Friday, November 30, 2012

One Party Rule



One-Party Rule
Charlie Earl

Please allow me to apologize in advance for not having a valid attribution or link for the foundational premise of this column. I was listening to the “Quinn and Rose Show, the Warroom,” (commercial for ‘I heart radio”) on Tuesday and heard a reference about the pitiful conditions of many of our cities and some of the states. Their fiscal and financial situations are bleak with the future being no more promising. There is one constant element that ties the failing cities and states together. They are all governed by Democrats. Their political environments have been dominated by Democrats for decades. In those rare instances where Republicans have held some power, they were “moderate” or liberal Republicans … big spenders and big taxers.

Detroit is the poster child and Washington D.C. runs a close second for ruinous policies and profligate spending. The Motor City was a thriving, dynamic and wealthy metropolis as recently as 50 years ago. Detroit and its products were the envy of the globe, but Democrat politicians and their lock-step union allies have managed to destroy the dynamism and dismantle a once-grand city. Empty buildings abound and a crumbling infrastructure testifies that the former king of the industrial world is now a mere skeleton. Taxpayers have been fleeing the city in droves as its image has gone from powerful to pauper. In a frightening way… Detroit could be a metaphor for the United States. Our industrial prowess has been replaced by an entitlement state. The demands for government assistance grow faster than the private sector’s ability to fund them. While the Democrat political machines bear most of the blame for the demise of Detroit, Washington, D.C., Illinois, California and other decaying sites, they are not alone in their perfidy. They had willing accomplices.

The major cities and destitute states in our country have not always been dominated by Democrats. True, they generally held most of the cards, but Republicans from time to time shared the power. The inability of the GOP to nominate and elect true fiscal conservatives, however, has contributed to the downfall and collapse of the cities and states. The elected Republicans were often big-spending, go-along-to-get along types whose policies and practices made them superfluous. Why elect a Republican who acts like a Democrat when you can choose the genuine article? By incrementally ceding their usefulness the GOP became unnecessary in the eyes and minds of the voters. They were not a loyal opposition. They became loyal enablers.

The same has occurred with our federal government but on a lower trajectory … until now. If a party seeks to offer a viable alternate to a competing political entity, it must be different. There must be a clear line of demarcation between the two parties every time … all the time. If not, the public will be lulled into voting for the party that appears to be more committed to its basic principles. The line of reasoning is that one party is predictable and dependable while the other wavers and is irresolute. Copycat politics, policies and practices merely entrench the party whose original positions are copied. Schizophrenic positions and campaigns confuse voters, and they may choose to support the “devil they know” rather than the fickle unknown. In politics, love and faith … clarity is preferred to obfuscation and spinelessness.

One party rule has led to the demise of some once-great locales in America. Unchallenged power will eventually become corrupt. The party that rules without meaningful opposition will build a massive gravy train to cement their place in power. Eventually reality will derail it, but the train wreck might be avoided if the opposition actually offered alternatives rather than more of the same. Opposition parties must shout out with principle rather than compliantly whimper.

Charlie Earl





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