Mail
Magazine 24
Does
the Republican Party have a
future?
by Star Parker
The
United States, from Day One,
was a project about principles and ideals.
The
superpower that emerged and
grew from the handful of colonists that began settling here was not the
product
of where those colonists happened to land, but of the ideals and
principles in
their heads and hearts, applied in how they lived their lives.
The
Republican Party was founded in
1854 to address one great blot on the nation's founding legacy: the
existence
of slavery in a nation founded under the ideal of freedom under God.
Runaway
slave and self-educated
abolitionist leader Frederick Douglass said, "I am a Republican, a
black,
dyed-in-the-wool Republican, and I never intend to belong to any other
party
than the party of freedom and progress."
Douglass
called Abraham Lincoln,
America's first Republican president, "emphatically the black man's
president."
When
some 30 years ago I told the
welfare officer not to bother showing up again at my home -- when I
decided
that my own future would be based on the values of Scripture, work and
personal
responsibility -- there was no doubt in my mind what party would become
my
political home.
The
party of "freedom and
progress," the party of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass.
But,
as longshoreman philosopher
Eric Hoffer once observed, "Every great cause begins as a movement,
becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket."
It
's no mystery why the Republican
Party is having a hard time today. No matter how hard you squint and
try to
discern the values of Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, or any values for
that
matter, in those now wielding the money and power at the top of the
party,
they've disappeared.
These
establishment Republican
leaders and operatives are not about ideals and values but business --
their
own business.
The
Wall Street Journal reports
that the latest estimate from the Congressional Budget Office is that
unemployment will "remain above 7.5 percent through next year. That
would
make 2014 the sixth consecutive year with a jobless rate that high, the
longest
stretch of such elevated unemployment in 70 years."
Yet
the Republican presidential
candidate in 2012 could not defeat the current occupant of the White
House.
In
the party that is supposed to be
about freedom and personal responsibility, party operatives want to
blame
everyone else for their own failures.
Worse,
they want to pin it on
candidates who actually take seriously the traditional values of their
party.
Karl
Rove would like to weed out
candidates like former Missouri congressman Todd Akin.
Akin,
defeated by Democrat
incumbent Claire McCaskill in the Senate race in Missouri, was a
six-term
Republican congressman with a flawless conservative record.
For
most of 2012, he was ahead of
McCaskill in the polls. Then, in August, he expressed himself poorly in
an
interview about abortion. Despite his apologies and efforts to clarify
himself,
his own party abandoned him.
McCaskill
ran ads, over and over,
showing the Republican's own candidate Mitt Romney questioning Akin's
qualifications. This race could have been saved. But the party elite
wasted not
a second to dump Akin because they were not comfortable with his
conservative
values to begin with.
We're
living in a deeply troubled
country today. Americans are looking for answers, not a political class
feathering its own nest.
There
are tens of millions of
conservative American patriots who seek an opposition party to
represent their
conviction that America will not get back on the path to strength and
prosperity without restoration of freedom, limited government, free
markets and
traditional values.
Today's
big question is whether the
Republican Party is going to be that opposition party. If not, it is
not
conservative values and convictions that will be abandoned. It will be
the
Republican Party.
Read
this and other articles at
Mail Magazine 24
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