The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
John Eisenhower: Why I will vote for
John Kerry for President
By John Eisenhower
Guest Commentary
The New Hampshire Union Leader
© September 9, 2004
The Presidential election to be held this coming Nov. 2 will
be one of extraordinary importance to the future of our
nation. The outcome will determine whether this country will
continue on the same path it has followed for the last 3½
years or whether it will return to a set of core domestic and
foreign policy values that have been at the heart of what has
made this country great.
Now more than ever, we voters will have to make cool judgments,
unencumbered by habits of the past. Experts tell us that we
tend to vote as our parents did or as we "always have." We
remained loyal to party labels. We cannot afford that luxury
in the election of 2004. There are times when we must break
with the past, and I believe this is one of them.
As son of a Republican President, Dwight D. Eisenhower, it is
automatically expected by many that I am a Republican. For 50
years, through the election of 2000, I was. With the current
administration’s decision to invade Iraq unilaterally, however,
I changed my voter registration to independent, and barring
some utterly unforeseen development, I intend to vote for the
Democratic Presidential candidate, Sen. John Kerry.
The fact is that today’s "Republican" Party is one with which
I am totally unfamiliar. To me, the word "Republican" has
always been synonymous with the word "responsibility," which
has meant limiting our governmental obligations to those we
can afford in human and financial terms. Today’s whopping
budget deficit of some $440 billion does not meet that criterion.
Responsibility used to be observed in foreign affairs. That
has meant respect for others. America, though recognized as
the leader of the community of nations, has always acted as
a part of it, not as a maverick separate from that community
and at times insulting towards it. Leadership involves setting
a direction and building consensus, not viewing other countries
as practically devoid of significance. Recent developments
indicate that the current Republican Party leadership has
confused confident leadership with hubris and arrogance.
In the Middle East crisis of 1991, President George H.W. Bush
marshaled world opinion through the United Nations before
employing military force to free Kuwait from Saddam Hussein.
Through negotiation he arranged for the action to be financed
by all the industrialized nations, not just the United States.
When Kuwait had been freed, President George H. W. Bush stayed
within the United Nations mandate, aware of the dangers of
occupying an entire nation.
Today many people are rightly concerned about our precious
individual freedoms, our privacy, the basis of our democracy.
Of course we must fight terrorism, but have we irresponsibly
gone overboard in doing so? I wonder. In 1960, President
Eisenhower told the Republican convention, "If ever we put
any other value above (our) liberty, and above principle, we
shall lose both." I would appreciate hearing such warnings
from the Republican Party of today.
The Republican Party I used to know placed heavy emphasis on
fiscal responsibility, which included balancing the budget
whenever the state of the economy allowed it to do so. The
Eisenhower administration accomplished that difficult task
three times during its eight years in office. It did not attain
that remarkable achievement by cutting taxes for the rich.
Republicans disliked taxes, of course, but the party accepted
them as a necessary means of keep the nation’s financial
structure sound.
The Republicans used to be deeply concerned for the middle
class and small business. Today’s Republican leadership, while
not solely accountable for the loss of American jobs, encourages
it with its tax code and heads us in the direction of a society
of very rich and very poor.
Sen. Kerry, in whom I am willing to place my trust, has
demonstrated that he is courageous, sober, competent, and
concerned with fighting the dangers associated with the
widening socio-economic gap in this country. I will vote for
him enthusiastically.
I celebrate, along with other Americans, the diversity of
opinion in this country. But let it be based on careful
thought. I urge everyone, Republicans and Democrats alike,
to avoid voting for a ticket merely because it carries the
label of the party of one’s parents or of our own ingrained
habits.
John Eisenhower, son of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, served
on the White House staff between October 1958 and the end of
the Eisenhower administration. From 1961 to 1964 he assisted
his father in writing "The White House Years," his Presidential
memoirs. He served as American ambassador to Belgium between
1969 and 1971. He is the author of nine books, largely on
military subjects.
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