Today's so-called Republicans have established a mind-numbing
record at polluting the environment; bloating government; appointing
crony partisans; pushing the nation into debt to fund tax cuts for
the rich; legislatively catering to the world's largest
corporations; opposing women's rights; kneecapping states, local
communities, and schools; eviscerating constitutional protections of
liberty at home; and devastating our nation's reputation abroad.
They try to re-write history - the biography of Thomas Jefferson
on the www.whitehouse.gov website has been re-written to turn him
into a man who had "assumed leadership of the
Republicans," while the reality was that Jefferson's party was
the Democratic-Republicans and still exists today, called the
Democratic Party. (The Republican Party is much more recent, having
come into national existence in 1856.)
Corporate shills like former Enron lobbyist and current GOP
chairman Ed Gillespie would have us think the Republican party was
born in service to corporations. But Abraham Lincoln, the first
Republican president, was also the first president to actively use
the power of government in support of striking workers.
In Lincoln's era, the idea of strikes was so novel the word
"strike" was put in quotation marks in newspapers, but
Lincoln was often on their side. "Labor," Lincoln wrote,
"is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the
fruit of labor, and could never have existed if Labor had not first
existed. Labor is superior to capital, and deserves much the higher
consideration."
Republicans would do well to revisit the Republican Party's
campaign platform of 1872, before the era of corporate personhood,
as it may hold the seeds of their redemption.
The Republicans of 1872 didn't think that anybody should be
appointed to high office just because he was a party hack or the son
of the Secretary of State. Instead, they wrote in their platform,
"Any system of civil service under which the subordinate
positions of the government are considered rewards for mere party
zeal is fatally demoralizing; and we, therefore, favor a reform of
the system, by laws which shall abolish the evils of patronage, and
make honesty, efficiency, and fidelity the essential qualifications
for public positions."
They didn't think corporations - particularly big ones - should
get the kinds of freebies that corporations today regularly demand
for moving into a community. Instead, resources owned by We, The
People should be held in trust for, or given to, human beings, as
they wrote in their platform: "We are opposed to further grants
of public land to corporations and monopolies, and demand that the
national domain be set apart for free homes for the people."
The Republicans of 1872 felt that the national debt (from the
Civil War) should be paid off as quickly as possible, and a budget
must not only be balanced but show a surplus while at the same time
paying pensions to retired persons. They were also protectionists,
in favor of import duties and tariffs to protect working peoples'
salaries and keep manufacturing jobs from moving offshore. They
proclaimed in their platform:
"The [nation's] annual revenue, after paying current
expenditures, pensions, and the interest on the public debt, should
furnish a moderate balance for the reduction of the principal [of
the national debt]; and that revenue should be raised by duties upon
importations, the details of which [duties] should be so adjusted as
to aid in securing remunerative wages to labor, and promote the
industries, prosperity, and growth of the whole country."
The Republicans of 1872, having just freed the slaves (in part,
at least), also spoke to that era's women's struggle for equal
rights. Their platform explicitly said:
"The Republican party is mindful of its obligations to the
loyal women of America for their noble devotion to the cause of
freedom. Their admission to wider fields of usefulness is viewed
with satisfaction; and the honest demand of any class of citizens
for additional rights should be treated with respectful
consideration."
The Republicans of 1872 had repealed most of Lincoln's wartime
abrogations of civil rights, and opposed any other Patriot Act-like
interferences with civil liberties. They were rediscovering the Bill
of Rights, and said so in party platform plank sixteen:
"The Republican party proposes to respect the rights
reserved by the people to themselves as carefully as the powers
delegated by them to the States and the Federal government. It
disapproves of the resort to unconstitutional laws for the purpose
of removing evils, by interference with rights not surrendered by
the people to either the State or National government."
The party platform said that Republicans would embrace only
"modest patriotism" and "incorruptible
integrity" in their leaders, because the nation's
"honor" was, in that day, "kept in the high respect
throughout the world."
The party noted that since it had first achieved national power
with Lincoln's election, "During eleven years of supremacy it
has accepted, with grand courage, the solemn duties of the
time." Republicans had "emancipated four millions of
slaves, decreed the equal citizenship of all, and established
universal suffrage. Exhibiting unparalleled magnanimity, it [the
Republican Party] criminally punished no man for political
offenses," and tax "revenues have been carefully collected
and honestly applied."
"This glorious record of the past is the party's best pledge
for the future," the Republicans of 1872 wrote, blissfully
unaware of how corrupt their party would become.
They added, perhaps presciently. "We believe the people will
not entrust the government to any party or combination of men
composed chiefly of those who have resisted every step of such
beneficent progress."
In the years since then, the Republican Party has been seized by
Ayn Rand utopians, Pat Roberson fundamentalists, and the largest and
dirtiest of America's corporate elite. They've trashed the values of
Lincoln and Eisenhower, rejected Jesus' words in Matthew 25, and
turned our commons into a dumping ground while using our nation's
treasury as a honey pot.
At the same time, there's a growing concern that George W. Bush's
projected quarter-billion-dollar campaign war chest, and
demonstrated willingness to use Big Lie techniques and October
Surprise wars, will be enough to induce national amnesia in 2004,
destroy the last vestiges of a civil society, and permanently turn
our nation into the land of the observed and the home of the
worried-about-the-terror-alert.
And, so, those of us "on the left" ask our Republican
friends: Please take your party back from these fanatics, before
it's too late for America to ever again be the land of the free and
the home of the brave.
Thom Hartmann (thom at thomhartmann.com) is the award-winning,
best-selling author of over a dozen books, and the host of a
syndicated daily talk show that runs opposite Rush Limbaugh in
cities from coast to coast. www.thomhartmann.com/commondreams.shtml
This article is copyright by Thom Hartmann, but permission is
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copyright 2003 Thom Hartmann