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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: GOP Must Go November 20, 2006 Issue Copyright © 2006 The American Conservative GOP Must Go Next week Americans will vote for candidates who have spent much of their campaigns addressing state and local issues. But no future historian will linger over the ideas put forth for improving schools or directing funds to highway projects. The meaning of this election will be interpreted in one of two ways: the American people endorsed the Bush presidency or they did what they could to repudiate it. Such an interpretation will be simplistic, even unfairly so. Nevertheless, the fact that will matter is the raw number of Republicans and Democrats elected to the House and Senate. It should surprise few readers that we think a vote that is seenin America and the world at largeas a decisive No vote on the Bush presidency is the best outcome. We need not dwell on George W. Bushs failed effort to jam a poorly disguised amnesty for illegal aliens through Congress or the assaults on the Constitution carried out under the pretext of fighting terrorism or his administrations endorsement of torture. Faced on Sept. 11, 2001 with a great challenge, President Bush made little effort to understand who had attacked us and whythus ignoring the prerequisite for crafting an effective response. He seemingly did not want to find out, and he had staffed his national-security team with people who either did not want to know or were committed to a prefabricated answer. As a consequence, he rushed America into a war against Iraq, a war we are now losing and cannot win, one that has done far more to strengthen Islamist terrorists than anything they could possibly have done for themselves. Bushs decision to seize Iraq will almost surely leave behind a broken state divided into warring ethnic enclaves, with hundreds of thousands killed and maimed and thousands more thirsting for revenge against the country that crossed the ocean to attack them. The invasion failed at every level: if securing Israel was part of the administrations calculationas the record suggests it was for several of his top aidesthe result is also clear: the strengthening of Irans hand in the Persian Gulf, with a reach up to Israels northern border, and the elimination of the most powerful Arab state that might stem Iranian regional hegemony. The war will continue as long as Bush is in office, for no other reason than the feckless president cant face the embarrassment of admitting defeat. The chain of events is not complete: Bush, having learned little from his mistakes, may yet seek to embroil America in new wars against Iran and Syria. Meanwhile, Americas image in the world, its capacity to persuade others that its interests are common interests, is lower than it has been in memory. All over the world people look at Bush and yearn for this countrywhich once symbolized hope and justiceto be humbled. The professionals in the Bush administration (and there are some) realize the damage his presidency has done to American prestige and diplomacy. But there is not much they can do. There may be little Americans can do to atone for this presidency, which will stain our countrys reputation for a long time. But the process of recovering our good name must begin somewhere, and the logical place is in the voting booth this Nov. 7. If we are fortunate, we can produce a result that is seenin Washington, in Peoria, and in world capitals from Prague to Kuala Lumpuras a repudiation of George W. Bush and the war of aggression he launched against Iraq. We have no illusions that a Democratic majority would be able to reverse Bushs policies, even if they had a plan to. We are aware that on a host of issues the Democrats are further from TACs positions than the Republicans are. The House members who blocked the Bush amnesty initiative are overwhelmingly Republican. But immigration has not played out in an entirely partisan manner this electoral season: in many races the Democrat has been more conservative than the open-borders, Big Business Republican. A Democratic House and Senate is, in our view, a risk immigration reformers should be willing to take. We cant conceive of a newly elected Democrat in a swing district who would immediately alienate his constituency by voting for amnesty. We simply dont believe a Democratic majority would give the Republicans such an easy route to return to power. Indeed, we anticipate that Democratic office holders will follow the polls on immigration just as Republicans have, and all the popular momentum is towards greater border enforcement. On Nov. 7, the world will be watching as we go to the polls, seeking to ascertain whether the American people have the wisdom to try to correct a disastrous course. Posterity will note too if their collective decision is one that captured the attention of historiansthat of a people voting, again and again, to endorse a leader taking a country in a catastrophic direction. The choice is in our hands. November 20, 2006 Issue
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#1. To: gargantuton (#0)
Well, I think this is a significent thumbs down from the Paleocons. In 2004, the Paleos held their noses and voted Bush. If the Christofundies stay home and the Paleocons vote for da' other guy, who will vote for the GOP? - the Zionaziis? - but there can't be that many of those nutbars kicking around here.
I am a republican in a heavily republican county. I agree the republican party needs a knuckle punch smack in the nose. Even though I am a precient (sp) captain for a repub election (don't ask it involves property rights and smoking issues), my wife and I voted for not one repub in this election (we vote by mail cause we do not trust the machines). Libertarians first,(except in one inportant congressional race that the dem might defeat a repub) demos next, and not one, not ONE republican, did we vote for.
Our county (El Paso, Colorado, shame be upon it's name) had security escort a women wearing a "Grandmothers for Peace" button, out of the polling area, claiming she was "electioneering".
pretty good job on your voting. but I wouldn't be surprised if you're the only precinct captain for the republicans in the whole nation who voted that way.
How the heck do you know how to spell "precinct" correctly? Latin?
I agree the GOP must go, and the Democratic Party must follow right behind them. However, I am concerned, almost to the point of convinced now, that the Republicans will maintain control of at least one House of Congress, if not both. I have nothing to base that on other than a "gut" feeling at this point.
"People should not be afraid of their governments, governments should be afraid of their people." -- V
I don't know why I have a knack for spelling, but I do. And I didn't take latin. I guess that in the whole nation there must be some other precinct captains that vote 100% non-Republican. but the party officials don't know about it.
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