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A Letter to Steele
You Should Become a Democrat

WASHINGTON--It’s time for a change, Michael Steele….time for you to find a new political home.
Born into a family of Maryland Democrats, you became a Republican when the most revered members of the state’s GOP were Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin and Charles “Mac” Mathias.
McKeldin was the moderate Republican who gave the nominating speech for Dwight Eisenhower at the party’s 1952 convention, and who later broke with the GOP to back Democrat Lyndon Johnson over Republican Barry Goldwater in the 1964 presidential campaign. [Read full story] 

A Most Unsettling Tendency
The Supreme Court’s Aggressive Term

John Roberts Jr., the chief justice of the United States, did not write the most important opinion of his court’s just-concluded term:  the one that allowed unlimited corporate and union spending in election campaigns. [Read full story]

A Financial Crisis?
Boehner Gets a Little Antsy

WASHINGTON--If U.S. Rep. John Boehner (Rep., Ohio) feels like renting a movie this weekend, I suggest he steer clear of the 1954 sci-fi horror flick, "Them!"
In it, nuclear testing in the New Mexico desert creates a marauding colony of giant mutant ants. [Read full story]

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Congress Passes Financial Reform
Just Three Republicans Supported in Senate

There was more than enough in the financial reform bill--now on its way to President Barack Obama--to merit broad support. 
Yet, for Thursday’s final Senate vote on the bill, 60 to 39, just three Republicans joined 57 Democrats to support reform.  In the House of Representatives, only three Republicans voted for the bill when it passed that chamber in June, 237 to 192. [Read full story]

When Greatness Slips Away
Helplessness Becoming as American as Apple Pie

We’ve blown so many enormous opportunities over the past several years. 
In the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, when most of the world had lined up in support of the United States, President George W. Bush had the chance to lead a vast cooperative, international effort to combat terrorism and lay the groundwork for a more peaceful, more secure world.
He blew it with the invasion of Iraq. [Read full story]

Editorials

 

DEWAYNE WICKHAM
USA Today

As Fewer Vote
Right-Wing, Left-Wing Fringes Dominate

ORLANDO--Three days before Election Day, U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson (Dem., Fla.) sent out an e-mail urging his supporters to place over 50,000 calls the next day to help him stave off defeat.
With polls showing Congressman Grayson trailing his Republican opponent in the closing days of the campaign, the first-term Democrat was beating the bushes for votes.
Saying his backers had made 50,000 calls a week earlier, Congressman Grayson wrote:  “Tomorrow, we’re going to top that.”
But the great test for the congressman and Daniel Webster, his Republican challenger, was not how many people their campaign workers talked to, but, rather, how many of them they could get to actually vote.
In the 2008 presidential election that swept Barack Obama into the White House, just 63 percent of Americans who were eligible to vote cast ballots, according to Curtis Gans, director of American University’s Center for the Study of the American Electorate.
And, get this:  2008 was a good year.
In fact, to find a higher turnout you have to go all the way back to 1960, when a greater percentage of Americans of voting age--64.8 percent--took part in a presidential election.
Voter turnout in midterm elections, Mr. Gans noted, is usually a lot lower.
Despite the seismic shift in the political landscape that pundits predict the midterm elections will bring, Mr. Gans holds out little hope for a corresponding increase in political participation in the world’s greatest democracy.
That’s because one in four Americans hasn’t registered to vote, and, in every presidential election since 1920, more than a third of citizens who are eligible to vote have failed to do so.
When you dissect the numbers, as Mr. Gans does with great precision, it’s easy to understand why he worries about the balkanization of America’s body politic.
“It suggests that, as voter participation declines, our politics becomes increasingly the providence of the interested and the zealous,” he said.
Mr. Gans worries about the fraying of the bonds that link this nation’s governed to our government. 
I worry that government will increasingly derive its powers not from “the consent of the governed,” but from the apathy and quiescence of non-voters.
I worry that government by the fringe is fast replacing the “government of the people, by the people, for the people” of which Abraham Lincoln spoke so eloquently in his Gettysburg Address.
I fear that, as voter participation dwindles, America’s democracy will give way to a government that’s controlled by those who shout the loudest, are the most intimidating or are the angriest members of society.
It’ll become the providence of the winners of an ideological tug of war that has little to do with democracy and a lot to do with uncompromising people wanting to have their way.
Sadly, there is no solid middle ground among American voters.
There are just avowed liberals and conservatives and the so-called independents, who waver between these two poles until they pick sides on Election Day.
The outcome of this year’s midterm elections, like that of the 2008 presidential contest, will produce short-term gain, but the warring between political parties that follows chips away at the underpinnings of our democracy; an erosion that threatens its collapse.
Greater voter participation can keep our democracy from imploding.
It’ll bring more diversity--ideological, racial and cultural--to the voting booth, and it can force the extremes of the left and right to put the good of the nation ahead of their selfish quest for political gain.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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