worry that May has let this become way too personal. And it could backfire politically.

Left to stew in his own juices, Rep. Bruce could very well alienate hometown voters to the point where he loses the August primary and passes from the legislative scene after a single, stormy session. But the more he is able to portray himself as a martyr persecuted by the party establishment and press, the better his chances of surviving this election cycle and returning to bedevil the body for another two years. That's the risk implicit in the minority leader's draconian punishment for Bruce's resolution peccadillo.

"Keep your eye on the main chance and don't stop to kick every barking dog," advises conservative wiseman Morton Blackwell in his classic, 45-point outline, "Laws of the Public Policy Process." I kept that parchment on my office wall when I was a Senate leader, and a current senator reminded me of it apropos the May-Bruce dustup. While the reference to kicking is purely coincidental, it may be good advice for Mr. TABOR's colleagues right now. If attention is oxygen to him, why furnish more of it?

The audacity of conservatism

The intra-party brouhaha over the imminent nomination of Sen. John McCain as the GOP candidate for president is, as modern elections are regularly becoming, a spiteful referendum on political conservatism. That our nation has lost its cultural, its political, and, most deeply, its spiritual way has long since been beyond doubt. The only question is increasingly – and this election cycle demonstrates it in spades – how a principled conservative ought to respond when the standard for political leadership has dropped so embarrassingly low that he senses an undeniable tug of the conscience toward abstaining from an election altogether. Outside the broad mushy middle of the political world – that portion of the “mainstream” spectrum where one resides when one knows not what one believes or why – everyone agrees there is a point where such recusal is the only conscientious choice. In an election, say, between Ronald Reagan and Antonin Scalia, does anyone seriously believe Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama, or many of the self-righteous pundits in the media now scoffing at lifelong conservative leaders such as Dr. James Dobson for his decision not to vote if Mr. McCain is the GOP nominee, would be found darkening a presidential oval?

By the same token, many Republicans, including many conservatives, calling for other conservatives to get on board the inevitable McCain bandwagon – “What, are we just going to let a liberal Democrat win?” – know there is a point where they, too, would choose intelligent, convicted abstention over casting a vote for someone they know is unworthy of the presidential office. Picture an election between, say, Hillary Clinton and Richard Nixon – Nixon being well to the political right of John McCain – or between, say, Bill Clinton and Sen. Larry Craig, who is also well to the political right of Sen. McCain. Just get on board the GOP bandwagon? What, are we just going to let a Democrat win?

This is how third parties get started.

Recusal is not only the intelligent choice but the only wise choice in many life circumstances. Judges regularly and admirably recuse themselves when their personal connections, interests, or history make, or even give the appearance of making, a disinterested judgment improbable. An attorney will decline a case in which he has no expertise, as will a business manager who knows a particular decision is outside the realm of his knowledge or experience. Members of school boards, city councils, state legislatures, and the U.S. Congress regularly abstain from votes for a multitude of reasons, not infrequently because they simply wish to broadcast their protest against an array of options so pathetically weak that only the lowest form of pragmatism, political expediency, and peer pressure could persuade one to participate by casting a vote one simply does not believe in.

A vote is more than just a protest against the party or issue opposed. It is, at the same time, an affirmation of the party or issue supported. This is the nature of a vote. A vote says something about us as people. Twelve years from now, when we are gathered at the house with friends during the momentous election year of 2020, the question of who we voted for “back in that year, you know, when Hillary and Barack were running, when was it?” is one we can expect to come up, and our answer one on which we can expect, however light-heartedly and good-naturedly, to be evaluated. Many conservatives are deciding that “I held my nose and voted for McCain” is an answer they will be able to live with. I may yet take that route myself. For the moment, “For the first time since I came of voting age, I voted down-ballot but sat the presidential race out” is sounding like an answer I’d be comfortable with.

Even if I ultimately take a different route from Dr. Dobson, his stand is refreshing. He and the conservative talk radio universe that has opposed McCain consistently since the beginning of the race are right, and other conservative leaders, particularly among the intelligentsia, who are now falling over themselves to curry favor and secure access with McCain, are foolish. Even if one votes for McCain, one need not commit one’s public influence, or that of the organization with which one is associated, to supporting a candidate so far from what we admire, revere, hold dear, and still hope for in a great political and world leader. Now is the time for conservative leaders to be trumpeting what conservatism is and calling the GOP back to it, not myopically looking for ways to defend Mr. McCain and secure access to his potential administration.

Opposing Democrats is easy. We show how dearly we hold our conservative principles by how willing we are to hold Republicans to the same standard.

Three obvious truths, two of them timeless, need to be stated clearly once again. First, the temporary one: Mr. McCain is not a conservative. He is a liberal Republican. He is not the most liberal Republican. There are currently 48 Republican members of the U.S. Senate. Perhaps the most liberal is Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine. Perhaps the most conservative is Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma. Those who know his record know that Mr. McCain is 7 or 8 senators to the right of Snowe, and 40 or so senators to the left of Coburn. The list of issues and occasions on which he has sold out the conservative movement runs into the dozens.

The laughable claim by President Bush that McCain is “a solid conservative,” or by Dr. Richard Land of the Southern Baptist Convention that McCain “has moved to a more conservative position on taxes, he has expressed appreciation for the pro-life position, and has proclaimed regularly, ‘I am pro-life,’” reflect the pragmatic low standards and neglect of real history that are rampant among the political and chattering classes today and which have brought the Party of Reagan to its knees over the last two decades. Dr. Land’s dismissal of Rush Limbaugh as someone who “needs to get out and talk to average folk more” is a manifestation of the precisely backward way in which short-sighted leaders – including those in the church – justify their expedient choices, alliances, and maneuverings rather than take an unpopular stand for the truth. Dr. Land, I can say it respectfully as someone who admires your body of work and who is a student at your convention’s flagship seminary: you have a D.Phil from Oxford and have been in high church and Republican circles for decades. Limbaugh doesn’t even have a college degree, talks to “average folk” by the dozens every day on his radio show, and has for 20 years shown more backbone in standing up to compromising politicians, including Republicans, than most anyone on the national scene. Again with respect, it is you, sir, who might benefit from talking to average folk a bit more.

Second truth, first timeless one: political conservatism is not a knee-jerk reaction or simple dislike of Hillary or a set of talking points for after the golf round. It is the stuff of the American grassroots. It is the stuff of the American founding. It is the stuff of strength, of truth, of right, of principle, of courage, of honor. It is the stuff of legends. It represents now, and will always represent, a hope far more audacious than Barack Obama ever conceived or wrote about, or that John McCain may ever realize he has systematically negotiated over the course of his political career: it is the hope that authentic truth, justice, and wisdom may yet arise to lead the planet’s greatest commonwealth in our lifetime, and that a dying American culture may yet be redeemed by authentic political virtue on high.

Third, final, and, to many, most annoyingly timeless truth: political conservatism is rooted in Christianity, and Christianity is by its nature conservative. Being conservative means believing in the steadfast conservation of God-given political and social institutions against the corrupting influence of human vice, ambition, mendacity, machination, and manipulation. Christianity preserves and conserves because it tells the truth about God, man, society, state, and history. Christian leaders like Dr. James Dobson do not abstain because they are grumpy; they abstain because they feel the weight that C.S. Lewis felt when he wrote that Christianity, considered only from an ethical standpoint, is hot enough to boil all the other systems of the world to rags. Christianity is fierce because evil and folly are fierce. Christianity’s standards are high because the standards of evil and folly are so despicably low. And all the greatest Christian saints in history have been equally fierce in their defense of truth not because they were grumpy, but because they knew that, in the course of human events, today’s pragmatic sellout is tomorrow’s political, cultural, and historical calamity.

One of the greatest truths Christianity teaches is that human politics, even at their best, are a pathetic imitation of the Real Thing. As the American Founders knew and wrote as eloquently as any group of political men in history, and as American conservatives still sense deeply today, the Real Thing is yet to happen. When the clouds are rent and the trumpet sounds, and the Son of Man descends for the second time to gather His elect from the four winds, there will be no more compromised political candidates or pathetic attempts to hide a history of negotiated principles. Rather, the entire world – some joyfully and some in terror – will join in recognizing for the first and final occasion that, in the fullness of time, government as we always dreamed and feared it could be – a deeply and abidingly and permanently conservative government – has finally come of age.

Into the wilderness?

The Republican Party is going into exile and the wilderness as the Children of Israel did after the destruction of the Temple in 586 BC. They had broken their covenant with the Lord and were punished. The GOP also has forsaken its principles and succumbed to media pressure to enact big spending programs, alienating its base and its reason to exist. Whether or not the Republicans ever come back, or disappear as did the Whigs, is not clear. It will take more than tired exhortations to conjure up the long-dead Ronald Reagan. The last time I went to a GOP breakfast, I talked about the necessity of an online presence. I told of the online communities and bloggers our opponents have. I told about how Republican candidates were being trashed on the Internet with the "assassination by search engine" technique. All I got from the elderly party leaders was glazed eyes. They moved on to speaking of "getting the next mailing out" and the necessity of "working the precincts and hanging brochures on doorknobs".

Thus, the GOP is hopelessly out of date and being left in the dust, at least at the local level. And is not "all politics local"?

I'm not sure what mechanism remains to regenerate the situation. One wakeup call might be Wahhabist Islam finally showing its face in its vicious way. Or as the progressives hammer into place more and more European social democratic welfare dependencies, the toll on the economy will begin to manifest itself. But it may take more time than anyone foresees.

Was Keynes right, "In the long run, we're all dead"? Or was Moses, in his confidence that eventually the Jordan would be crossed, even if he didn't live to see it?

What is GOP's paramount object?

Today, on Lincoln's birthday, and in the midst of a struggle over the soul of our party, we Republicans need to remember his example in balancing principle and prudence when facing a dilemma. Determined as he was to keep slavery "in the course of ultimate extinction" as he believed the Founders had intended, Lincoln could still insist at a dark hour early in the Civil War:

    "My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union... If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that."

The Great Emancipator knew his paramount object and allowed nothing to divert him from it. In doing so, he was able to achieve his other cherished object as well. It couldn't have worked the other way around. He knew that if the Union were broken in the 1860s, slavery's future would be extended -- exactly as slavery's human, moral, and political cost would have been greater if the Union had never been formed to begin with in the 1770s and '80s.

Republicans now, as America's conservative party, must think with the same cool clarity as Lincoln in fixing our paramount object for 2008. Is it purity in the presidential nominee? Is it electoral victory at any price? Is it avoidance of a Democratic president even at the cost of a (further) liberalizing makeover to the GOP identity? Is it arm-twisting McCain and his supporters to move right in the spring or face certain defeat in the fall?

None of those objects is paramount, in my opinion. I see the first as unattainable, the second as unworthy, and the others as desirable but lesser objects. None of the four involves a principle by which personal inflexibility and costly sacrifices can be justified. All come under the heading of prudential judgment -- messy choices in the gray area. (See Lincoln's blunt acceptance of freeing some slaves and not others; exactly what he later did by proclamation.)

Protecting America's constitutional heritage and our national interest in the world, over the span of decades and not just months or years, is the paramount object in this struggle as best I can tell. Show me a better. And show me how that paramount object can possibly be served by actions this year that result in splitting the GOP and electing Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton. and political cost would have been greater if the Union had never been formed to begin with in the 1770s and '80s.

Republicans now, as America's conservative party, must think with the same cool clarity as Lincoln in fixing our paramount object for 2008. Is it purity in the presidential nominee? Is it electoral victory at any price? Is it avoidance of a Democratic president even at the cost of a (further) liberalizing makeover to the GOP identity? Is it arm-twisting McCain and his supporters to move right in the spring or face certain defeat in the fall?

None of those objects is paramount, in my opinion. I see the first as unattainable, the second as unworthy, and the others as lesser object. None of the four involves a principle by which personal inflexibility and costly sacrifices can be justified. All come under the heading of prudential judgment -- messy choices in the gray area. (See Lincoln's blunt acceptance of freeing some slaves and not others; exactly what he later did by proclamation.)

Protecting America's constitutional heritage and our national interest in the world, over the span of decades and not just months or years, is the paramount object in this struggle as best I can tell. Show me a better. And show me how that paramount object can possibly be served by actions this year that result in splitting the GOP and electing Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton.