Posted on 06/22/2008 11:51:12 AM PDT by K-oneTexas
A Contract With America Retrospective
by Steven D. Laib
It is quite possible that for political parties periodic "revolutions" may be necessary to allow true progress and prevent stagnation.
An opinion piece by former House Majority Leader Dick Armey in the latest edition of Imprimis caught my eye, and for good reason. It was entitled "Whatever Happened to the Contract with America?" This is an excellent question, as the "Contract" a statement of principles and intentions introduced by the Republican Party during the 1994 congressional election helped bring that party
to control of both houses of the Legislature.
Armey's paper addresses the question by dividing legislators into two classes; entrepreneurs and bureaucrats. According to Armey the entrepreneur is "a person who has a set of principles and is willing to take risks on its behalf." The bureaucrat seeks to "perpetuate the present situation" and "remain safely in office." This analysis is somewhat novel in method, but can be considered factually correct, as we see that there are a vast Number of legislators whose primary goal is to remain in office, at the expense of all else. This leads to one of Armey's concluding statements; that "In the end the Republican Congress - in the two or three years leading up to the Democratic victories in 2006 - had utterly forsaken its commitment to liberty and limited government with the often active acquiescence of the White House."
Armeys analysis is correct. What happens when legislators begin to concentrate on staying in office, rather than on what is best for the nation their willingness to take risks becomes compromised. This, in turn, leads to the potential for the legislator to concentrate on what is most likely to garner them the most votes in the next election, which in turn leads to pork barrel spending, handing out of political favors, consorting with lobbyists, and worse. Armey asserts that when this happens and When its only about power, you lose. Again he is correct, but only up to a point. This axiom appears to be applicable only to Republican and/or Conservative office holders. Liberals such as Ted Kennedy appear to be unaffected by it, hence their remaining in office, essentially for perpetuity. What Armey does not address is why this is true, and perhaps the limited format of Imprimis did not permit him to do so. In any event, I will attempt to do so here.
The Contract with America was at bottom line, a conservatively oriented document. The basic underlying principle that drives the voting behavior of Conservatives and many Republicans is one of policy and principle, which is grounded in intelligent analysis of actions, not words; and results, rather than intentions. This is why so many Conservatives scoff at the hope and change message promoted by the current Democrat candidate. Hope is meaningless without opportunity, and Democrats are anti-opportunity. Change is likewise meaningless unless one knows what is being changed, and what the change is going to be. But to someone who is interested in simple but catchy sounding slogans and platitudes, it works very well.
True Conservatives are driven not by emotion, sloganeering or cheap marketing ploys. They examine candidate behavior, past policy support, and future intentions. They are also true to their convictions and principles; a trait that leads them to question the actions of both Presidents Bush, and the intentions of John McCain as a potential President. They refuse to march in lockstep with the party, just for the sake of unity, and many seriously consider not voting at all because no candidate fits their view of what the nation needs. They are willing to criticize representatives who err, and continually watch out for anyone that does. And, they are more likely to be the party of change because they are the party that generally favors maximizing a citizens rights to control his or her own destiny.
In January of 2006 I obliquely addressed [1] Tom DeLays involvement with and Jack Abramoff and it seems reasonable to mention the incident again at this time. It seems possible that DeLay had made the transition from entrepreneur to bureaucrat, allowing himself to become involved in activities that were better avoided. When all the dust settled, DeLay was not convicted of anything, and almost certainly committed no crime. Still, for the true conservative, it is not only Caesars wife who must be above suspicion. Caesar must be also, for his own protection, as well as that of the party. In a hostile political environment, it is an absolute necessity.
In the end, Armey is correct. The Republican Party shot itself in both feet in the term leading up to 2006. As is usual, power tends to corrupt, and the party refused to recognize that it was being corrupted by failure to recognize the nature of its base. This is what brought down the spirit of the Contract With America, and what led to the alienation of Conservative voters. It is what has left us in 2008 with a lot of difficult choices and in the final analysis a candidate whom many do not trust.
There has been a sentiment among some commentators that McCains position is similar to that of Bob Dole in 1996. That it is a candidacy of its my turn. The answer to this is that if McCain had not stayed in office so long, and had groomed someone younger to move in behind him, then the continual turnover of office holders would 1) make power orientation less common, 2) support legislative entrepreneurship, and make the Republican Party a place where initiative, energy, youth and ability are recognized. In todays political scene people such as Bobby Jindal are a rarity. Politicians who voluntarily move aside to make way for new blood are unusual. Party loyalty often means that an incumbent must not be challenged. This means that new blood often gets side tracked, or disinterested. This prevents idealism, energy, and renewed enthusiasm for basic principles gets wasted; sacrificed on the altar of seniority.
Thomas Jefferson is quoted as suggesting that periodic revolutions may be necessary to maintain liberty. It is also possible that in political parties revolutions may be necessary to prevent stagnation and to allow progress.
Those interested in reading Dick Armey's column in full may find it [2] here .
Article printed from Intellectual Conservative Politics and Philosophy: http://www.intellectualconservative.com
URL to article: http://www.intellectualconservative.com/2008/06/22/a-contract-with-america-retrospective/
URLs in this post:
[1] Tom DeLays involvement with and Jack Abramoff: http://www.intellectualconservative.com../2006/01/17/jack-abramoff-and-the-lobbying-game
[2] here: http://www.hillsdale.edu/news/imprimis.asp
BTTT
This year, Republican candidatess need to agree to similar promises. They should promise that if our country elects McCain for president and republican majorities for the U.S. Senate and House, they’ll pass a set of bills, including:
1. Decrease all federal tax rates to the 1986 rates. When Reagan was president, we had a great economy, because of low tax rates.
2. Elminate federal welfare, by 2011, requiring each state government to provide for welfare needs of its residents.
Since federal tax rates would be lower, the other governments would be able to change tax rates, to ensure that they receive enough money.
3. Immigration reform, which includes a brick wall, along the border with Mexico. Fines for employers who hire illegal aliens would be tripled. The money that is collected, from those fines, would be used to hire more border patrol agents.
You're not familiar with what the Contract With America promised, are you?
The Republicans gave up on term limits and a balanced budget amendment to easily. IMHO, these two things would help fix almost everything that is wrong with the US Government.
Obviously he's not! They enacted every single item! This is when conservatives had it made, but blew it over these past 12 years! That's what you should bitch about M50D.
Actually, I’m withdrawing my previous comment. The rest of your comments which you made are very close to what has happened. I wouldn’t call McCain a socialist, but I would call him a liberal coddler.
Since then the repubs led by Bush have become moderate/rino skanks who need a can of whoopass opened up on them by conservatives.
Yes, I read the article. And, no, I didn't miss the point.
My mistake was responding to your mistaken notion, thus entering into this irrelevant exchange.
More like a conservative addressing a post.
Great points. Drill Drill Drill and nuke nuke nuke plants as well. Last one for me. Tighten the justice system down. They have gotten way out of control and need to be introduced to We the People
Wjhat made the 1994 Revolution was the promise of LIMITS. LIMITS on taxes, LIMITS on government and term limits on legislators. The idealists kept their word. The cynical, opportunistic bastards stayed.
“They enacted every single item!”
Really? When did they enact Term Limits?
I know what you mean, but it was a brillant plan. The document was about what they would do if the electorate gave them control. They were already standing strong with the constitution, they were already acting on it. It was the DBM/dems distoring everything the repubs brought something clear cut and screwed themselves when W came to office. They had no choice but to follow his moderate hug-a dem, spendthrift agenda. This cost the repubs control of congress!
Term Limits wasn't in the CWA!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.