I have been following
presidential politics since FDR ran for a fourth term. I was in the Navy then,
and loyal to my Commander-in-Chief. I was one who did not want us to “change
horses in mid-stream.”
I’ve always considered myself
an Independent, and as an ordained minister I registered as an Independent,
because I wanted to be able to address the issues in the pulpit from a
Christian perspective, when they impacted our moral and spiritual life as
individuals and as a nation, without being accused of being partisan. I have
always voted for the person not the Party.
Although I hadn’t voted for
him in 1968, I voted for Richard Nixon’s reelection in 1972, because I believed
his ambition to leave a legacy would make him an effective second-term
President. His trip to China and the establishment of diplomatic relations with
the People’s Republic of China was a good start. But then we learned about
Watergate!
In recent years I have been
registered as a Democrat, primarily because the Democratic platform consistently
matches more closely my personal convictions and principles. Anyone who has
ever read the Bible knows that God is on the side of the poor, and that’s where
I want to be as well.
People of good conscience
often disagree in their interpretation of principles. The extent, for example,
to which the laissez-faire doctrine is applied to the government’s
involvement in the economic enterprise is a matter of continual debate.
To cite another example,
there was considerable disagreement regarding the application of the Second
Amendment1
to justify the right of private citizens to own handguns, until the Supreme
Court in 2008 settled the matter in a landmark 5 to 4 decision ( District of
Columbia v. Heller), ruling that Second Amendment protects the right of
individuals to own firearms for lawful purposes, including self-protection in
their own homes. The N. R. A., of course, was elated that the conservative
Justices on the Court had prevailed. Many private citizens, however, myself
included, were dismayed. And our fears have been realized by the increase in
deaths involving handguns, a trend that has been alarmingly spiked by the
so-called “stand your ground” laws that some states have enacted.
Another much-debated
principle is that of the separation of church and state. As a preacher I avoid engaging
in partisan politics from the pulpit, although my remarks may sometimes appear
that way to the people whose political toes have been stepped on. I’ve never
understood that principle to mean that a clergyperson has no right to speak to
whatever issues he or she believes need to be addressed, because at their root
all socioeconomic issues have theological implications.
I view many if not most
issues from the perspective of Christian stewardship —stewardship of the
environment, stewardship of the earth’s natural resources, stewardship of life,
and so on. So issues relating to health care, birth control, voting
restrictions, civil rights, women’s rights, immigration, capital punishment,
taxation, “stand your ground” laws, off-shore oil drilling, fracking, gun laws,
anti-abortion legislation, unemployment, use of torture in the interrogation of
prisoners, warfare in general, to name just a few, are all stewardship issues,
having to do with responsibilities as well as rights. As a Christian I want to
vote for candidates whose positions most nearly reflect the teachings of and
example of Jesus Christ, be those candidates Christians or non-Christians.
I have always wanted the
political parties to pick the best possible candidates, who could rise above
partisan loyalty for the good of the nation. I want to be able to like and to
trust whoever is elected, and I wanted that person to do well for the sake of
our nation, whether or not I voted for him or her. I admired my Dad’s attitude
toward the President elect. Once the President was elected, my father was
loyal, respectful, and supportive, whether or not he had voted for the winner.
He wanted the President to succeed for the good of the country.
My Dad’s attitude must have
rubbed off on me. I remember, for example, what a difficult choice it was for
me between Dwight Eisenhower and Adlai Stevenson, because I liked and admired
both men so much. I ended up voting for Eisenhower, but I would not have been
disappointed if Stevenson had won, and I would have wanted him to succeed as
President. Though there were marked differences in the two men and their Party
platforms, the political discourse was for the most part civil.
How different is the
political climate today. Instead of wanting President Obama to succeed for the
sake of our country, his opponents want him to fail for the sake of their
Party. Their leaders unashamedly announced that their main goal was to make him
a one-term President. In that spirit they have opposed every piece of
legislation his administration has proposed. They have reversed their positions
when he has attempted to compromise by incorporating their original proposals.
They have filibustered, second-guessed, and criticized, and they have too often caved in to the ultra-conservative Far Right, even the moderate members of the Party.
I waited and hoped in vain
for those whom I have admired, like Senator Richard Lugar of Indiana, to speak
up and speak out against the extremists, but with a few recent exceptions,2
they haven’t. The exceptions have related primarily to the legislation which
some States have passed restricting a woman’s right to have an abortion by
mandating that she have an invasive ultrasound. The majority of women are
outraged by these developments.
Historians tell us that there
have been periods of bitter controversy in American politics, but I have never
seen such meanness as has been exhibited toward President Obama by his
opponents. They have given him no credit for the positive impact of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (3.6 million jobs created thus far), for
reforming Wall Street, for saving the automobile industry, for signing the
Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009, which was passed when the Democrats
controlled both Houses3, for ending the war in Iraq, for
ridding the world of Osama Bin Laden, and for many effective Executive orders
that have raised the ethical standards of government and streamlined many of
its practices.
Most notable of his
accomplishments was the passage of health-care legislation (the Affordable Care
Act) that no other President had been able to accomplish. His opponents
derisively called it Obamacare, ignoring the millions of Americans who for the
first time will now have affordable health care. They pointed out the Act’s
flaws and cumbersomeness, forgetting the fact that most of the law’s weaknesses
were the result of the Administration’s efforts to compromise by incorporating
many of their suggestions.
The President has been
subjected to unceasing and merciless criticism throughout the Republican
primaries. Now that he has finally begun to differentiate between his views and
those of his opponents, they’re accusing him of bullying! What is even more
disturbing is the way the President of the United States has been personally
attacked by his opponents and their constituents. They impugn his motives,
question his citizenship, his patriotism, his faith. Governor Romney
continually refers to him derogatorily as “this President.”
George W. Bush had his
critics, and I was one of them, but never was he treated that way Mr. Obama has
been treated. People made fun of Mr. Bush’s verbal goofs, and many disagreed
with his policies, but they never questioned his patriotism or accused him of
not doing what he thought was best for America.
Mr. Obama’s Republican
detractors are inconsistent in their attacks, however, accusing him on the one
hand of accomplishing nothing, and on the other hand of acting like a dictator!
You can’t have it both ways, but that doesn’t seem to matter to his critics.
Whatever he says, they twist and attack. Whatever he does, they denounce or
belittle. I cannot help feeling that much of the hatred being expressed toward
Barack Obama reflects a latent if not overt racism.
Mitt Romney has deservedly
earned himself a reputation of saying anything to get elected. He has proven
himself to be the quintessential flip-flopper. One of his own senior advisers
likened Mr. Romney’s intention to reinvent himself and change his views during
the presidential campaign to an Etch A Sketch, a sobriquet his Republican
opponents were quick to seize upon. Now that his chief opponent, Rick Santorum,
has pulled out of the race for the Republican nomination, we are seeing the
Etch A Sketch at work.
I hope the American people
are perceptive enough to see through what’s going on, especially as Mr. Romney
attacks the President for the very things for which he himself has been
criticized by his Republican rivals. It’s a karlrovian (don’t look it up, I
invented the word) tactic that the Republicans have used effectively in the
past. The Romney Super PACs’ use of negative advertising is unsurpassed, and
they’re now unleashing it against the President. The sad truth is that negative
advertising works, because too many Americans are not discerning enough to see
through it.
I hope the President doesn’t
stoop to that level. He doesn’t need to fight that kind of nasty fire with
fire. Far better that he keep to the high road, stick to the truth, and focus
on the facts, which speak for themselves.
One of the things I admire
most about our President is the thoughtful and reasonable way he responds to
the pointed questions he is asked by the media and others about very sensitive
issues. His very heartfelt reply to a reporter’s question about the Trayvon
Martin case is a good example. He has represented our nation well at home and
abroad, and I know I’m not alone in taking great comfort from that.
One would expect that any
person who wants to be President of the United States has to be ambitious, but
candidates should not sell their soul in the process. Nor should their personal
ambition be oozing out of every pore. We have the right to expect them to want
what is best for our nation, and to argue their points of view on the issues as
vigorously and effectively as they can, but not by misrepresenting their
opponent’s positions, and resorting to half-truths and outright falsehoods. We
know politicians are addicted to exaggeration, and we can forgive their
customary hyperbole, but we have a right to expect them to be fair and honest.
We shall have the opportunity
in the forthcoming Presidential campaign to see which candidate best meets that
test.
1The Second Amendment reads: A well regulated
Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the
people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
2 Alaska’s Senator Lisa Murkowski is a good example.
3 The Bill received the support of only three
Republicans. It was the first legislative act signed by President Obama.President Obama.
I fully agree with what Dick writes, and would not change a single word of it. Having grown up in the 60s and 70s, I recall the day when the "opposition," whether Republican or Democrat, was no less fierce but a lot more loyal. I don't recall openly hoping for a President to fail for political reasons.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dick, for your write-up. There are probably lots of other folks out there who feel like this, but we are underpublicized, as we don't make for big, blaring headlines.
I couldn't agree with you more! I also think the President and his economic advisors saved the country from falling into the ecomonic abyss and averting a second great (and worldwide) depression which would have reeked unbelievable pain and havoc on our country and the world.
ReplyDeleteLionel J. Frank
Princeton Jct., NJ
Thanks, Dick. Your reflections are exactly on target!! Bill.
ReplyDelete