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Barbara Anderson's
Column:
Stormy seas forecast
as Republicans, Libertarians meet to launch statewide
campaigns
By Barbara
Anderson
The Salem Evening News
April 5, 2002
This coming weekend Republicans meet in Lowell and
Libertarians in Woburn to nominate candidates for
statewide office. Democrats will gather June 1 in
Worcester to choose their nominees. The actual party
standard-bearers, in cases where more than one is
nominated, won't be known until after September's
primary election.
The price we Independents
pay for independence is to pick in September from
what we are offered; in November, we make the best
of what we have. So it behooves us to wish all party
activists well.
The Libertarian candidates
for governor and lieutenant governor are Carla Howell
and Rick Aucoin. Principled, focused and idealistic,
Libertarians have a simple agenda: Small government,
freedom, personal responsibility.
Many of us accept these basic concepts, but either
have become accustomed to government handouts or recognize
that anyone trying to make government a lot smaller
will run into federally-protected contracts and lawsuits
that gubernatorial vetoes of legislative spending
proposals can't address. It would be interesting to
have a chance to push that envelope, though.
The Libertarians keep us aware that liberty, not high-tax
serfdom, was once the American dream.
Republicans speak of similar goals, but often settle
for less-big government and more personal freedom
and responsibility than moderate or liberal Democrats
would encourage. They, too, have only one candidate
for governor this year, and an interesting battle
for lieutenant governor among Jim Rappaport and two
women, Kerry Murphy Healey and Donna Cuomo, who must
assume we have learned nothing from the last affirmative-action
choice for the office.
Fired by the possibility that Mitt Romney can win
this race, the Republican party will be actively recruiting
more legislative candidates at its convention to help
him govern. Let's hope, if elected, they will be more
useful than most legislative Republicans were when
Weld, Cellucci and Swift needed votes to support slowing
government growth.
The Three Governors have
been criticized over the years for not helping build
the Republican Party, because it is in everyone's
best interest to have a viable two-party system. But
as good as Republican legislators can be as allies
on issues like Proposition 2 1/2 and tax cuts, they
can be frustrating to work with because of their institutional
need for pork for their districts and desire to be
re-elected above everything else.
While the Republican activists I know stand proudly
for limited government, some Republican politicians
get defensive and try to hide from their party label
and platform ideals. Governors Weld, Cellucci and
Swift took the "no new taxes" pledge and
vetoed many of the more outrageous spending proposals
passed by the Legislature; but many Republican legislators
joined Democrats in overriding those vetoes, thus
helping create the current spending crisis.
Then, incredibly, state Rep. Susan Pope, R-Wayland,
recently became the first politician in two decades
to publicly call for the abolition of Prop 2 1/2.
This kind of betrayal is rare, but hard to take from
someone who should know better, and makes me glad
I'm an Independent so I don't have to apologize for
her.
Regardless of party affiliation, since the ability
of the Democratic legislative leadership to raise
taxes this year depends on how many incumbents have
an opponent this fall, we hope that citizens are inspired
by the top of their tickets to run.
Moderate and liberal Democrats generally do well as
legislative candidates because they come from a culture
of running for office. Among its features: The pro-government
mindset that makes public office an acceptable job
choice to their families and community, aggressive
union and public employee activists, and rhetoric
that offers voters something at someone else's expense.
Conservative Democrats
are sometimes better for taxpayers than moderate Republicans,
but we haven't had many of those running recently,
and no, Tom Finneran isn't one.
The Republican Party once
dominated Massachusetts politics; its downhill slide
began in the middle of the last century with its support
for birth control in a Catholic state. You'd think
that grateful women voters would give credit where
it's due instead of voting for Democrats who claim
they care about "the children" and Republicans
don't. Had it not been for the GOP, there'd be a lot
more children about which to care!
Another problem is that Republicans, like us Independents,
find other things to do with their lives than run
for office, so there is a much smaller pool of potential
candidates. These often have a naive, private-sector
misunderstanding of the political arena, and their
private-sector employed supporters often have little
opportunity to take time off for holding signs and
distributing flyers.
Independents who don't want to run themselves should
adopt a limited-government candidate this year, just
to create a healthy balance between fantasy small
government and the giant, more expensive government
that we are going to get without a strong minority-party
presence.
Concerned taxpayers would
be well-advised to support challengers to potential
tax-hikers. A campaign contribution won't cost as
much, after all, as all those tax increases that will
soon be debated on Beacon Hill.
Barbara Anderson is executive director of Citizens
for Limited Taxation. Her syndicated columns appear
weekly in the Salem Evening News and the Lowell Sun;
bi-weekly in the Tinytown Gazette; and occasionally
in other newspapers.
Every tax is a
pay cut ...
... A tax cut is a pay raise
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