“History does not repeat itself, but it
does rhyme.”
By Patrick J. Buchanan
Mark Twain’s insight comes to mind as one observes the panic of Beltway Republicans over the latest polls in the battle of Obamacare.
Mark Twain’s insight comes to mind as one observes the panic of Beltway Republicans over the latest polls in the battle of Obamacare.
According
to Gallup, approval of the Republican Party has sunk 10 points in two weeks to
28 percent, an all-time low. In the Wall Street Journal/NBC poll, approval of
the GOP has fallen to 24 percent.
In the campaign to persuade America of
their Big Lie — that the House Republicans shut down the government — the White
House and its media chorus appear to have won this round.
Yet, the
truth is the Republicans House has voted three times to keep open and to fund
every agency, department and program of the U.S. government, except for
Obamacare.
And they
voted to kill that monstrosity but once.
Republicans
should refuse to raise the white flag and insist on an honorable avenue of
retreat.
And if
Harry Reid’s Senate demands the GOP end the sequester on federal spending, or
be blamed for a debt default, the party should, Samson-like, bring down the
roof of the temple on everybody’s head.
This is an
honorable battle lost, not a war.
Why, after
all, did Republicans stand up? Because they believe Obamacare is an
abomination, a new entitlement program this nation, lurching toward bankruptcy,
cannot afford.
It is
imposing increases in health care premiums on millions of Americans, disrupting
doctor-patient relationships and forcing businesses to cut workers back to 29
hours a week. Even Democratic Sen. Max Baucus has predicted a coming “train
wreck.”
Now if the
Republican Party believes this, what choice did the House have except to fight
to defund or postpone it, against all odds, and tune out the whining of the
“We-can’t-win!” Republican establishment?
And if
Republicans are paralyzed by polls produced by this three-week skirmish, they
should reread the history of the party and the movement to which they profess
to belong.
In the
early 1960s, when the postwar right rose to challenge JFK with Mr. Conservative,
events and actions conspired to put Barry Goldwater in the worst hole of a Republican nominee in history.
Kennedy
was murdered in Dallas one year before the election. Goldwater had glibly
hinted he would privatize Social Security, sell the Tennessee Valley Authority
and “lob one into the men’s room at the Kremlin.”
After his
defeat of Nelson Rockefeller in the California primary assured his nomination,
Goldwater was 59 points behind LBJ — 77-18.
Rockefeller,
George Romney and William Scranton — to the cheers of the Washington press,
began to attack Goldwater for “extremism” and failing to vote for the Civil
Rights Act of 1964.
At the Cow
Palace convention, liberals demanded Goldwater rewrite the platform to equate
The John Birch Society with the Communist Party USA and the Ku Klux Klan, which
had murdered four black girls at a Birmingham church in 1963 and three civil
rights workers in Neshoba County, Miss., that same summer.
Goldwater
rejected this stinking outrage, declaring, “Extremism in the defense of liberty
is no vice.” And, so, the liberals all abandoned him.
One man
stood by Goldwater. The two-time loser Richard Nixon, who had not won a race in
his own right since 1950, campaigned for Goldwater and the party longer and
harder than Barry himself.
And what
became of them all?
Bill
Scranton packed it in 1966. George Romney was trounced in 1968 by Nixon, with
Goldwater’s legions at his side, in New Hampshire, and quit the race two weeks
before the returns came in.
Rockefeller,
who had spent a career calling Nixon a “loser,” lacked what it took to
challenge Nixon in any of the contested primaries.
And, lest
we forget, one other national Republican spoke up for Goldwater and
conservatism in that 1964 humiliation, the retired Hollywood actor and
impresario of GE Theater: Ronald Reagan.
Nixon and
Reagan would go on to win four of the next five GOP nominations and
presidential elections. In the one convention Reagan lost, 1976, the right, as
the price of its support of Gerald R. Ford, demanded that Nelson Rockefeller be
dumped as vice president.
Done.
Rocky was last seen flipping a middle finger to the delegates happily marking
“paid” on his account.
Prediction:
The people who fought the battle of Obamacare will be proven right to have
fought it, and America will come to see this.
And the
people who said, “We can’t win!” will never win.
America is
at a turning point.
If she
does not stop squandering hundreds of billions on liberal agenda items like
Obamacare and if she do not end these trade deficits sucking the jobs,
factories and investment capital out of our country, we will find ourselves
beside Greece, Spain, Illinois and Detroit.
Even if
America disagrees, as in 1964 when it embraced LBJ’s Great Society plunge to
social and economic disaster, Republicans need to stand up — current polls and
corporate Republicans be damned.
If the
right is right, time will prove it, as it did long ago.
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