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Guest
Contributor
Zell Miller
Zell Miller
is United States Senator from Georgia.
I
Tried To Tell You...
Democrats repel voters, who put faith in freedom...
[Zell Miller] 11/08/04
America's
faith in freedom has been reaffirmed. With the re-election
of President Bush, America recommitted itself once again to
expanding freedom and promoting liberty. Only the 1864 re-election
of Abraham Lincoln, the 1944 re-election of Franklin Roosevelt
and the 1980 election of Ronald Reagan rival this victory as
milestones in the preservation of our security by the advancement
of freedom.
This election validated not just freedom, but also the faith our Founding Fathers
placed in average folks to navigate the course of this great nation. By weighing
the greatest issues at the gravest times and choosing our path, ordinary people
have again accomplished extraordinary things. With courage and caution, rather
than fear and timidity, the voters chose a path to ensure others would enjoy
the same freedom to set their own path.
This election outcome should have been implausible, if not impossible. With
a litany of complaints - bad economy, bad deficit, bad foreign war, bad gas
prices - amplified by a national media that discarded any pretense of neutrality,
a national opposition party should have won this election.
But the Democratic Party is no longer a national party. As difficult as the
challenges are - both real and fabricated - Democrats offered no solution that
was either believable or acceptable to vast regions of America.
Tax increases to grow the economy are not a solution that is believable
or acceptable. Democratic promises of fiscal responsibility are unbelievable
in
the face of massive new spending promises. A foreign policy based on the strength
of "allies" such as France is unacceptable. A strong national defense
policy is just not believable coming from a candidate who built a career as
an anti-war veteran, an anti-military candidate and an anti-action senator.
Democratic Party policies haven't sold in large sections of America in decades,
and the only success of Democrats in presidential elections for 40 years was
when they pitched themselves as pro-growth, low-tax, strong-defense, fiscally
responsible, values-oriented candidates.
Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton hummed the tune but never really sang the song,
and that's why Democrat prospects have gone south in the South. In 1980, the
South had 20 Democrats and just six Republicans in the Senate. As recently
as 1994, the Senate had 17 Democrats and nine Republicans from the South.
A decade later, the number had reversed to 17 Republicans and nine Democrats.
With this election, it is 22 Republicans and just four Democrats from the South.
When will national Democrats sober up and admit that that dog won't hunt? Secular
socialism, heavy taxes, big spending, weak defense, limitless lawsuits and
heavy regulation - that pack of beagles hasn't caught a rabbit in the South
or Midwest in years.
The most recent failed nominee for president stands as proof that the national
Democratic Party will continue to dwindle. The South has gone from just one-fourth
of the Electoral College in 1960 to almost a third today.
To put this in perspective, that gain is equal to all the electoral votes in
Ohio. Yet there was not a single Southern state where John Kerry had any real
chance. Would anyone like to place bets on the electoral strength of the South
by 2012? Maybe they should tax stupidity.
When you write off centrist and conservative policies that reflect the will
of people in the South and Midwest, you write off the South and Midwest. Democrats
have never learned from the second or third or fifth kick of a mule. They continue
to change only the makeup on, rather than makeup of, the Democrat Party.
And so we have a realignment election. For the first time, in an "us vs.
them" election and in the toughest of situations, Republicans have been
re-elected to the White House, the Senate and the House of Representatives.
Confronting an opposition that can win a divided electorate in the worst of
times and that has a growing electoral base, the national Democratic Party
has a choice: continue down this path toward irrelevance or reverse course.
As the last Truman Democrat, I hope my party makes the right choice but know
I will not be allowed to be part of it. Such is the price you pay when you
love your nation more than your party.
And so while I retire with little hope for the near-term viability of the party
I've spent my life building, I retire with a quiet satisfaction that after
witnessing the struggle of democracy over communism and fascism, the fear I
once held that America might not rise to meet this new challenge of terrorism
has vanished like a fog under the radiance of a new dawn. While the threat
is still real, the shadow looming across a promising future is gone.
And the credit for that goes to one man. Like the last lion of England, Winston
Churchill, George W. Bush has stood alone and risked all to give the world
a new, clearer path to the advancement of freedom.
Abraham Lincoln, in his second annual message to Congress, stated: "In
giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom for the free - honorable alike
in what we give and what we preserve. We shall nobly save or meanly lose the
last, best hope of earth."
George Bush has injected into a region of enslavement an incurable
dose of freedom, and thus nobly saved that "last, best hope of earth" -
free men. CRO
Zell
Miller is a Democratic U.S. senator from Georgia. This piece
first appeard in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
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