It's very easy to maintain your purity when you never even get the chance to govern - because you never win.
From: Canada Free Press
by - Herman Cain -- May 6, 2016
I saw an interesting comment on my Facebook page yesterday. It came from
a reader who clearly considers himself a “true conservative” and had to
do with the idea of expanding the Republican tent to let more people
in. He said he’d be happy to have more people in the tent, provided they
all believe in constitutionally limited government, liberty, etc.
Um . . . news flash: The people who believe in those things are already in!
The concern here, which can be a valid one if you don’t take it too far,
is that you don’t want to let go of any and all principles just to make
more people feel comfortable in your tent. Often when party leaders
talk about expanding the tent, what “true conservative” activists think
they mean is abandoning any commitment to conservative ideas so that
more liberal voters will consider becoming Republicans.
But because it invovles raising a tax on some people in certain circumstances, it’s not “true conservative” enough for those obsessed with ideological purity.
The same is true with health care. Trump has said in the past that health care is a major responsibility of government. Is that a conservative statement? Taken by itself, not at all. If I heard it and didn’t know anything else about what he’s proposing for health care, I’d be concerned. But the way I’d deal with my concern would be to look into what he’s proposing in the here and now. And I’d find that Trump proposes replacing ObamaCare with an excellent market-based set of proposals.
You’d think a conservative would be happy with that. But it’s not enough for the purest of the pure, who remain convinced Trump is not really one of them.
I think much of the resistance to expanding the tent stems from the fear that we might let in people who are not really “true conservatives.” Then again, I have no idea what that term is actually supposed to mean. How do I become a true conservative? Are there 50 issue positions I have to agree with? Can I qualify with 40 out of 50? Is there a sliding scale?
What I know is this: Conservatives in general believe in less government, less spending and more individual responsibility. Liberals believe in more government, more spending and less individual responsibility. How much more? How much less? It seems to me those questions leave room for us to have a discussion. But if you’re afraid of anyone who might be with you for the most part, but might want a little more government than you do . . . well then you have a choice to make.
You can try to drum everyone but the “true conservatives” out of the party, and you can have a very pure - and very small - party. Or you can welcome those who embrace your general ideas but might disagree here and there, and work together to win elections. Then, you work together to govern as best you can.
As it stands right now, we’ve lost two straight presidential elections and we have a lot of work ahead of us to avoid making it three. I had my problems with Mitt Romney, as you know, but I voted for him. He would have been eons better than Barack Obama. Yet I actually knew people who called themselves “constitutional conservatives” or whatever who refused to vote for Romney on the grounds that he wasn’t pure enough for them, and they were quite proud of themselves for their “principled stand.”
Some principle. It helped give us another four years of Barack Obama. Romney would have won some victories for conservatives. Under Obama, we’ve won none. Today we’ve got another chance. Some will reject Donald Trump - and many of his supporters - because they fear that welcoming them in will compromise the purity of the conservative movement.
I’d like to suggest that conservatives try winning for a change, and then winning the policy battles as they govern. It works a lot better than closing your doors to people who are willing to fight alongside you on some things, and might be persuaded over time on others. But then again, it’s very easy to maintain your purity when you never even get the chance to govern - because you never win.
God bless,
JohnnyD
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