Political
Leadership and Governance
The present crop of Republicans is bereft of responsible
leadership, as reflected by their titular leader’s statement that”The single
most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one term
president.” In addition, the majority of Republicans who signed the Grover Norquist
pledge never to increase taxes have abrogated their ability to govern, if they
are to abide by their pledge. Their ability to address the pressing problems
arising from poverty and the potential demands of warfare are rendered ineffectual.
If politics is the art of compromise, how can the Republican Legislators
effectively act as co-partners in governance? The present economic crisis
strongly indicates that they fail to recognize the need for compromise, and
that their attitude reflects allegiance to their party rather than allegiance
to the United States.
How did it happen that the Republican Party became so
inadequate, so miserable and pathetic? It certainly has not always been so. At
other times the Republican Party not only stood for smaller government and low
taxes, the party and its leaders also stood for Civil Rights, and was the first
to support the Equal Rights Amendment. The 1964 Civil Rights legislation would
probably not have passed if it had not been for Republican Senator Everett
Dirksen. Robert Taft, Mr. Republican, stood in the Senate and denounced our
internment of the Japanese – the only one to have the courage to do so at a
time of national fear of invasion and hatred of the enemy. An example of
statesmanship was President Dwight Eisenhower’s warning of the military-
industrial complex; a warning unheeded by subsequent national leaders. And
Gerald Ford brought dignity and compromise to the office of the President after
the tragedy of the Nixon scandal. These men were politicians practicing the
honorable art of politics as committed leaders of our country. They were not
just leaders of the Republican Party seeking political power, although they
were that, too, but they recognized that the art of politics is compromise. These
are the kind of leaders needed at this time of national crisis. Unfortunately,
they are dead!
Harry E. Berndt
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