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Will Democrats choose principle over power? |
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| Will Democrats choose principle over power? |
By CHRIS CRAIN
Within hours of realizing they'd lost control of Congress in last
week's
elections, Republicans were talking about returning to their true
principles.
The party that came to power 12 years ago promising limited government
had,
under a Republican president, gotten into bed with sleazy lobbyists
like
Jack Abramoff and gone on a spending spree, racking up huge deficits.
Worse yet, the party of so-called family values instead was home to a
predatory closet case who trolled the Capitol for congressional pages.
Once
GOP leaders learned what Mark Foley was up to, they valued protecting
his
congressional seat over protecting the teens who work in Washington.
As one disgruntled conservative put it, "When Tom DeLay and his bunch
first
ran, they campaigned against the cesspool in Washington. After a while
they
looked around and said, 'Hey, this isn't a cesspool, it's a hot tub.'"
Because power became more important than policy, the Republicans failed
to
deliver for their core constituency 9 conservative Christian
supporters 9
giving their issues lip service rather than legislation. Karl Rove and
company called them crazy in private, and by the time they finally got
around to voting on a federal marriage amendment, the family values
crowd
could see through the charade.
So the so-called "values voters" credited with keeping George Bush in
office
two years ago weren't so willing to vote Republican this time around.
Exit
polls showed the Democrats did better than they have in years with
evangelical Protestants and even beat out the GOP with Catholic voters.
No one's saying the religious right has been born again Democrat, but
when
they could see their Republican champions were really just chumps,
their
loyalty crumbled and they acted more like other (rational, sane) voters
and
cast their ballots based on other (more important) issues than what's
going
on in their neighbor's bedroom 9 like, for example, the wayward war
in Iraq.
So after 12 years in the wilderness, it's the Democrats' turn again,
and
we'll learn soon enough whether power is more important than principle
for
them as well. Nancy Pelosi, the new House speaker, has announced a
modest
agenda for her "first 100 hours" in office that includes a minimum wage
hike
and congressional ethics reform.
Among social causes, only stem cell research made the "Six in '06"
pledge
for the Democrats' first priority. No one expected gay rights
legislation to
make that list, especially Democrats who remember how gays in the
military
ended Bill Clinton's honeymoon within weeks after he took office back
in
1993.
But we still should be watching for early signs of whether the
Democrats
decide they were elected to advance an agenda or only advance an agenda
they
think will get them re-elected. If the first week is is any indication,
the
forecast could be for stormy weather ahead.
Legendary Democrat power broker James Carville is promoting Harold
Ford,
Jr., the Tennessee congressman who lost his bid for a Senate seat, to
replace Howard Dean as the head of the party. Ford is young, African
American and incredibly charismatic, and talks more about loving Jesus
than
Jerry Falwell does.
To Carville, that means he's a star fund-raiser who can talk about
"faith
and values." Never mind that Ford's faith and values mean he takes
positions
earning dismal marks on the Human Rights Campaign's congressional
scorecard,
including support for federal and state amendments to ban gays from
marrying.
Meanwhile, Pelosi's first bold decision since becoming speaker-elect
was to
back another intra-party rebellion, this one by Iraq-war opponent John
Murtha to be the next House majority leader instead of Maryland
Congressman
Steny Hoyer, the heir apparent for the position.
Murtha makes Ford look like a liberal, and not only has a rotten record
on
gay rights, but is anti-choice and anti-gun control. Hoyer, on the
other
hand, is pro-choice, pro-gun control and scored perfect 100's from HRC
the
last three sessions of Congress.
Even if the Dems don't lurch to the right with the likes of Ford and
Murtha,
HRC and other gay groups should keep the pressure on Democrats to
remember
the principles supposedly behind the party. Two gay rights bills 9
employment non-discrimination and hate crimes 9 already enjoy
overwhelming
public support. Getting them both through Congress and onto George
Bush's
desk should be a no-brainer, and happen sooner rather than later.
And if the party really wants to prove itself to its core
constituencies, it
should remember during the coming debate on immigration reform that gay
Americans have no rights, right now, to keep their loved ones in this
country. Enacting the Uniting American Families Act, which has
bipartisan
and growing support, would speak volumes to voters that the Democrats
aren't
Republicans in sheep's clothing.
Chris Crain is the former editor of the Washington Blade and Southern
Voice
newspapers and can be reached through his blog at www.citizencrain.com.
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